AN ENTERTAINING BIOGRAPHY. JUST PUBLISHED. THE LIFE TRAVELS AND BOOKS OP ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT. WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY BAYARD TAYLOR. One handsome 12mo. volume, uniform with " The Let- ters of Von ffumboldt," elegantly bound in muslin, with an original steel portrait. Price, $1.25. Containing a full account of his Life from birth to death; a picturesque summary of his Travels and Adventures in the New World and Asia ; biographi- cal sketches of his relatives and literary associates ; a complete resum& of his various works, with extracts from his most important ones ; a lucid statement of his achievements in all departments of science, &c. " The Life Travels and Books of Alexander von Humboldt has already gone into a fifth edition. * * * It is entertaining as a romance, and contains the cream of Humboldt's books. * * * The plan of the work is excellent. The biography is combined with the wan- derings of the old savant, and the essence of numerous volumes is here artistically condensed into one. A more readable and instructive book has not been lately issued." Philadelphia Daily Press. %* Sold by all booksellers, and it will be sent by mail, postage free, on receipt of the price, $1.25, by KM>I> & CARLETON, Publishers, No. 130 Grand Street, New York. LETTERS OF ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN VON ENSE. From 1827 to 1858. WITH Extracts from Varnhagen's Diaries, and Letters of Varnhagen and others to Humboldt. ranjslate& from tljt 3>onfc CStrman 3E&tium, BY FRIEDRICH KAPP. NEW YORK : RUDD & CARLETON, 130 GRAND STREET, LEIPZIG: F. A. BROCKHAUS. M DCCC LX. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1860, by BUDD & CAELETON, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. B. CKAIGHEAD, Printer, Stereotype!-, and Electrotyper, Carton IS milling, 81, 83, and 85 Centre Street. " Your last favor doing me so much honor contains words about which I wish to prevent every mistake. 'You are afraid to confess yourself the exclusive owner of my impieties.' You may freely dispose of this sort of property after my not far distant departure from life. Truth is due to those only whom we deeply esteem to you therefore." ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. Letter of December ^th, 1841. 0? UHI7BESIT7 CONTENTS. 1. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . - 17 2. Humboldt to Varnhagen, ....... 18 3. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 19 4. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . . .20 5. Humboldt to Varnhagen, ,21 6. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 22 7. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 23 8. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 25 9. Humboldt to Rahel, 28 10. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 29 11. Humboldt to Rahel 31 12. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 32 13. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 33 14. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 34 15. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 35 16. (No Address.) 35 17. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 40 18. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 41 19. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 43 20. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 44 21. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 45 22. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 46 23. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 49 24. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 49 25. Humbold to the Princess von Pueckler, .... 51 26. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 52 viii Contents. PAGH 27. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . . . . . . 54 28. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . ... . . . 56 29. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . ... .68 30. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . , . . . . . 59 31. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . ,. . . . . . 60 32. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . . . . 61 33. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 62 34. (No Address.) V . ... 66 35. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . v * . . . 67 36. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . .70 37. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . , . . 73 38. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . . .74 39. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . . . . 75 40. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . * . . 76 41. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . .'..*. 77 42. Metternich to Humboldt, . . . . . . . 79 43. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 82 44. King Christian VIII. of Denmark to Humboldt, . . 83 45. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . 85 46. (No Address.) 86 47. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, ' . 87 48. Humboldt to Yarnhagen , ;. . . 89 49. Guizot to Humboldt, . ....-'* . -- ., - . 93 50. Arago to Humboldt, . . . .... . 94 51. Humboldt to Bettina von Arnim, . . . -. . . 96 52. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . , . . 97 53. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, .. >*^' . . . . 100 54. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 101 55. Humboldt to Spiker, 104 56. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 105 57. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 106 58. King Christian YIH. of Denmark to Humboldt, . . 108 59. (No Address.) . 110 60. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 112 61. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 115 62. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, ., 119 63 Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 120 64. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . '. '.122 65. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 127 66. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 128 67. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, .... 130 68. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . ". '.131 69. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 138 70. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 139 71. (No Address.) ] 140 72. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, .... 141 73. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 142 Contents. ix PAGE 74. Humboldt to the Prince of Prussia. 144 75. (No Address.) 146 76. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 151 77. J. W. T. to Humboldt, 154 78. Count Bresson, French Ambassador, to Humboldt, . . 155 79. Arago to Humboldt, 158 80. Four Notes of Frederick William the Fourth to Humboldt, 160 81. King Christian VIII. of Denmark to Humboldt, . .163 82. John Herschel to Humboldt, 164 83. Balzac to Humboldt, 168 84. Robert Peel to Humboldt, 1 69 85. Metternich to Humboldt, 170 ' 86. Prescott to Humboldt, 171 87. Madame de Recamier to Humboldt, . . . .174 88. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 175 89. Leopold. Grand-Duke of Tuscany, to Humboldt, . .175 90. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 177 91 Humboldt to Varnhagen, 178 92. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 180 93. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 182 94. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 183 95. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 184 96. (No Address.) 185 97. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 186 98. Metternich to Humboldt, 188 99. Jules Janin to Humboldt, 189 100. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 192 101. Huraboldt to Varnhagen, . . . . . 193 102. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 196 103. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 196 104. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . . . .198 105. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 199 106. Humboldt to Varnhagen 201 107. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 203 108. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 204 109. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 205 110. Humboldt to Friedrich Wilhelm IV., . . .206 111. Bessel to Humboldt 208 112. Victor Hugo to Humboldt, 215 113. Friedrich Rueckert to Humboldt, 216 114. Alexander Manzoni to Humboldt, 217 115. Thiers to Humboldt, 220 116. The Princess of Canino, Lucien Bonaparte's Widow, to Humboldt, 220 117. Duchess Helene d'Orleans to Humboldt, . . . .221 118. Duchess Helene d'Orleans to Humboldt, .... 222 119. Duchess Helene d'Orleans to Humboldt, . . . .223 Contents. PAGE 120. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 223 121. Humboldtto Yarnhagen, ..' . . . . .225 122. Metternich to Humboldt, ...*'-.. . . 225 123. Humboldt to Varnhagen, ,, ,- * . -,."" . 229 124 Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . ,- . . ;.:.,-.?.. 229 125. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, ,, .. . ... . . .>. . 231 126. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . ... ,. .. . 232 127. Mignet to Humboldt, .... _-, . . . . 233 128. Humboldt to Baudin, . . . . ;* : . . 235 129. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 238 130. Metternich to Humboldt, . . . .-': . . .; . 240 131. Prince Albert to Humboldt, 241 132. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 242 133. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, - . 243 134. (No Address.) 248 135. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, -* . . . . . 251 136. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . .w. ... 252 137. Metternich to Humboldt, 253 138. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 254 139. Helen, Duchess of Orleans, to Humboldt, . . .254 140. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . ; > . . , . . 256 141. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . ...-.:.. . 259 142. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 260 14.3. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . ..'..$;. . 160 144. Humboldt to Bettina von Arnim, . ... . 262 145. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 263 146. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 266 147. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . . 268 148. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . : . , 271 149. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, .' 271 150. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 275 151. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 276 152. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 278 153. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 279 154. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . .281 155. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . . . \ .284 156. Humboldt to "VJfcihagen, 286 157. Arago to Humboldt, ..' '.287 158. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, ,289 159. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, '. 289 160. Yarnhagen to Humboldt, 294 161. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 297 162. Humboldt to Bettina von Arnim, ." . * * .' 300 163. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 302 164. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, ' 3o3 165. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, . . \ 304 166. Yarnhagen to Humboldt, [ 305 Contents. xi PAGE 167. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 306 168. Humboldt to Yarnhagen, 308 169. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 313 170. The Princess Lieven to Humboldt, 316 171. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 317 172. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 318 173. Humboldt to Varnhagen, ...... 320 174. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 321 175. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 323 176. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 324 177. The Prussian Minister Resident, von Gerolt, to Humboldt, 325 178. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 327 179. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . - . . . . 329 180. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 330 181. Grand Duke Charles Alexander of Saxe- Weimar to Hum- boldt, 330 182. Varnhagen to Humbpldt, 331 183.- Humboldt to Varnhagen, 333 184. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 334 185. Metternich to Humboldt, 336 186. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 338 187. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . 338 188. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 341 189. Charles Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe- Weimar, to Hum- boldt, 343 190. Jobard to Humboldt, 344 191. Lines by Varnhagen on Hildebrandt's Painting of Hum- boldt's Apartments, and the Motto Attached. . . 346 192. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 347 193. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 360 194. Charles Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe- Weimar, to Hum- boldt, 351 195. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 352 196. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 354 197. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 356 198. Varnhagen to Humboldt, . . . . . . . 359 199. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . . . . .360 200. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 362 201 Karl Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe- Weimar, to Hum- boldt, 363 202. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 364 203. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 366 204. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 368 205. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 368 206. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 370 207. Charles Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe- Weimar, to Humboldt, 371 xii Contents. PAGE 208. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 372 209. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 374 210. Charles Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar, to Humboldt, V .. . 375 211. Thiers to Humboldt, ..' . . V . . . 376 212. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 377 213. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . ." . . ".379 214 Humboldt to Varnhagen, . . . .... 382 215. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 383 216. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 385 217. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 387 218. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 380 219. Prince Napoleon, Son of Jerome, to Humboldt, . . 390 220. Varnhagen to Humboldt, 393 221. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 394 222. Humboldt to Varnhagen, 395 223. Humboldt to Varnhagen, . .* . . . 397 224. Humboldt to Varnhagen, '. < . . . . .399 225. Humboldt to Ludmilla Assing, 402 1HIVSXIS1TY PREFACE. THE following letters of Humboldt furnish a con- tribution of the highest importance to the true, correct, and unveiled representation of his genius and charac- ter. That they should be delivered to publicity after his death was his desire and intent, which have found their positive impression in the words preceding this book as its motto. Never has he spoken out his mind more freely and sincerely, than in his communi- cations with Yarnhagen, his old and faithful friend, whom he esteemed and loved before all others. In him he placed an unlimited confidence ; with him he deposited those letters received by him, which he desired to be saved for their importance, while he used to destroy nearly all others. He presumed that Varnhagen, the junior of the two, would survive him. xiv Preface. Varnhagen, however, died first and transmitted the duty a doubly sacred one to me, of publishing this memorable evidence of the life, the activity, and the genius of this great man. In the accomplishment of this charge it was a religious duty to leave every word unchanged as written down. I would have thought it an offence to Humboldt's memory had I had the arrogance to make the slightest alterations of his words. For the same reason I did not think myself authorized to grant the request however well-meaning it may have been of the publisher, that I should make such alterations, nor could I accord the least influence to my own feelings or to personal regards. There was but one consideration to be obeyed the eternal truth, for an adherence to which I am responsible to Humboldt's memory, to History and Literature, and to the will of him who enjoined this duty upon me. And therefore the legacy, intrusted to my hands, will appear full and complete, as it was received. The interest of Humboldt's letters is sometimes pleasantly heightened by entries in Varnhagen's diary they will Preface xv indicate the verbal sentiments of Humboldt in addi- tion to those written by him. Of Yarnhagen's letters few only were preserved or could be found. In the little, however, which is known, the noble friendship, the constant, never-ceasing mental activity, the faith- ful fellowship in their mutual efforts in behalf of science and liberty, in all of which Humboldt and Yarnhagen were so many years united, find a suffi- cient expression. The letters of many other distinguished and cele- brated persons, which are also added, will show Humboldt in his world-wide connexions, in his mani- fold relations to savans and authors, to statesmen and princes, all of whom approached him with reverenc \ LUDMILLA ASSING. BERLIN, February, 1860. HUMBOLDT'S LETTERS. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, September 25th, 1827. MY HONORED FRIEND: ALLOW me to present you with the best copy of my essay* left me. The end of it will, I hope, secure me your indulgence for the whole. Tuesday. A. v. HUMBOLDT. * On the Principal Causes of the Variation of Temperature upon the Earth. i8 Humboldt's Letters. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, November 1st, 1827. You recollect having once uttered some affectionate words in acknowledgment of my endeavors to describe Nature vividly and truly (that is, with strict correctness as to what we do observe). That your words have left agreeable impressions, you will perceive from this insignificant token of my grati- tude.* I have altered nearly all " the Explanations," and added " The Genius of Rhodes," for which Schiller has shown some predilection^ With friendship and the highest consideration, Yours, A. HUMBOLDT. Is it not strange, that Koreff has never acknowledged what we did for him here ? * With a copy of " Yiews of Nature," new edition. Humboldt's Letters. 19 8. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BEELIN, November 21, 1827. WEDNESDAY, AT NIGHT. TRUSTING more to your friendship for me and to my memoranda, which always guide me in my lectures, than to the notes taken by the students, I send you herewith the entire fifth lecture, together with to-day's recapitulation. I am sure, you will not find anything anti-philosophical therein. You may make whatever use you like of them except a copy for publication please send them back before Saturday. That the memoranda were made for my own use only, you will observe by the confusion in their composition the desire, however, to be always frank, makes me forget any consideration which vanity could suggest.* A. HUMBOLDT. * The memoranda were intended to be communicated to Professor Hegel, who was told that Humboldt had indulged in attacks on Phi- losophy in his lectures. 2O Humboldt's Letters. a. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, April 15th, 1828. yon allow me to disturb you for some moments between 2 and 3 o'clock this afternoon, that I may ask your literary opinion? My book shall bear the title: " Sketch of a Physical Description of the World." I should like to embody in the title itself the occasion of these lectures, so as to make it understood at onoe that the book contains more and something else than the lectures. " From reminiscences of lectures in the years 1827 and 1828, by A. v.Humboldt," is considered, I am told, ridiculous and pretending. I do not insist on it ; but " Souvenirs d'un cours de Physique du monde,'' or, " Souvenirs d'un voyage en Perse," seemed simple enough. How shall I arrange the title of the book ? " Sketch of the Physical World, elaborated from lec- tures by A. v. H. ; or, " Partly treated from Lectures ? All that seems rather awkward. Adverbs will not do for titles. What if I add in small type : " A part of this work has been the subject of lectures in the years 1827 and 1828?" This is, however, rather long and Humboldt's Letters. 21 then the verb! " Occasioned 5y," &c., would perhaps be better. I trust to your genius ! You will help me out of this labyrinth, I am sure ! With the sincerest attachment, Your obedient, A. HUMBOLDT. NOTE BY VARNHAGEN. I had objected to the first herein mentioned title myself when I once dined at Prince August's, and Humboldt had heard it from Beuth. 5. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, 3d of April, 1829. I SHALL call and thank you and enjoy your being home again, and the good effects which the exercise of your new duties have everywhere had. And I will implore pardon of your gifted lady, so dear to me through the misfortunes that happened in my own fcouly. It is never allowed to present a book to the King, not even by Prince Wittgenstein. It must go the usual way. But I will entreat Albrecht very, very fer- vently.* I am quite exhausted and will be off in a week. Friday. A. HT. * It was a book of Ranke (the Historian). 22 Humboldt's Letters. e. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, 26#A of April, 1830. I HAVE just come home from Potsdam, and find your dear letter and your present, so very agreeable to me. The " Zinzendorf" * will delight me very, very much. He is an individual physiognomy like Lavater and Car- danus. The recent pietism, which began to break out at Halle, made me smile. I rejoice that you will kindly accept my " Cri de Petersbourg" it is a parody recited at Court the forced work of two nights ; an essay to flatter without self-degradation, to say how things should be. As you and your high-gifted wife, my ancient and kind friend, rejoice in anything agreeable that happens to me, I wish to say that the King sends me to the Emperor to attend the meeting of the Potentates. I shall probably go with the Crown-Prince, who will meet the Empress at Fischbach. Yours, A. HT. Zinzendorf >s letters to the Saviour were rather more legible, f * Biography of Count Zinzendorf by Varnhagen. Translator. f Humboldt wrote a very illegible hand, hence this allusion.- Translator. Humboldt's Letters. 23 HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, July 9A, 1830. PLEASE accept for yourself and your highminded and excellent lady my sincerest thanks for your new present, so agreeable to me.* I was not personally acquainted with the man whose eccentricities you have so aesthetically described. He was one of those who shine by their personal appearance ; their lives are of greater effect than their writings. A man who boasts that his recollections go back to the first year of his life (how differently the Margravine judged things, when she says : " J'etais un enfant tres precoce a deux ans je savais parler, a trois ans je marchais !") ; a man who owns a guardian angel in a black cloak, like Cardanus who makes love to old maids, without being drunk, only in order to convert the same to virtue and reading ; a man, to whom the fate of German profes- * Memoirs of John Benjamin Ehrhard, Philosopher and Physician. Edited by Varnhagen von Ense. Stuttgart and Tubingen. Cotta. 1830. 24 Humboldt's Letters. sors under German princes appears more tragical than that of the Greeks such a man cannot but be admired as a curiosity! The " Kirchen-Zeitung" will never inscribe his name in the list of "the faithful," and the Schimmelmanns will hardly thank you, my most honored friend, that the work recalls the Danish- Holstein saturnalia of sentimental demagogism. I am very much gratified that you will take " Har- denberg" in hand. It is a difficult but satisfactory task, if you be careful to separate the epochs, and pro- vided his life be judged without party hatred, which seems to have subsided at last, with regard to Hegel in the Academy. Thankfully yours, A. HUMBOLDT. We find in Varnhagen's diary the following entry referring to the above : " Alexander von Humboldt said to Gans, after the July revolution, when he heard him express very exalted hopes of the new govern- ment, ' Believe me, dear friend, my wishes go as far as yours, but my hopes are very feeble. I have seen changes of government in France fbr forty years. They always fall by their own incapacity; the new ones give always the same promises, but they never keep them, and the march to ruin is renewed. I was personally acquainted with most of the men in power, some of them intimately; there were distin- Humboldt's Letters. 25 guished, well-meaning men among them ; but they did not persevere ; after a short time they were not better than their predecessors nay, they became even greater rascals. Not one of all the governments there has kept the promises made to the people not one of them has subordinated its own interest to the welfare of the country. And until this be done, no power can pos- sibly take a lasting root in France. The nation has always been deceived, and will again be deceived ; when it will punish the treason and the perjury of its rulers ; for it is strong and mature enough to do this at the proper time.' " 8. VARNHAGEtf TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, January 23d, 1833. CERTAINLY it was I who met your Excellency some time ago at the sunny hour of noon and who recognised you too late, as I was recognised too late by you. How I should have liked to run after you, but it would not do, the distance was already too great. I would have liked to have told you something concerning Mr. von Bulow at London, which I had just got from the 2 26 Humboldt's Letters. best authority, and which I thought would be new to you, as it was to me. It was about the danger in which that bold ambassador was for some time, and which, according to a declaration of the King, had passed over. Since then your Excellency has heard it from other sources, and my information will be but stale. Now we Prussians are also gratified at last by a general representation of the people, or, to speak more correctly, we had it a long time ago, only we did not know it! Bishop Eylert has lifted the veil from our eyes. He is the first to speak out the great truth, like a second Mirabeau, in clearness of thought and boldness of words. I can vividly imagine how the " Rittersaal," nay, the whole palace, was shaken to its foundation, when he thundered that powerful truth to the assembly, that the representation of the whole people, of all the classes and interests, ought to be found in that solemn lodge of the Order of Knights ! I bend my head in deep reverence to such a colossal boldness, to such a new unheard-of combination, by which other miserable institutions, until now regarded as national representa- tions, as for instance Parliaments, Assemblies, Cortes, and the like, were annihilated and blown into nothing- ness! I have listened to the orator from the silent mouth of the official gazette only ; but your Excellency was present without doubt at the solemnity and pitied me, to be sure, and will say, what in ancient times was Humboldt's Letters. 27 said when a speech of Demosthenes was read : " Oh ! had you heard it delivered by him !" And the smiling approval, the gracious satisfaction of the high audience, the amazement of all present at the wonderful discovery, how much the impression must have been heightened by all that ! Oh, our Protestant parsons are on the best road, they promise to leave behind their Catholic brethren as they were when in the most flourishing condition of their priesthood. Such hypocritical black coats make us the laughing-stock of the world. Representation of the people or no representation, may we have it, or may it be denied, I care little about it just now, but that such a scoundrel should assume to call the meeting of the Knights of an Order a national representation, is an attempt which should be rewarded by the lunatic asylum or the State prison. And there is not even a song, a street ballad, a caricature, to make merry of such a monstrosity all is silent ! But as this is the time of sleep, I will go to bed and wish you and myself good night and sweet dreams. With the highest respect, &c., V. See A. v. Humboldt'a note to Rahel, Varnhagen's wife, of the 1st of February, 1833. 28 Humboldt's Letters. 9. HUMBOLDT TO EAHEL. BERLIN, February 1, 1833. MY speedy reply has no good foreboding, my dear friend. When anything is to be done in this country, it wants fourteen months' maturing after that there is hope. The inclosed letter, which, however, you are entreated not to leave in the hand of your lady friend, explains all. I was listened to in my words and letters kindly and promisingly. This morning, however, the drawingsthose beautiful drawings were sent back. The underlined word in the accompanying note might give some hope ; but I like better to give myself up to illusions than to nourish them in others, and the firm- ness with which Beuth, who alone has to decide in the matter, sticks to his will, bars all prospects. That I have done my best in the matter, as you yourself have desired it, does not require further words this should be a sort of historical faith with you. Please send me a word of comfort about my dear Varnhagen the only brilliant star in the literary world of our country that country in which, as the bishop with the drawn sword Humboldt's Letters. 29 says, even the most eminent talents, as such, ought to have no distinction whatever ! I do not wonder that such things are spoken out, but what depresses me is the vileness of the society in which we are here living, and which is Dot even aroused by such contemptible asser- tions. May both of you preserve your nobler selves. A. HT. 10. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, 3d of Feby., 1833. I am eternally grateful and affected by your noble letter. Grace and euphony of language should always be joined to purity of character and gracefulness of manners. My brother was here for two days, but almost always under the shock of the waves, dashing from the Court. Princes have the right to pray without ever being depre- cated. He ordered me to tell you, dear friend, how very sensible he is to the flattering nature of your offer ; but he is just now so much occupied with the publica- tion of the quarto edition on the affinity of Asiatic languages with the Sanscrit, that he cannot accept 30 Humboldt's Letters. what he considers, nevertheless, as highly important. He desires, in honor of the celebrity of the great departed one,* that you should undertake the task. I am painfully concerned to hear that you enjoy, together with your ingenious friend, but a small bit of health, which you kindly lend each other something of a mutual self-instruction, or Azais-compensation, which afflicts me very much. I have received a long letter of Mrs. Cotta. It seems she will assume the editorship of the Allgemeine Zeitung, an anti-salique enterprise alto- gether. Is it not strange, how, at certain epochs, a certain principle seems to penetrate all mankind ? Resus- citation of reverence for the past, not-to-be-disturbed love of peace, distrust in the possibility of amelioration, hydrophobia against genius, religious compulsion for unity, mania-diplomatica for protocols Cardi- nes rerum. NOTE BY VARNHAGEN. I had replied in Rah el's name, who was prevented by sickness, to the note of the 1st inst, directed to her, and in a postscript had expressed the desire Minister de Humboldt should write the critique of Faust, just then to be published for tho Jahrbucher der Kritik. * Goethe. Translator. Humbolck's Letters. 31 11. HUMBOLDT TO UAHEL. BERLIN, February 9tk, 1853. I have seen Beuth once more, to remind him of his ancient friendship with L. His opinion is, that it would be advantageous for the family to separate the architectural subjects from what belongs to landscape merely, and also to leave out the engravings. Only the architectural drawings were of any use to his institute, and if the family wanted the money, he would be enabled to purchase to the amount of some hundred Thalers (perhaps four to five hundred?). However un- inviting such an offer may be, I thought it my duty, dear friend, to impart it to you. In case of acceptance, Beuth wishes to deal forthwith with some agent, who should come and see him in his house. May the sun of gentle spring give you both warmth, cheerfulness, and vigor ! The "Byzantine empire" (ours I mean) is seriously divided into two parties about " Bunsen's Psalm Book," and " Eisner's Collection of Hymns ! " The military power and the adjutants are in favor of the " Collection of Hymns." As for myself, I have not yet made up my mind. Saturday. * A. HT. 32 Humboldt's Letters. is. HUMBOLDT TO VAENHAGEN. SATURDAY, March 9th, 1833. To a mind like yours, noble friend, solitude and calm are necessary. You draw only upon yourself. Think, that I received the painful news* only last night by Prince Carolath. You know what a warm-hearted, long-proved, and kind friend I lost in her, the honor of her sex ! how amiable she was, when lately she instructed me to trans- act the little business with Beuth. So experienced in all the vicissitudes and illusions of life, and yet so cheer- ful, and so gentle ! With such an intellect, so full of soul, and so true of heart ! The world will appear to you a solitude for a long time, but the consciousness of having imparted to such a lovely woman, until her very last breath, all that genius, and heart, and gracefulness of intercourse like yours can afford, will be a balm to your wound, dear Varnhagen. I conjure you, take care of your health ! A. HUMBOLDT. * Of Rahel's death. Humboldt's Letters. 33 la HUMBOLDT TO YABNHAGEN. BERLIN, December 3, 1833. PAEDON, a thousand pardons, for not sooner return- ing the classical studies of Friedrich Schlegel. I stu- died them diligently and I am convinced that many views of Grecian antiquity, which modern authors ascribe to themselves, are buried in writings dated from 1795 (a deucalionic time of yore !). Angelus Silesius, whom I have but now learned to appreciate, has also gratified me and my brother very much. There is a*piety in the book, which breathes on the mind like the balmy air of spring, and the mysterious and hieroglyphical marks of your departed wife, render your gift doubly dear to me. Spiker,* very curiously mistook the genitive in the " astronomical observations of Alexander von Hum- boldt," for my signature, when he informed the public of Oltmann's death. I will pass it over, however, with- out correction. With everlasting affection, yours, A. HUMBOLDT. * At that time editor of the Haude and Spenersche Zeitung in Berlin. Tr. 2* 34 Humboldt's Letters. 14. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, December 9, 1833. I ENCLOSE you, most honored friend, some words of the lovely Duchess of Dessau. Anything honoring the memory of our departed lady friend must be dear to your heart. Sunday. A. v. HUMBOLDT. DESSAU, December 1, 1833. ACCEPT my best thanks for the books you sent me. Each in its way interested me very much. I am sorry not to have been personally acquainted with Rahel. Her mind now lies so clearly before me, that I should have been happy to have been acquainted with her exterior appearance, that it might suggest to me the intellect within. FKIEDEKIKE, Duchess at Anhalt. Yet full of admiration for R. the book of all books. May I ask you, my honored friend, for Friedrich Schle- gel's works, third volume ? Humboldt's Letters. 35 15. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEff. BERLIN, December 19, 1833. I HAVE been prevented by the irksome and noisy Court-life from inquiring personally after the dear health of my friend. I am sorry that I must request you, by the present note, to return me the letter of the Duchess of Dessau, containing the amiable words concerning our sainted friend. Tuesday. A. v. HUMBOLDT. le. BERLIN, Oct. 24, 1834. I BEGIN the printing of my work (the work of my life). I have the extravagant idea of describing in one and the same work the whole material world all that we know to-day of celestial bodies and of life upon the earth from the nebular stars to the mosses on the 36 Humboldt's Letters. granite rocks and to make this work instructive to the mind, and at the same time attractive, by its vivid lan- guage. Every great and sparkling idea must be noticed, side by side with its attendant facts. The work shall represent an epoch of the intellectual development of mankind in their knowledge of nature. The prolego- mena are, for the most part, ready. They are my amended " discours d'ouverture " as they were delivered from memory, although immediately afterwards care- fully written down ; the picture of physical nature incentives to the study of nature in the spirit of our age these latter are threefold: 1. "Poesie descriptive" and vivid description of natural scenery in modern works of travels. 2. Landscape pictures, sensitive description of an exotic nature when it originated, when it became a necessity and a pleasure to the mind ; the reason why antiquity (too passionate) could not feel it. 3. Plants grouping of them, according to the physiognomy of plants (no botanic gardens). His- tory of the physical description of the world. How the idea of the world of the connexion of all the pheno- mena, became clear to the nations of the world in the course of centuries. These prolegomena are the most essential. They contain the general part of the work, which is followed by the special part, the particulars of which are arranged in systematic order. I send also a part of the tabular register ; space of the universe; the Humboldt's Letters. 37 whole physical astronomy ; our globe, its interior, exte- rior ; electro-magnetism of its interior ; vulcanism, that is, the reaction of the interior of a planet upon its surface ; organization of the masses ; a concise geognosy ; ocean ; atmosphere ; climate ; organic matter ; vegetable geogra- phy; animal geography ; human races and languages; the physical organization of which (articulation of sounds) is controlled by the intellect, the product and manifestation of which is language. In the special part all numerical results, the most minute, as in " Laplac&s Exposition du Systeme du Monde." As these particulars do not admit the same literary perfection of style as the general combinations of natural science, the simple facts are stated in short sentences, arranged in tabular order. The attentive reader will find condensed in a few pages all results on climate, magnetism of the earth, etc., which it would take years of application to learn by study. The intimate relations of the fundamental details, for the sake of literary harmony with the general plan, are effected by brief introductory remarks to each chapter. Otfried Mueller, in his ably written " Archaeology," has very suc- cessfully pursued the same method. It was my wish that you, my dear friend, should get a clear perception of my undertaking from myself. I have not succeeded in concentrating the whole in one single volume, however magnificent the effect of such conciseness would have been. I hope, however, that 38 Humboldt's Letters. two volumes will contain the whole. There will be no notes under the text, but at the end there will be notes appended, containing solid erudition, and minuteness of detail ; these, however, may be left unread. The work is not what is commonly called " Physical Description of the Earth." It comprises heaven and earth everything existing. I began to write it fifteen years ago in French, and called it " Essai sur la Phy- sique du Monde." In Germany I thought first of calling it " The Book of Nature /" a title already adopted in the middle age by Albertus Magnus. But all this is too vague. The title shall be "JZbsmos," Sketch of a Physical Description of the World, by A. v. H., enlarged outlines of his Lectures in 1827 and 1828. Cotta, Publisher. I wanted to add the word Kosmos, and to force people to call the book by this name in order to avoid their calling it "Humboldt's Physical Geography," which would throw the thing in the class of Mitter- sacher's writings. " Description of the World" (formed after History of the World) would, as a designation seldom used, always be confounded with " Description of the Earth." I know that " Kosmos" sounds rather pretending, and the word is indeed not without a certain " Affeterie ;" but this title says in one and the same striking word, "Heaven and Earth," and is quite opposed to " Gaea," the title of that rather imperfect Humboldt's Letters. 39 description of the earth by Professor Zeune. My brother is also for the title " Kosmos." I myself hesitated for a long time. Now, grant me a favor, my dear friend. I cannot prevail upon myself to send away the com- mencement of my manuscript without entreating you to cast a critical eye over it. You possess such an eminent talent for style, and you have at the same time so much genius and independence of judgment, that you do not quite discard the style of others because it differs from your own. Please read the " Discours," and put in a little sheet on which you write without giving any reasons. " So .... I would better like, so .... instead of . ..." Do, however, not condemn without assisting me ! and do also ease my mind as to the title. With the utmost confidence, yours, Monday. A. v. HUMBOLDT. The principal faults of my style are an unhappy inclina- tion to hyper-poetical forms, long constructions upon participles, and too much concentrating of manifold views and sentiments in one and the same period. I think, however, that these radical evils, founded in my individuality, are somewhat lessened by a grave simpli- city and generalization, enabling me to contemplate my subject with a complete mastery of its details, if I may be permitted so much vanity. A book on nature should produce an impression like nature itself. I have been 40 Humboldt's Letters. always careful, as in my " Views of Nature," and in that work my manner is quite different from that of Forster and Chateaubriand. I have always endeavored to describe faithfully, to design correctly, and to be even scientifically true, without losing myself in the dry regions of knowledge. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEK BERLIN, October 28th, 1834. You have encouraged and cheered me by your amia- ble letter, and your still more amiable solicitude. You have quite entered into the spirit of my efforts. But the expression of my affectionate confidence in you [a manifestation of the acknowledgment of your talent in the Humboldt family] has rendered you too considerate and inclined to praise. Your remarks have a degree of refine- ment, of taste, and acuteness, which makes emendation a highly pleasant task. I have adopted all, or nearly all more than nineteeu-twentieths. Some obstinacy, how- ever, must always be allowed an author. I beg a thousand pardons for sending you some sheets, in which (towards the end of the Discourse) I had not corrected the newly- Humboldt's Letters. 41 annexed parts. Some sentences were really confused. You will permit me to call one of these days, and thank you personally. I will then show you the emendations at the end of the discourse. How happy I would have been to have laid some of these travels before her, the dear departed one ! Yours gratefully, A. v. HUMBOLDT. 1 would there were in Germany as excellent a book of synonyms as the inclosed one, which, I am sure, you did not see before now. Abbe Delisle has advised me to use it, and indeed it spares much time ; if a similar word is wanted, one finds it at once. I shall come and take the book back. 18. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, Sunday, 6 o'clock A.M., April 5th, 1855. You, my dearest Yarnhagen, who are not afraid of grief, but who trace its phases through the depths of sentiment, you should receive at this sorrowful time a few words expressing the love which both 42 Humboldt's Letters. brothers feel for you. The release has not yet come. I left him last night at 11 o'clock, and I hasten to him again. The day, yesterday, was less distressing. A half lethargic condition, frequent, though not restless, slumber, and after each waking, words of love, of com- fort; but always the clearness of the great intellect, which penetrates and distinguishes everything and examines its own condition. The voice was very feeble, hoarse, and thin, like a child's leeches were therefore applied to the throat. Full consciousness ! " Think often of me,'' he said the day before yesterday, " but always with cheerfulness ! I was very happy ; and this day also was a beautiful one for me ; for * Love is above all.' I will soon be with mother, and will have an insight into a higher* order of things." I have no shadow of hope. I never thought my old eyes had so many tears ! It has lasted near eight days.* * Wilhelm von Humboldt died on the 8th of April, 1835, at Tegel, at 6 o'clock in the evening. Humboldt's Letters. 19. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, May 15th, 1835, Tuesday. MY time is, unfortunately, so much occupied by the many princely strangers, and I am so affected by the cold, though not at all bracing weather, that I can scarcely find leisure to thank you, dear friend, for the " Bollmann" * and the biographical sketch of him, in which I recognised at once your pen, and also the " retouchings," when the " Staats Zeitung" fell into my hands. One should not undertake to speak of distin- guished men in such papers ; it is a difficult task, even for a man of your genius, to keep the proper course between the family, the censor, and the cold, indifferent public. The name of " Mundt" has recalled to me some remarkable pages of his " Madonna," on the tendency of the Germans to sentimental lucubrations. There is * Bollmann, a German who resided a long time in the United States, and who is known by his bold attempts to liberate Lafayette from the prison of Olmutz. Translator. 44 Humboldt's Letters. much truth in these observations, and I thought to read my own sentence in them. So much, dear friend, on this world, to us, now unhappily deserted. Always gratefully, A. HUMBOLDT. I feel some sorrow, nevertheless, that you refuse to see the Grand-Duchess. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEK BERLIN, May 6th, 1835. I SEND back the communicated sheets, as they might interrupt the series. I was personally acquainted with almost all those whom Bollmann describes so vividly and faithfully. One perceives how he rises as he enters into more important situations. What a strange course of life, " Medecin de Sauvetage !" I have now a better impression of him, thanks to you; for, without being capable of divining the true cause, I noticed some cool- ness towards Bollmann in Lafayette's family, for some years past. A. HT. Humboldt's Letters. 45 si. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, Saturday, 23d of May, 1835. IP the " Morgenblatt" of the 18th of May should fall into your hands, dear friend, please glance at a rather offensive article therein, entitled " Wilhelm von Humboldt's Funeral." My brother is said to have died abandoned by his family. I take but little notice of such misrepresentations. I should wish to know, how- ever, is " that other thing" which my brother was " ignorant of, besides music, and which one dare not name" is it God, or some lewdness ? I do not know what it possibly can be ! Please, dearest one, to find out how this assertion is explained by the public. The cause of my brother's retiring from public life is also so world-known, that it is singular to intimate that one did not know whether it was by his own fault. I call with pleasure on your acuteness and affection. Supply my deficiency in the first. Most thankfully yours, A. HUMBOLDT. 46 Humboldt's Letters. HUMBOLDT TO YARITHAGEN. BERLIN, March 28th, 1830. A MIND like yours, my generous friend, understands, in its mildness and fortitude, how to discover some justification for everything. I do not fear, therefore, to appear this morning again before you as a petitioner, after a winter distracted by the dashing court-waves and festivities. You are the only one in this harmony- barren, genius-deserted city who possesses a harmony of style and a sense of moderation in the utterance of painful sentiments. May I beg you to cast a critical glance over the inclosed sheets ?* The variations played on the praise-chanting lyre for forty individuals were a tedious, style-spoiling necessity. It was arranged who should be invited to the great table. As for me, I think I came out not quite awkwardly, by some indi- vidual characteristics, and by a sort of graduation in my praise. Allow me to call to-day, about eleven * Preface to Wilhelm von Humboldt's work about the Kawi lan- guage. Humboldt's Letters. 47 o'clock, to receive the sheets, which are much wanted by the printer, together with your verbal remarks at the same time. I can alter, if necessary, sous votre dictee, at your home. It would be humane in you to receive me in bed. Respectfully yours, Monday. A. HUMBOLDT. At eleven o'clock I shall be with you. Varnhagen made, on the llth of May, 1836, the fol- lowing entry in his diary : " Very early this morning, Alexander von Humboldt came to see me, and remained an hour and a half. The principal subject of our conversation was the French princes, who arrived here to-day. The embarrassment of the King is very great ; he would like to show the greatest attention to the strangers, while at the same time he desires his attentions should have the appear- ance of insults at St. Petersburg. State Secretary Ancillon had not courage enough to advise the Crown- Prince for their coming here as a certainty. He trusted to chance to acquaint him with it. Our princes go into a violent passion, and complained bitterly of the unwelcome visit. The Princesses Augusta and Maria, who showed themselves pleased with it, had hard words to hear. It was said that there would be a demonstra- 48 Humboldt's Letters. tion in the theatre : some would applaud, and a greater number would hiss, it was hoped. At Treves, some- thing of that sort had already happened, on their way through that city. No doubt, however, that our Princes, notwithstanding their ill-feelings, will behave very civilly, as the King has expressed his wishes in this respect too positively. The Queen of the Netherlands, who is just now here, and who was believed to be the most violently opposed to them, leads the way with a good example, and declares that she will receive the strangers. The Ambassador, Mr. Bresson, and Mr. von Humboldt, at first disapproved of this excursion. That it is carried out notwithstanding is owing to Prince von Metternich, who desiring to secure the influence of France in the Oriental affairs, and at the same time to preserve the friendship of Russia, puts Prussia in the foreground, whose conduct in receiving the French Princes will form a precedent which must necessarily be followed at Vienna. The thing is, indeed, an event of great importance, and must tell effectively on public opinion. It is a fact, and, as such, speaks to every one. Every one will say that our Court has not the principles it pretended to have, or that it is too weak to avow them openly, and is driven, therefore, to try hypocrisy. A bad thing either way ! Humboldt's Letters. 49 HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, May 31**, 1836. [Concerning the article in the Allgemeine Zeitung, against Raumer,* written, it was said, by Major von Radowitz.] THE correspondent had, it seems, little to fear from the mendacious declaration of this " defloured." In the general view on the shallowness and dough-facedness, of the great historian, I am of his opinion. Moreover reading Herr von Raumer's books is like being " whipped," and that I neither suffer nor pardon. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. Monday, April 24 of Tins o 198 Humboldt's Letters. but " Duncker-Freitag," the recruiting officer, the sen- tinel, and the humorously excited suspicion of what was attempted at night with Madame Denis, are and will always produce an uneasiness. With old attachment, yours, A. v. HT. SUNDAY. I shall not forget Mr. Breul the merchant. Minister Buelow was very sorry that you missed him. You will be very agreeable to him and Lady Buelow any evening from half-past seven to nine o'clock. 104. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGBK THURSDAY, January 15th, 1846. ME. MILNES, and what he may have said of the King, " who showed him no personal civilities," interest me but little ; but it will afford me great joy if my earnest intercession for Prutz be at last useful to him. This miserable trifle is the only thing that I can secure in my position. I shall die, however, in the conscientious belief, that to my last moment I never abandoned one devoted to the same principles as myself. Your appro- bation is highly valuable to me, my dear friend ! Humboldt's Letters. 199 The " Quarterly Review" says I had a prolix style, and am never able to write one page of " vivid expres- sion." With faithful attachment, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. Please excuse, like a philosopher, the writing on this mutilated sheet. I am in such a hurry that I have mistaken the address. 105. HUMBOLDT TO YAENHAGEN. BERLIN, January 25fA, 1846. AFTER an official feeding, at court, of the " knights of the peace," whose unworthy chancellor I am after some sorrowful hours at Buelow's, whose state becomes every day more precarious after a ball at the Chateau, from which I am just returned, I cannot seek repose without sending you my preliminary thanks for your ecclesiastical gifts. I am delighted at the review of a poetical period, the precursor of a nobler one or, to speak more correctly, of one more pregnant with life. I will, however, turn away from the long " Ode of Grief," from "The Blue and the Black Eyes," from 2oo Humboldt's Letters. " Besser's Merry Wig," and recur with new pleasure to your " Zinzendorf." This is a grand, well-executed life-sketch, a figure towering above all other things, which, in a different direction, attract the interest of our time. Your " Zinzendorf" was also constantly admired by my brother. How much the interest is enhanced by all that we see or rather expect to see ! But where, among the intellectual " glaciers" of the present time, are those who could compare themselves with Zinzen- dorf, Lavater, and Stilling ? . . . . Most gratefully yours, A. HUMBOLDT. SATURDAY NIGHT. I told Ranke to-day, very frankly, how much I was disgusted at what he presumptuously did at a meeting of the Academy, when I was not present, against Preuss, a much nobler character than he is. Have you not received yet the journals, in which I am immoderately praised and reproved ("North-British Review" and " Quarterly Review) ? In Germany, my prose is fre- quently blamed as being too poetical ; but the " Quar- terly Review" finds it languishing, lifeless, and "not a vivid description." How differently different nations feel! Humboldt's Letters. 201 100. HUMBOLDT TO YA.RNHAGEN. BERLIN, February tta, 1846. YESTERDAY afternoon poor Buelow was released from his sufferings. Thursday night, at eleven o'clock, on go- ing to bed, he fell lifeless into the arms of his servant. An apoplexy ! He closed his eyes never to open them again. In the morning a hundred and forty pulses were counted ; bleeding had no effect. His end was, as lately his life was, unconscious. The family is deeply affected ; the event, however, is beneficial. His excellent wife would have been sacrificed. Next Tuesday morning we will carry him, without pageantry, to Tegel, and bury him under the column of the " Statue of Hope." Under the pres- sure of business, caused by this event, and in the midst of letters which I have still to write to Guizot, Metter- nich, and Aberdeen, I can only briefly reply to the heartfelt letter of Madame von Arnim. I have but little hope, that the old folks now reigning at Weimar will appoint either Prutz or Fallersleben. I had formerly thought of Guhrauer, for whom you will also have some predilection to be sure. You know how happy I would have been if Prutz were appointed. I 9* 2O2 Humboldt's Letters. am not personally acquainted with Fallersleben. The whole passage, however, in the " Wbchenstube,"* alluding to the King and to me, must be changed. It is based on a false rumor. I never have shown the book to the King, and I never applied to the King to quash the indictment, as he is always rather irritated against Prutz, on account of the old cousin from Kulmbach.f It was Minister Bodelschwingh who showed' it to the King. On this Minister Prutz had personally made a very favorable impression, which it was easy to improve. Prutz had applied to have the indictment quashed, and besides he would hardly have been found guilty on all the counts. It was thought advisable, as he made the first advances to the Govern- ment, not to rebut him. The passage " that our King should be asked," must also be discarded, as it would give offence to the Grand Duchess, who likes to show her independence of Prussia at every opportunity. So she protected, not long ago, the Chancellor Mueller, when the Court of Weimar was diplomatically reproached for allowing a journal here prohibited to be read in a read- ing-room at Weimar. The Court of Weimar replied * Die " Politische" Wochenstube by Robert Prutz, a satire on Schel- ling and his philosophy. Tr. f The cousin referred to is Margrave Albrecht, of Brandenburg, who, in Prutz's drama^ "Moritz von Sachsen," is represented as a " Robber Knight." Tr. Humboldt's Letters. 203 with dignity. But that Prutz or Fallersleben could be appointed seems highly improbable to me. Credat Judoeus Apella. Excuse to-day my contused writing, dear friend ! Yours, SATURDAY. A. v. HT. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. J, Feb. 20th, 1846. Do you guess, my dear friend, who sent me this strange article ? Do you guess anything from the seal and the name on the envelope, " M. ?" Is that the author, and to what journal may the article belong ? Profound, of enlarged political views, it certainly is not. The passage on p. 8 is underscored by the author himself, and it con- tains a contradiction ! Prussia is to have unity in an American confederacy. His remarks, p. 3, on Frede- rick n. and on his works, and on " Kant a guillotine," p. 5, are as Minister Thiele would write them. I am indignant at both. The author knows all the news, all the names, all the gossip, of the " JSckensheher,"* and is touched by the liberalism of Bodelschwingh, p. 14, who * Curbstone Guard. Tr. 204 Humboldt's Letters. still defends every day the expulsion of the Baden Representatives. He does not dare to name Eichhorn with censure. The last line only is grand and fine. With unalterable devotion, Yours, FRIDAY. A. v. HTJMBOLDT. 1O8. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, March 29th, 1846. I have only time to tell you, that I shall certainly be in Sans Souci from June to September, and to thank you, noble friend, from my heart, for the kind manner in which you allude to the Agamemnon of my brother. To choose maliciously 16 verses out of 1700!! I once complained that they would not perform the drama in a royal palace hi my brother's translation ! As the Staats Zeitung is seen every evening by the King, they thought it well to malign the production there. The very next day I answered in the Spenersche Zeitung mildly, because the well-informed but unpoetical Dr. Franz is now seeking an increase of his pension. I myself took care that the King did not see my answer ; at least, he Humboldt's Letters. 205 did not talk to me about it. Send back the little sheet. I am at work, not without success, I believe, at the Kosmos, but in a sad mood respecting the public cause. Your news from England is very interesting. With the most cordial friendship, Yours, SUNDAY. A. v. HUMBOLDT. 109. HUMBOLDT TO VAENHAGEN. BERLIN, March 30 to, 1846. I SEND you again some autographs of little import, ten in number, of Villemain, Bessel, Victor Hugo, Rueckert (of whom you have plenty of autographs), Manzoni (full of praise for me, but in bad style), Thiers, Widow of Lucien Bonaparte, three billets de matin of the Duchesse d'Orleans. I add to these fugi- tive sheets a letter from me to the King, which I beseech and implore you not to show to any one, and to send back to-morrow, because I might have use for it. You shall have the letter afterwards. It sometimes happens that the King, instead of a billet de matin, writes his answer on my letter. This happened yesterday. The 206 Humboldt's Letters. ministers who would gladly permit the " Turnen,*'* throw suspicion on Prof. Massman, whom the King likes very much, and whom he wants to keep here. My letter will show you at least, that I openly say, how the tide of evil is bearing down all things before it, and how we are depriving ourselves of the means of action. With my old attachment, yours, A. V. HlJMBOLDT. 110. HUMBOLDT TO FRIEDRICH WILHELM IY. As early as eight o'clock this morning I sent to the Koethener Strasse, to have an interview with Professor Massraann, after the confiding communications of your Majesty, concerning the decision of his situation. He has just gone, leaving me again with an excellent impression of his solidity, clear perceptions, and enthu- siastic vigor for influencing our youth (the indelible, primaeval, self-restoring institution of mankind). To be afraid of every enthusiastic energy is to take from the life of a State its nourishing, preserving power. Pro- * Gymnastic Exercises. TE. Humboldt's Letters. 207 fessor M. did not see Minister von Bodelschwingh for two years, but the Minister then treated him very kindly, and Massmann desires very much, without intruding, to give a candid answer to every question. In view of the noble and frank character of Minister von Bodelschwingh I have great hopes of the result of such a conversation, and therefore I have to beg of your Majesty, most submissively, to communicate to me, whether, according to the orders of your Majesty, the Minister will send for Professor M., or whether he may go to the Minister on his own account, not called for, but animated by some words of your Majesty. I won- der how it could be forgotten how much Massmann has done for the poetry of the Hohenstaufen times, and how talented a lecturer he was at the University. I find praised in Gervinus Geschichte der Deutschen Litteratur : Massmann's Denkmaeler Deutscher Sprache, 1828 ; his Gedichte des Zwoelften Jahrhunderts, his Legenden and Ritterliche Poesie. How could a man be dangerous to youth whom the King of Bavaria appointed for the education of his princes, and by whom above all others the Crown-Prince declares himself to have been animated with the love of culture and intel- lectual freedom, and the true appreciation of his impend- ing kingly duties ? We live not in a sad, but in an earnest time. All action and energy are paralysed, if backbiting is permitted to deprive us of our most useful 208 Humboldt's Letters. men. Enthusiastically attached to your person, to the splendor of your reign, and to the glory of our country, it makes me sad to see the most noble purposes in danger of being misunderstood. No doubt there are very honorable men who, from pure love of your Majesty, would like to see me also under the column at Tegel, or at least on the other side of the Rhine. In grateful submission, Your Royal Majesty's most faithful HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, March 29, 1846. The King wrote on the fly-leaf : My warmest thanks, dearest Humboldt. M. Bodel- schwingh will send for Massmann. In all haste, as ever. Your faithlul F. W. ALEXANDER v. HUMBOLDT, Present. 111. BESSEL TO HUMBOLDT. KOENIGSBERG, Feb. llth, 1846. I HEAR with great regret that your Excellency has to mourn the loss of Herr von Buelow. Although I had Humboldt's Letters. 209 not the pleasure of knowing the late Baron personally, I was not unacquainted with the true affection of the uncle for his nephew, and I heard frequent mention of the enthusiastic manner in which it was reciprocated. Moreover, I knew his repute as that of a noble, talented, clear-sighted man. Would that I could indite words of consolation, such as I heard them, at the time of my great loss ! but it is not given to every one to speak them. That time heals our bleeding wounds, the wounds which at first seemed mortal, I myself have experienced ; that death after a short suffering is prefer- able to death after a long one, is a truth which impresses itself often on my mind ! The chancellor, Herr von Wegnern, communicated to me on the 27th ult. the letter which he received from your Excellency. This letter contains the first news I received since Nov. 7th, of last year, respecting the portrait by which our most gracious monarch intended to gratify a poor invalid : that your letter was ex- tremely gratifying and consoling to me, is natural. It created the first ray of hope ; it has unceasingly occupied me ; it even gave rise to some kind of superstition, and I attributed my good health the whole month of Decem- ber to the vivid hopes it had raised. This prospect of the restoration of my health, I thought, gave me hope of being able to indulge for a longer period in the plea- sure which the dear picture of the "most highly revered 21 o Humboldt's Letters. one, affords me. I, however, do not indulge in the hope of this restoration," since I find my own experi- ence as frequently opposed to as in harmony with that of others, and the result of my reflections on this obscure subject, is simply this, that it is one of the innumerable questions, which are beyond the veil that separates us both from the great secrets of our own nature, and from those which nature in general interposes between first causes and perceptible phenomena. I did, however, excuse the rising superstition by recalling the indis- putable truth, that vivid agreeable effects on the mind or soul react upon the body ; but why did the reaction not endure in my case ? Be this as it may, it is a fact that the portrait of the King always moved before my eyes during my restless nights ; I hoped every day would bring me news of it. I perfectly understand that a care for the well-being of millions of subjects, equally dear to the heart of the monarch, rules the ruler himself and compels him to abandon, under the pressure of the moment, the arrangement of a succession of innumerable interests centring in him ; I also fully understand that the King, although he is no more unmindful of the honors he intends bestowing than of those he has already awarded, has not been able to fix the exact moment of confer- ring the intended benefit upon me. I also know be- yond all doubt, that I am standing upon a mine which may at any time explode, and that to-day has no Humboldt's Letters. 211 power over to-morrow. I have, therefore, thought best to conceal entirely within my own breast the hope of possess- ing the dearest of pictures, and to betray nothing, even to my wife and daughters, until further news of the actual approach of the hoped-for object shall render me as secure in the certainty as the case permits. I have the utmost horror against the propagation of anything the truth of which maybe subjected to doubts by succeeding events ; knowing from sad experience that it may not be sustained by the next moment, for which falsehood and misrepresentation are greedily lying in wait. I fear that the premature spreading of such news, moreover, may imply a sort of coercion (sit venia verbo) on the King. These reflections imposed profound silence on me. But when the letter of your Excellency to Herr von Wegnera spread the news without my co-operation, and when the realization of my hopes seemed near, this compulsory si- lence terminated, and I actually revelled in the idea of its possession. Next day, the 28th of January, I put down on paper the testamentary provision, which disposes of the picture after my death. I consider it the common property of our country, not only on account of its funda- mental object, that of alleviating the sufferings of the sick man, but also for other reasons. I therefore do not leave it to my family ; but in consequence of long and careful considerations, up to January 27th, to my native town of Minden, so that the highest military and civil functiona- 212 Humboldt's Letters. ries of the province, together with the Mayor of the town, may decide further on the place and manner of its keeping. Moreover, on the 28th of January, I entered upon the execution of other plans relative to the fulfilment of my hopes, which entertained me in various ways during these last months. In order to receive the portrait of the " most highly revered" in a becoming man- ner, it is necessary to put the place where I shall keep it into the best state at my command. I have, therefore, condemned the present furniture and ornaments of my two rooms, and ordered new ones, as luxurious and tasteful (for a professor, of course) as I could decide upon. The directions for their manufacture were sent immediately, and with the opening of the navigation in spring I shall have everything I want. I shall blame no one who thinks me foolish in prosecuting plans for embellishing my residence at a moment when my leav- ing it for ever seems so highly probable. But if I delayed, the prospect of the arrival of the royal portrait would depress, instead of elevating me joyfully, as it does now, above much suffering. If I enjoy the sight of the picture even one day only, I shall pass through a fleeting, indeed, but beautiful " frontier scenery" from this life into the other ! One thing yet I shall add before I cease annoying your Excellency, by narrating the con- sequences following the invaluable expected gift of the most high Master. Mr. Chancellor von Wegnern has Humboldt's Letters. 2 1 3 asked Professor Simson to express to me bis wish to insert a notice of the picture in the papers. But I opposed it, partly for reasons stated above, and partly because such a notice would certainly be more appro- priate after the receipt of the picture. In case I should be unable to write any more after its arrival, Simson knows what are to be the contents of the notice accord- ing to my wish. Could I but once behold the fine appearance now pre- sented of the comet of Biela ! At our place, on the 1 1th of January, Wichman could observe nothing, per- haps, or probably on account of the little clearness of the sky at that time; but on the 15th he saw distinctly both heads of the comet. On the following day he described to me orally what he had seen ; but I did not get a clear idea of it, and was, on the contrary, of opi- nion, that what he called a second head of the comet, is an accumulation of nebula3, as other comets too had shown at a greater or smaller distance from the real head. I asked of him to make for me, when it appeared again, a diagram of it, as accurate as possible. The state of the sky and tbt position of the comet, which was often very low, delayed the making of a diagram and measurement till the 26th of January. Since that time the second head of the comet has been traced as faith- fully as possible. Our observations are the earliest of those known ; since, they have directed their attention to 214 Humboldt's Letters. it everywhere, and have measured it ; there will become known, in spite of the bad season, a fine series of obser- vations, which may, as I hope, permit us to draw reliable conclusions. As now developed, forces of polarity, I believe, must be recognised in it. The further deve- lopments will, I hope, enable us to advance beyond superficial conjectures like these. The observations of the new planet can be made here so excellently by the heliometer, which is quite invalu- able for this purpose, that their accuracy far surpasses that of the best meridian observations ; of course its greatest usefulness will only be attained when the stars of comparison are equally well determined in their posi- tion. To this determination, then, the power of the meridian observations is directed about the planet itself. Dr. Busch, following my counsel, does not trouble him- self. I have also requested Encke and Schuhmacher to assist in determining the positions of the stars. The former has already received from here a series of excel- lent observations, as a foundation for his calculation of the orbit, and he will soon receive the continuation of them. It is very fortunate that I Jjave arranged my extensive investigations on the exact reduction of observations by my heliometer, and that these are pub- lished in the first volume of my " Astronomische Unter- suchungen." Without them, Wichmann would be unable to reduce them with exactness, as I can do nothing now, Humboldt's Letters. 215 and the observations of the planet would thereby lose much of their interest, which exists only in the first period of observation, and therefore only when the observations are calculated immediately. I hope, that by proceeding on this basis, Encke's calculations will acquire certainty, which will prove itself up to a few seconds at the reappearance of the planet. At last an end of this ! In accustomed reverence to the end of life, Your Excellency's most obedient F. TV. BESSEL. NOTE BY HUMBOLDT. The last letter but one which I received from the great and noble man. 113. VICTOR HUGO TO HUMBOLDT. MARCH 20th, 1845. You have been kind enough, my Lord Baron, and illustrious colleague, to promise your acceptance of a copy of " Notre Dame de Paris," and the further good office of offering it in my name to your august Sove- reign, my sympathy with and admiration for whom are well known to you. To " Notre Dame de Paris" I add 21 6 Humboldt's Letters. my solemn discourse before the Academy. It would make me happy to think that it gave you a little plea- sure to receive this mark of my high and profound regard. Yours, VICTOR HUGO. 113. FRIEDRICH RUECKERT TO HTJMBOLDT. BERLIN, March, 1846. I HAD the misfortune of twice missing your Excellency when I called to give you my thanks for your great kindness, and at the same time to bid you a hearty farewell, as to-morrow I hasten to my rustic solitude. May God grant you many felicitous hours for the happy completion of your great work, for which I now am more heartily anxious than for any work of my own. For it is the monument of honor for Germany, her repre- sentative work before the nations of Europe ; and I, as a German, feel proud that you did not write it in French. I would also ask your leave to introduce to you my eldest son, who is private tutor at the university of Jena ; now, he may try his luck himself with you, as bearer of this letter. Finally, I beg of you that you will speak in my Humboldt's Letters. 217 behalf with their Majesties, whom it was not my fortune to see this winter. May I yet be permitted to work something worthy of their approbation and of yours ; but may you also be persuaded that it is not for me to appear in person before the public of the capital, but to shape my thoughts in the solitude and quiet of rural life, whither I am now permitted to withdraw, grateful for the highest favor of his Majesty, and with the purest reverence for you. RUECKERT. 114. ALEXANDER MANZONI TO HUMBOLDT. (FROM THE FRENCH.) MILAN, Dec. Gth, 1844. MONSIEUR LE BARON : I WOULD not have hesitated to express my confidence in an august and perfect goodness ; but, instead of a becoming confidence, it would have been an unpardon- able presumption on my part to have dared to foresee i under what ingeniously amiable form this goodness I would deign to manifest itself. I have thus a second time acquired the precious right (I had almost been made to forget that it is a sacred duty), to beg your 10 21 8 Humboldt's Letters. Excellency to lay at the feet of your noble sovereign the humble tribute of a gratitude which has become, if possible, more lively and more grateful. And at the risk of appearing indiscreet, I cannot refrain from avail- ing myself of this opportunity to renew the respectful homage of the devotion which, as a dweller on this earth, and under this title, nihil Tiumani a me alienum putans, I have long entertained. This homage would cease to be pure, and would thus lose its unique value if it involved the slightest sacrifice of my Catholic con- science, that is to say, of that which is the soul of my conscience. But, thank God, such is not the case ; for, amid the character and the sign of the high destiny which I salute from afar, with a respectful joy, it is my privilege to admire and to love the development of the most excellent work of justice, which is the liberty of doing good. My admiration for you, M. le Baron, if even it did not content itself with being the simple echo of so great a reputation, ought not to surprise you ; for if, as I am daily told, there is not a learned man who has not some- thing to learn from you, there are few unlearned men whom you have not taught something. In this con- nexion, and at the risk of abusing your indulgence, I cannot conceal from you my hope to have a memento of Humboldt a memento less precious, no doubt, than those which I owe to his good-will, but which will also Humboldt's Letters. 219 have its value. My fellow-citizen, Count Alexander Lito Modignani, in a journey made by him, entirely under your guidance, in North America, sought out, in the mountain of Quindia, the magnificent Ceroxylus at the season of the ripeness of their fruit, possessed him- self of one, and was kind enough, on his return, to divide with me the seeds he gathered from it. Planted last spring, not one has yet sprung up ; but on visiting them lately, I found them entirely sound, and in two of them a trace of vegetation was perceptible at the base. I should be happy, and even a little proud, to possess a memento, and that, I believe, a very rare one, of a people at once ancient and new, whom you have sub- jected to the victorious sway of science. It is with the most profound respect, and, permit me to add, with that affection always so naturally enter- tained for a great man, and which it gives such pleasure to express, that I have the honor to be your Excel- lency's most humble and most obedient servant, ALEXANDEB MANZONI. NOTE BY HUMBOLDT. Written to A. Humboldt on the occasion of a refusal to accept the class of peace of the order pour le merite. I had been commissioned to write to him, that it was not to interfere with his liberty in any degree, that he was never to wear the cross, but that a name so great and so beautifal as his must needs continue to grace the list of the knights. 220 Humboldt's Letters. 115. THIERS TO HUMBOLDT. (FROM THE FRENCH.) PARIS, August, 1845. SIR, I take the liberty of introducing a young Frenchman, full of talents, of acquirements, and of thirst for knowledge. He desires to become acquainted with Germany, and Berlin in particular. I thought I could not direct him better than to the illustrious who does the honors of Berlin to strangers. Permit me to recommend him in a very special manner. Mr. Thomas is my particular friend, and the friend of all your friends of Paris. Be pleased to receive in advance all my thanks for the reception you will kindly accord him, and to receive the assurance of my attachment and of my high consideration. A. THIERS. lie. THE PRINCESS OF CANINO, LUCIEN BONAPARTE'S WIDOW, TO HUMBOLDT. PARIS, Hay, 1845. I SEND you, M. le Baron, a copy of my refutation of M. Thiers, in regard to the passages of that historian Humboldt's Letters. 221 which assail the memory of my husband. The esteem which you bore him, as well as that of your dear brother and your estimable sister-in-law, both, to me, of sweet and noble memory, leads me to hope that you will receive with interest this token of all the sentiments I possess for you, M. le Baron, and in which I beg you to believe me. Yours affectionately, THE PRINCES^ OP CANINO, Widow Bonaparte Lucien. 117. DUCHESS HELENE D'ORLEANS TO HUMBOLDT. TUILEEIES, Feb. 12 to, 1845. I WILL not longer hold the treasure intrusted to my keeping, which was a source of great joy to me. Receive once more my sincerest thanks for this communication, and let me hope soon to find new material for thanks. You see, selfishness is unpardonably predominant in my character. Your Excellency's affectionate 222 Humboldt's Letters. 118. DUCHESS HELENE D'ORLEANS TO HUMBOLDT. NEUILLY, May 12th, 1845. YOUR Excellency must suffer me often to claim your services ; but to-day I come to ask something great of you. I wish for myself and for my cousin of Weimar the instructive pleasure of visiting Versailles in your society ; our plan is to go there on Thursday. For the evening, the King invites you for dinner and theatre in Trianon. If you have the courage to share our altered pilgrimage, I invite your Excellency to be here in Neuilly, Thursday, half-past 11, to accompany us on our journey. But if other occupations should prevent you from going, I ask an open confession. I beg your Excellency to receive the expression of my sincerest esteem, HELENE. Humboldt's Letters. 223 119. DUCHESS HELENE D'ORLEANS TO HUMBOLDT. WlXTER OP 1845. I HAD not the satisfaction to bid adieu to your Excel- lency, and to repeat to you my thanks for your excellent work ; permit me to do it now in writing, whilst I send to you the lines for my beloved cousin, and receive once more the expression of the most heartfelt wish to greet again your Excellency, after a short interval, on French soil. With most sincere esteem, your Excellency's affec- tionate HELENE. ISO. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, April 22d, 1846. IT has afforded me a great relief being permitted to read before you, and while very much of the warm and 224 Humboldt's Letters. friendly praises expressed by you are of course to be ascribed to the kindness of heart which prompts you to give pleasure to an old man, still there is a large margin for the unalloyed gratification of my love of approbation. The main object of my efforts is that of composition in the precise sense of the word, the command of large masses of matter compounded with care and with an accurate knowledge of details. The management of our beautiful, pliant, harmonious, and drastic tongue is but a secondary consideration. I shall certainly find an opportunity of availing myself of your excellent advice for Flemming and Mad. de Sevigne. Seneca also, though I consider him a little bombastic (Quaest. natur.) I have taken home with me for perusal. Now for the special purpose of these lines. The King said to me on going to bed yesterday, "Let Bettina know that she may make her mind easy in regard to the leading person.* No one ever thought of giving him up to the Russians." " You should write her to that effect yourself," said I. " Yes, I hope to do so," was the answer. He spoke very kindly of Bettina. With my old attachment, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. "WEDNESDAY. How sad is this eighth attack upon the King ! Strange * Microslawski. Humboldt's Letters. 225 that ministers and cabinet councillors are never shot at ! Such events are the more unpleasant, the more the probabilities or improbabilities of their recurrence baffle all attempts at calculation. 131. HTJMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, May 18th, 1846. I SEND you, dear friend, to be added to your collec- tion, a very remarkable letter from Prince Metternich, with a semi-theological conclusion, full of mind and rhetorical fervor, with a slight dread of pantheism at the close of the letter. With unaltered friendship, yours, A. V. HUMBOLDT. 123. METTERNICH TO HUMBOLDT. (From the French.) VIENNA, May 10, 1846. MY DEAR BARON Inclosed is my vote.* I give it in good conscience, and absolve you from the crime of that * NOTE BY HUMBOLDT. The Prince voted for Mr. Hermann, of Leipzig. 10* 226 Humboldt's Letters. electioneering to which the world is addicted. The King and his Chancellor are the sound appreciates of scientific merit, and I know how to designate the place which belongs to me in the avenue of science, and which, to my great regret, is far from the sanctuary. What I have just told you, my dear Baron, is neither gasconade nor an excess of modesty ; it is the unvar- nished history of my life. You do not know this his- tory, and I will relate it to you in a few words. At the age at which life takes its direction, I con- tracted an inclination for the exact and natural sciences which I would permit myself to describe as irresistible, and a disgust for practical life which I would call uncon- querable, if I had not overcome both this disgust and this inclination. It is fate that disposes of individuals, and their qualities as well as their defects decide upon their careers. Fate has separated me from the object of my choice, and has thrust me upon the road I should not have chosen. Once started, I submitted without losing sight of the goal of my wishes, and the result was that what I should have wished to regard as the aim of my life has become only the solace of it. The King has set the mark of a learned man upon me. I know to whom this is to be attributed. If it is a question of the heart, the King is not mistaken. What you tell me of the forthcoming second volume of Cosmos, makes me look forward to the study of it Humboldt's Letters. 227 with impatience ; you are not to be read, you must be studied, and the place of a pupil suits me exactly. No one is more called upon than I am to do justice to your remark relative to the influence exercised by Christianity on the natural sciences,* as upon mankind in general and hence upon all science, for that remark has long since dawned upon my mind. It is oorrect in all respects, and its generating cause is simple as are all other truths, those which are, as well as those which are not understood, for the latter circumstance has no effect on the substance of a truth. Error leads to error, as truth is the guide to truth. As long as the mind remained in error in the sphere of thought which is the most elevated of all those attainable by the human mind, this deplorable state of things could not fail to react upon every quarter of the moral compass upon all intellectual and social questions, and to oppose to their development in the right direction, an insurmountable obstacle. The good news once told, the position could not but change. It was not by bestowing divine honor on effects that they could be traced to the fountain head of truth ; the investigation continued to be confined to the abstract speculations of the philosophers, and to the rhapsodies of poets. The cause once laid bare, the hearts * NOTE BY HUMBOLDT. I had spoken of the intensity of the love of nature. I had compared St. Basil with Bernardin de St. Pierre. A.HT. 228 Humboldt's Letters. of men were comforted, and their minds opened to con- viction. Nevertheless, the latter still remained for a long time shrouded in the mists of pagan scepticism, until at last scholastic philosophy was unhorsed by expe- rimental science. Do you admit the force of my reason- ing ? If you do, I have no doubt you will share my fears that true scientific progress is in danger of being checked by too ambitious spirits, who desire to rise from the effects to the cause, and who finding the approach cut off by the impassable barriers which God has set upon human intelligence, and finding themselves unable to advance, roll back upon themselves, and relapse into the stupidity of paganism, in seeking the cause in the effect ! The world, my dear Baron, is in a dangerous position. The social body is in fermentation. You would do me a great favor if you could teach me the nature of this fermentation, whether it is spirituous, acid, or putrid ? I greatly fear that the verdict will be for the last- named of these kinds, and it is not I who could teach you that these products are hardly beneficial. Be pleased to accept the thanks of my household for your friendly memento, and the assurance of the con- tinuance of my old attachment. METTEKNTCH. Humboldt's Letters. 229 123. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, May 30th, 1846. PERHAPS, my dear friend, it will not be without some interest to you to possess a copy of the poem of the Crown Prince of Bavaria. The language is less crude than that of Walhalla ; and some passages show a good deal of feeling, if but little poetical fervor. Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. SATUBDAY. 134. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, November 14^, 1846. WHAT a splendid reception, my dear friend, have you given the fifth volume of my brother ! Pardon me if, in the excessive bustle of the last few days upon the cold " historic hill," I have not written some commen- 230 Humboldt's Letters. datory remarks. I also deplore the omissions to which you are kind enough to make me attentive. Perhaps they could be supplied in the next volume. It was sup- posed that the letters must be printed in the form in which my brother had prepared them for publication, and in which they were offered for sale. I believe no nation on earth can produce an instance of such a life devoted exclusively to the increase of the wealth of ideas ! How inexpressibly I rejoice in the mere prospect of once more beholding a master-piece of your accurate, life-like, and withal delicate representations of social and diplomatic occurrences ! With unalterable attachment, Your grateful A. HUMBOLDT. While it was not entirely wise in a monarch who is great in history to have yielded, under the influence of the atmosphere of Versailles, to the temptation of off- setting the memory of the barricades with a spectacle a la Louis XIV., throwing great difficulties in the way of the successor, and attaining nothing of value, the conduct of Palmerston, and of Albert and Victoria, on the other hand, is likewise clumsily ill-mannered. Mean- time, the sober Americans are establishing a universal empire in the West, which already threatens the trade of China. Humboldt's Letters. 231 My MS. " On the Textile Fabrics of the Ancients," pp. 106 and 113, appears also to have been lost among the papers of the lamented Wolf. The effect of the religious music, particularly on p. 323, contains much that is finely expressed. In the year 1846 we find the following remark in Varnhagen's diary : " The conversation turned upon the capacity of one of the younger princes, which was declared to be inferior. Humboldt was of a different opinion. * I do not agree with you,' he said ; ' the young prince spoke to me the other day, finding me in waiting in the apartments of his mother, and asked, "Who are you?" "Humboldt is my name," said I. " And what are you ?" " A chamberlain to his Majesty the King." " Is that all ?" said the prince, curtly, turn- ing on his heel. Is not that a proof of intelligence ?' " 135. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, November 28th, 1846. I DO not answer to-day, my dear friend, in regard to your splendid Memoirs. How everything succeeds in 232 Humboldt's Letters. your hands ! To-day I recommend you an able French- man, M. Galuski, who knows Germany better than we do, the author of an essay on A. W. Schlegel. He will stay but a few days. Preserve the autograph of Barante.* A. v. HUMBOLDT. SATURDAY. ise. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, December 6th, 1846. THERE will be perhaps some delay, my dear friend, in your receiving the u Cinq jours de Berlin," in which I am spoken of by the Berliners (who are introduced as speaking themselves), as a tolerably pleasant tattler, but in which I am alluded to rather unkindly, as to my moral character. If all my speeches lack consistency, I apprehend for the durability of the system of the world, the Kosmos. Mr. Barriere will probably have called on you the sixth day, and you will have suggested all that to him. The paper contains some excellent things, Cracoviana, about the vote of Prussia and Mr. de Kanitz. * Barante introduced M. Galuski to Humboldt. Humboldt's Letters. 233 I send you for your autograph collection a flattering letter of Mignet, and a letter of mine, written in 1801, at Carthagena, in South America, at a turning point in my life, and addressed to " Citizen" Baudin, who, on board of the Perron, made a voyage round the world. This letter was written at a time when probably people in Europe had ceased to be addressed any more as " citizens." Baudin, instead of doubling Cape Horn, and receiving me at Lima, went round the Cape of Good Hope to Australia. Your old friend, A. v. HUMBOLDT. SUNDAY. I inclose an excellent letter of my brother to Koerner, which will be published in the sixth volume ; but you must return this copy. MIGNET TO HUMBOLDT. PARIS, July 1st, 1846. DEAR BARON, AND MOST ILLUSTRIOUS COLLEAGUE : You will easily understand how happy and flattered I was at hearing, that the book " Antonio Perez and 234 Humboldt's Letters. Philip IT." has interested you and obtained approval so distinguished as that of your King. The applause of a Prince, of so great genius and learning, who ranks among the most acute and most infallible of literary critics, could not be otherwise than of the greatest value to me. To make the book which was honored with this august approbation worthier of it, may I ask you, my dear and most illustrious colleague, to offer the work in the new form, more complefe and more elaborate, which I have just given to it, to your sovereign ? This is a respectful act of homage, which the King of Prussia, by the expression of his kind satisfaction, has encouraged me to render, and for which your goodness to me will obtain, I am very sure, a gracious reception. I take also the liberty of sending to you, for your own library, a copy of this new edition. Documents, hitherto unknown and very curious, which have enabled me to exhibit the designs of Don John of Austria, the murder of Escovedo, and the disgrace of Perez, in their true light, make the first edition imperfect. But I must hasten to speak of the first volume of Kosmos, which you sent me, and in which you have so admirably shown, if I may use one of your beautiful sentences, " the order of the universe and the magnifi- cence of the order." I read the book with the greatest pleasure and advantage. It is an exposition, full of the most absorbing grandeur, of the phenomena and laws Humboldt's Letters. 235 of the universe, from those nebulous distances whence light comes to us only after a journey of two millions of years, to the revolutions which preceded the actual organization of our planet, and which enabled men to be born, to live, and to reign on its surface. To paint this great picture in its teeming variety and majestic har- mony, one needs to be master, like yourself, of all sciences, to love nature earnestly, and to have studied her under every aspect. In addition he must unite a vivid imagination to an accurate and profound judgment. Finish quickly this charming work, for your own glory and for our instruction. Accept, dear Baron, the assurance of my gratitude, my admiration, and my affectionate devotion. MIGNET. 1J3S HUMBOLDT TO BAUDOT. CARTHAGENA, April 12, 1801. CITIZEN! WHEN I embraced you for the last time in Helvetius Street, in Paris, on the eve of my departure for Africa and the East Indies, I had but a feeble hope of seeing you again, and of sailing under your orders. You have 236 Humboldt's Letters. been told, no doubt, by our common friends, C. C. Jussieu, Desfontaines . . . how the Barbaresques have prevented my departure for Egypt, how the King of Spain has given me permission to journey over his vast domains in America and Asia, to gather whatever may be useful to science. Independently, and always at my own expense, my friend Bonpland and I have wandered for two years through the territories lying between the coast, the Orinoco, the Casiquian, the Rio Negro, and the Amazon. Our health has resisted the frightful risks cre- ated by the rivers. In the midst of the forests we have talked of you ; of our useless visits ; on C. Francois, of Neufchatel ; of our beguiled hopes. Just as we were starting from Havana for Mexico and the Philippines, the gratifying news reached us that your perseverance had overcome every obstacle. After making our calcu- lations, we felt sure that you would touch at Valparaiso, at Lima, or at Guayaquil. We changed our plans at once, and in spite of the stormy gales of this shore, we started in a little pilot boat to look for you in the South Sea, to try whether by reviving up our old plans, we could join our labors with yours, and sail with you on the South Sea. A long passage of twenty-one days from the Havana to Carthagena, unfortunately hindered us from taking the route of Panama and Guayaquil. We fear that the wind has ceased blowing in the South Sea, and we have decided to continue our journey on land by Humboldt's Letters. 237 the way of the River Magdalena, Santa Fe, Popajan, Quito. . . . I hope we shall arrive in June or early in July at the city of Quito, where I will wait for the news of your arrival at Lima. Have the kindness to write me a line, directed in Spanish, " al Sr. Baron de Humboldt, Quito ; casa del Sr. Governador Baron de Carondelet." In case I should hear nothing from you, my respected friend, I intend to visit Chimborasso, Losca, . . . till November, 1801, and to come down in December or January, 1802, with my instruments, to Lima. You will perceive from all this, my revered friend, that the heat of the tropics has not made me sluggish, and that I am afraid of no sacrifice where useful and bold enterprises are to be prosecuted. I have told you now frankly what I want from you. I know that I ask more from you than I can return ; it may also be that particular circumstances may prevent your taking us on board of your vessel. ... In that case, my letter may embarrass you, the more, perhaps, since you honor me with your friendship. I beg you, therefore, to write to me frankly. I shall always be glad to have seen you once more, and shall never com- plain of circumstances, which often govern us in spite of ourselves and our wishes. Your frankness will be the highest proof of your regard for me. I should then continue on my route from Lima to Acapulco, Mexico, the Philippines, Surato, Bassora, Palestine, Marseilles. 238 Humboldt's Letters. How much I should prefer, however, to make a voyage with you ! Mr. Bonpland presents you his respects. Greetings and unchangeable friendship, ALEXANDER HUMBOLDT. NOTE OP HUMBOLDT, WRITTEN LONG AFTER. This letter to Cap- tain Baudin, written on my arrival at Carthagena (from the Havana), was returned to me, Captain Baudin not having touched at Lima. A. HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, Nov. 1846. 139. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. SUNDAY, Feb. 21st, 1847. I DO not recollect showing you a very beautiful letter of my brother, on the death of Schiller, dated " Home, 1805." It was discovered but lately, and will be pub- lished in the next volume of his works. I inclose a very amiable letter from Prince Metternich, received this week, also a stiff and unmeaning one from Prince Albert. Prince Metternich has published, at his own cost, a splendid description of his mineralogical collec- tion at Koenigswarth, having probably in view his election to the Presidency of the new Academy instead of Kolowrat. At the special request of Prince Albert I Humboldt's Letters. 239 left a copy of Kosmos on his desk at Stolzenfels. He had the civility not to thank me. The " blackbird"* has improved his politeness in the present instance, and besides, he makes me talk of " roving oceans of light" and "sidereal terraces" a Coburg version of my text, quite English from Windsor, where terraces abound. In Kosmos I speak once of the " starry car- pet," page 159, in explaining the open spaces between the stars. He presents me a work upon "Mexican Monuments,'' a copy of which I myself had purchased two years ago. A splendid edition of Lord Byron would have been in better taste. It is also strange that he does not mention " Queen Victoria." Possibly my " Book of Nature" is not sufficiently Christian for her Majesty. You see that I am a severe critic of " princely epistles." Please return Metternich and Albert soon, as I have not yet replied to them ; also Wilhelm's letter at your leisure it is the only copy I have. I gave the original to Schlesier, who was very anxious to possess something from my brother's hand. With old attachment, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. * The Prussian order of " The Black Eagle," which had just then been conferred on Prince Albert. TR. 240 Humboldt's Letters. ISO. METTERNICH TO HUMBOLDT. VIENNA, February, 1847. MY DEAR BARON: I WILL begin this letter by congratulating you upon the new decoration, which the King has lately conferred upon you. The "Eagle," under whose wing sub umbra alarum you have executed so much will be a noble decoration on your breast. Suum cuique ! Now to what I wish to say further. You know, that I am no savan and that I have no pretension to be one ; but notwithstanding this, you know that I am the friend of science, and in that capacity have furnished the means to some savans of publishing the little work of which I enclose the first copy to you. I hope you will approve of its execution. I think I am at the present the owner of the most complete collection of monuments* now existing of an epoch of which I can- not pretend to fix the age and of which the "Gossau'* conceals countless numbers. History written by man * Petrifactions dug out in the Gossau, in Bohemia. Humboldt's Letters. 241 presents but an insignificant point when compared to that of which nature supplies the material. It was not I who christened one of the Ammonites after me it is the doing of the editors of the opuscule. I am, how- ever, quite sure that neither my name nor even that of Ammon was known when my godson was alive. Thousand sincere homages, my dear Baron, METTERNICH. 131. PRINCE ALBERT TO HUMBOLDT. WINDSOR CASTLE, February If &, 1847. MY DEAR BARON: I HAVE been constantly impressed while gradually reading the first volume of your "Kosmos" with my desire to thank you for the high intellectual enjoyment, its study has afforded me. I am really unable to give you an authoritative judg- ment on this excellent work, which I received from your hands, and to atone in some measure for this de- fect, as well as to give some substantial character to the expression of my thanks, I present you the accompany- ing work (Catherwood's Views in Central America). It may serve as an appendix to your own great work 11 242 Humboldt's Letters. on Spanish America, and thus become worthy of your attention. I do not dare to express the intense anxiety with which I look forward to the appearance of the second volume of " Kosmos." May that Heaven, whose roving oceans of light and sidereal terraces you have so ably described, be pleased to preserve you to your country, to the world, and to " Kosmos " itself, for many years, in undisturbed vigor of mind and body. This is the sincere wish of your Very devoted, ALBERT. 133. HUMBOLDT TO YAENHAGEN. BERLIN, February 21th, 1847. HERE, at last, is my thankful letter to Carriere, con- taining three warm recommendations. You were right in reprimanding me as to my extreme severity against the man of the " sidereal terraces." I am severe only to the mighty ones of the earth, and this man impressed me very uncomfortably at Stolzen- fels : " I know you feel great compassion for the Poles under the Russian sceptre ; but, I am sorry to say, the Poles, are as little deserving of our sympathy as the Irish." "Mini dixit ;" and one is the handsome hus- band of the Queen of Great Britain ! Humboldt's Letters. 243 I hasten to Potsdam to day, in order to bring all the manuscripts here, which have fortunately arrived from Erfurt. Madame von Buelow writes, that they contain a long and very beautiful passage about our Rahel, and flattering things for you. With old attachment, A. v. H. SATURDAY. isa HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BEBLIN, March 27ft, 1847. I AM more deserving than you would believe, dear friend ! I am through with the first volume of the " Letters"* (Therese's property). I had very little to correct, and only about four pages to suppress, viz. allusions to biscuits, household details, a few sarcasms against Duke Charles of Brunswick (which he would have answered with calumnies as to the lady's virtue), and more such things. The letters are excellent both in thought and expression. They furnish a picture of a most remarkable life. Their contempt of all worldly Wilhelm von Humboldt's " Letters to a Lady Friend" (Charlotte Diede), bequeathed to Thereae von Bacheracht. 244 Humboldt's Letters. happiness or unhappiness beyond the narrow circle of one's own feelings, this mixture of scriptural and Chris- tian dogmas, of stoical indifference to the affairs, of the world, together with so much delicacy and gentleness in a correspondence, continued to the four last days of a life, and written by a trembling hand on ruled paper. The torments of love-sickness, gui rtimpatientent, are left untouched, in order not to lessen the impression of that powerful individuality. I repeat, all that I struck out amounts to only five or six lines all that 1 suppressed as dull or trivial, would not fill two printed pages. You will, however, see much, very much, in the manu- script stricken out, thus -^, sometimes half pages ; this is, however, not mine but the old lady's doing. This " Daughter of the Pastor of Taubenheim "* had, perhaps, hysterical fits of prudery now and then. The different ink shows that I am a stranger to these obliterations. The first volume has a beautiful passage on Therese, and says much in praise of the King of Bavaria. In the second volume a description of Rahel will please you. Of Bettina she speaks less approvingly, as Madame von Buelow told me. I shall try to modify it in this respect. I think the first volume will be ready for delivery next Tuesday, and the second will soon follow. I shall bring * A most sentimental and tragically- ending German love story made popular by Burger's ballad. TB. Humboldt's Letters. 245 it myself, together with notes and facsimiles, all locked in a tin box, which must be shortened. Then you will be in possession of the whole treasure, and I " salvavi animam meam.'' The thing will create much provok- ing but salutary scandal, and will elicit much conflicting criticism. With sincerest friendship, yours, A. v. HT. Please don't let the book be printed at Berlin, and have it (if possible) advertised before it is in the trade. My letters to Carriere will have duly reached you, I hope? On the 30th March, 1847, Varnhagen wrote in his diary : " Just when I returned home, Humboldt came in and brought a pack of manuscripts the letters of his brother to Mrs. Diede. Humboldt regards affairs here as desperate, as I do myself. He consoles himself with the belief that the constitution presented, though good for nothing at first, may result beneficially. He expects vio- lence of every description atrocities committed by the police, popular rage, and military strokes. The King, however, Humboldt thinks, has no misgivings. He is in high spirits, having prepared his opening speech, and no longer minds the llth of April, and its consequences. He never yet talked with Humboldt on constitutional affairs. As to Michelet, Eichhorn has instigated the King 246 Humboldt's Letters. very much ; but after all they will not find a reason to dismiss him, although the King would like very much to do it, and the Minister urges him on to it." On the 31st March Varnhagen adds : " Humboldt told me but yesterday that the King was firmly believing the restoration of Don Miguel, Don Carlos, the overthrow of the July dynasty, and that he would yet go to Paris, to salute the legitimate king. Also, that he, Humboldt, was deemed a Jacobin, who carried the tri-colored standard in his breeches pocket. As for myself, I was considered a royalist, but the King had prejudices against me. They think it strange that my old friend Canitz should not have enlightened the King on my behalf; that they did not ask my advice, and avail themselves of my services in the present situation. Witt- genstein also has talked in this manner with Humboldt. They forget only one thing : that I neither can nor will the one and the other, with equal determination. The nobility is terribly excited ; the change is remark- able ; self-esteem is mightily roused. The devil him- self could not have invented more efficacious ways of provoking the hostility of this whole class than this monstrous " Herrenstand." A. Dream. I saw the King weeping bitterly, and crying : so far it has come. Well, I will resign ! May my brother take charge of the whole, and be happier than I was ! Humboldt's Letters. 247 March 27th, 1847, Varnhagen wrote the following repartee of Humboldt in his diary: "Humboldt re- cited, good-humoredly, that a certttin Mr. Massow, in the Assembly, had characterized liberalism as a felony. He, Humboldt, was therefore a twofold felon, as Minis- ter Bodelschwingh considered literary men felonious." On the llth July, 1847, Varnhagen observes: "This morning Humboldt came in quite unexpectedly. He is in good health and spirits, and denies having been really sick. He says that the King lives in a whirlpool of pleasure, that he is often extravagantly gay ; thinks no longer of the Chamber, except when reminded of it, when he becomes immediately grave and sullen. The ministers, however, are full of anger Savigny and Eichhorn particularly so. Foremost, however, is Bodel- schwingh, who is always exciting the King to strong measures. Canitz acts this time in a conciliatory and compromising spirit. Bodelschwingh cannot bear being deprived of the imaginary triumph of his visionary premiership by the Chambers. Humboldt is engaged on the final sheets of his second volume. He is going to Paris next September. 248 Humboldt's Letters. 134:. BERLIN, Jan. 18th, 1849. IP I appear slow, my dear Varnhagen, and rather laconic to-day in offering you my thanks for your friendly presents and your letter, and your congratula- tions, you will not ascribe it to a diminution of my true esteem and friendship. I have had but now the enjoy- ment of what you alone are entitled to call " A Plain Discourse.''* How much more fearful, and at the same time hopeful, a turn events have taken. They only know how to oppose brute force to the impending danger, and are afraid themselves to pluck the proffered fruit. Romuald's u Vocation"! deserves, no doubt, the severest censure. What an abuse of his most eminent talents ! We will talk about it as soon as I shall have done with the " OrdenstagJ" and the annoyances of the * A pamphlet under that title, written by Yarnhagen, in commen- dation of the King. 2V. f Romuald ou la Vocation, par Mr. de Custine. Paris, 1848. 4 vols. \ The day on which the Prussian government yearly distributes orders and decorations. 2V. Huinboldt's Letters. 249 Academy elections of my order. La petite piece side by side with the great world's drama. With the old attachment, Yours, A. v. HT. There never was nobler praise bestowed on the King than in " The Plain Discourse." The little work, " Plain Discourse to the Germans on the Duties of the Day. Berlin, 1848," is from the pen of Varnhagen. A few months later, on the 10th of May, 1849, the author himself thus speaks of it in his diary: " I have been re-reading what I wrote in August last on Frederick William IV., and what I wrote in 1840, the day after he received the homage of his subjects. What strange sensations it provokes ! Do what I will, awake or asleep, I cannot for a moment shake off the night- mare of consciousness of our political condition, although I know full well how ephemeral it is, how certain the retribution, and how bright the ultimate future. Arouse then, my country, arouse ! Civil war is thy fate, but it is not thy choice. Go on thy way undaunted, and be the blood on the head of those who willed it not other- wise. At a time like this it is not the successes but the failures of the moment that are of profit to the people." This is the place to interpose another visit from Hum- boldt to Varnhagen. On the 12th of February, 1849, 250 Humboldt's Letters. the latter wrote in his diary : " Humboldt called. He thinks it absurd in the ministers to talk of meeting the Chambers, when they cannot find men to make up their own number. Even Kuehl wetter disdains to join them. My opinion that the constitution imposed by the govern- ment is merely a husk concealing the germ of a new revolution, which will shortly burst forth, startled him a little ; but he was much pleased with the notion that the King has been embroiled with the canon of logic for the last eight years past. He says the King was disposed to return to Canitz as Minister of Foreign Affairs ! Eich- horn also vouchsafes his advice, and, like the lady of Privy Counsellor , talks of the Pietists as if he had never belonged to them. " The ' Staats Anzeiger' publishes the Austrian note in regard to the German question. Austria will not withdraw, but will have a voice in the counsels of the empire, and will not tolerate a variety of things, such as popular sovereignty, or any leadership except its own. A fling at Prussia, a fling at Frankfort, and particularly at Gagern. There it is ! Everything plays into the hands of the revolution I" Humboldt's Letters. 251 135. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, August 16th, 1849. WHENEVER I enjoy the fancy of having written a few lines grateful to my ears, I always ask myself whether they would also please you, my valued friend. You know, or rather you do not know, that the Princess of Prussia has deposited a splendid album, with numerous autographs and painted initials, in those halls of the Chateau at Weimar which have been dedicated to Goethe, Schiller, and to Herder and Wieland, maligned by Schiller hi his letters to Koerner. I have been com- pelled to write a preface, which Galuski has translated quite happily. The Grand-Duchess desired a French version for the benefit of foreign travellers who might open the album. Look upon this little memento of your friend with indulgence. There is blood on the horizon, and it makes me sad. I need not remind you of the friendship and esteem of Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. SUNDAY. 252 Humboldt's Letters. ise. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, October 15th, 1849. I HOPE, my dear friend, that my " Views of Nature," enlarged, and, for two-thirds of it, almost re-written, are at last in your hands ! It was owing to an unfor- tunate confusion, occasioned by my long absence from Berlin, that this my favorite work was so long in reach- ing my favorite reader. Perhaps you will derive a brief pleasure from contrasting the picture of the nocturnal din of the words with that of the stillness of high noon vol. i., pp. 333 and 337 ; or from glancing at the golden visions of young Astorpileo, vol. ii., 352. In love and friendship, yours, In haste. A. v; HUMBOLDT. Increase your collection of autographs by a very agreeable letter from the man who now lives in Brussels. The phrase " votre fortune morale " is used with great freedom. But the newspaper, all disfigured with blood- stains ! What a. year, in which all the feelings of the heart run wild ! Humboldt's Letters. 253 137. METTERN1CH TO HUMBOLDT. (FBOM THE FBENCH.) RICHMOND, Sep. 17ft, 1849. MY DEAR BARON: I SEE by to-day's papers that the 9th of September, 1769, gave you to the world, and that thus you have just celebrated your eightieth birth-day. Had I been near you I would have joined your friends in offering my good wishes ; at the distance which separates us, I approach you alone. Let me say in a few words that I render thanks to the giver of the faculties which have rendered your name imperishable. To be born is of little account ; to make life valuable is excellent. You are numbered among the richest, and you have made a noble use of your moral fortune. May God preserve you in safety and in health ! Receive, my dear Baron, with the expression of a congratulation of which you do not doubt the sincerity, that of my sentiments of devotion and friendship, of a date as ancient as all that has a place between us ! METTERNICH. 254 Humboldt's Letters. 138. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, October 29tfi, 1849. MY DEAR FRIEND: A GERMAN letter of the Duchess of Orleans, to whom I have sent all my writings for many years, and who is very fond of them. She writes a hand so cabalistic to my eyes, that I beg to avail myself of your diplomatic experience in decyphering, and to be favored with a legible copy. The purport appears to be of a political nature. It will not be without interest for you, and on this account I appeal all the more confidently to your good-nature. Your faithful friend, A. HUMBOLDT. 139. HELEN, DUCHESS OF ORLEANS, TO HUMBOLDT. YOUR Excellency will accept my most heartfelt thanks for the token of the remembrance, so valued by me, Humboldt's Letters. 255 which you devote to the hours we passed in times but recently gone by, which the course of events, however, seems already to have thrust back into antediluvian periods. I see with joyous gratitude that the conversations in my red saloon in the Tuileries and in St. Cloud, ever present to myself, still live in your recollection also, and thank your Excellency for this constancy of sentiments, doubly precious at a time like this. The kindness of my beloved cousin had already ena- bled me to refresh myself by the perusal of your latest work, which is hailed as a fountain of health by so many hearts smitten by the rude hand of fate, and minds stunned by the wild confusion of public events ; and my son has also found nourishment in it to assuage his thirst of knowledge. Nevertheless, I thank you most cordially for the jewel you have sent, which receives additional value from being accompanied by your letter. As you say, in words so mild and yet so truly appro- priate, " Men are at present laboring at a fable con- venue ; they strive in part after what is unattainable, and in which they themselves do not believe !" But where will the light appear that is to lead them to the truth, and what events will yet be required to convince them of the impracticability of the most contradictory demands? I agree with your Excellency in thinking that the present tranquillity is destined to be of brief 256 Humboldt's Letters. duration. I also do not see in it any real pacification, but only the apathy and indifference which enervates without convincing. Who can fathom the future? The riddle of the coming day remains concealed how much more must we await in patience the developments of coming years ? But courage and resignation must not be impaired by this uncertainty ; on the contrary, our hearts should be steeled by it. During my visit in England, the King asked many questions in regard to the health of your Excellency ; the Queen also received with great interest such reports as I could give her. They hold in grateful remem- brance your frequent visits in Paris. My children ask to be commended to your recollection, and I also hope to revive in it from time to tune. With heartfelt reverence and gratitude, your Excel- lency's friend and admirer, HELEN. EISENACH, Oct. 23, 1849. 140. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, October 31s*, 1849. A THOUSAND, thousand thanks for the interpretation, my dear friend. How the political tempests have Humboldt's Letters. 257 ravaged even this handwriting, once so fine, or, at least, so distinct. The "beloved courier" I read "beloved cousin," the Princess of Prussia, who first showed the Duchess the latest *' Views." A little address delivered by me before the delegates from this city, in which I referred to the views of my brother, a Potsdamer by birth, on a political life which develops itself freely from within, has been printed by the " Spikersche Zeitung," with numerous typographi- cal errors. Inclosed is my own report, written imme- diately after delivery. I would have been pleased if the answer had been correctly given in the Constitu- tional and other truly liberal papers. With my old devotion and friendship, Yours, A.HT. WEDNESDAY NIGHT. (iXCLOSUBE.) I cannot, fellow-citizens, more vividly express the profound gratitude I entertain, than by saying, that you have given me as great a pleasure as you have bestowed an unexpected honor. A pleasure such as this shall not be dashed by the question how I can possibly deserve this distinction at the hands of your beautiful city. You 258 Humboldt's Letters. have worthily shown, not only that you value her material prosperity, but that you are alive to higher interests, and accord sympathy and respect to efforts directed to the advancement of knowledge, the educa- tion of the people, and the general culture of mankind. As a reward for a portion of these efforts, to which my long and chequered life has been devoted, I accept with pride your flattering gift. By the favor of two illustri- ous monarchs it has been my privilege, for twenty- two years, with but little interruption, to live as your townsman, and to find, in scenery beautiful by nature and art, those inspirations indispensable to a life-like portraiture of nature, which aims to display the workings of the powers of the universe. Grateful for this good fortune, I have adorned almost all my later writings with the historic name which has become dear to me, and in the walls of which the year 1767 witnessed the birth of my brother, whose memory lives in the hearts of those who have preserved a sense of the enlarged proportions of a political life which pro- gresses in obedience to laws inherent hi the constitution of society. A. v. HUMBOLDT. On receipt of the Honorary Citizenship of Potsdam. Humboldt's Letters. 259 HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, November 4fh, 1849. WHAT pleasure you have given me, dear friend, by so agreeable a communication from England! But on account of my brother's memory, and in order to reply to those who calumniate me for remaining at this court, I am very anxious to see my response to the deputies of Potsdam correctly printed in a liberal journal. I would like to send it to the " Constitutionelle Zeitung," which has not yet mentioned the subject. I have no copy, however nothing but the bit of paper I sent you. Have the goodness to send it back to me soon. How important is the news from Paris ! The forward one may attain the consulate for life (to which the words duree et stdbilite. seem to refer) ; but he will fall, nevertheless, and awake the sleeping lion. Liberty will lose nothing by it, and the German statesmen (are there any such besides Herr von Gagern ?) will then understand, that in the centre of Europe is the France of 1789, the same, about the nullity of which so many sar- casms have been uttered. The centres of gravity change. With cordial friendship, yours, A. HT. SUNDAY. 26o Humboldt's Letters. 143. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, March 19th, 1850. ACCEPT, my dear friend, my heartfelt thanks for the lines you gave M. Rio, whose praises had already been sung to me by Cornelius, Olfers, Radowitz, and the King himself, on account of the book, "De 1'Art Chretien." The new incarnation of a deputy to the Erfurt Parliament, and his supervision in the interest of the Prince President, was unexpected ; but Rafael him- self was a good deal of a mannerist. Very truly, and in some suspense, Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. TUESDAY. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, July 2d, 1850. IN the gloomy period of reaction, I am delighted to receive so pleasing a memento at your hand, my dear Humboldt's Letters. 261 friend. I ain also glad of your journey to Kiel, to the little region where German spirit finds an expression free and consistent. The state of public affairs is like the water-bottle shaken by D'Alembert, in order to produce a mixture of bubbles of different shapes. " Calculez moi cela," he said, in irony of hydraulic science, of which he was himself so great a professor. Many a bubble will burst before the diplomatists find time to calculate its evanescent figure. I shall render my heartfelt thanks to Herr von Froloff. I made a futile effort to dissuade him from inserting a mass of explanations and metaphors, in- tended to facilitate comprehension. He wished to accomplish what is absolutely impossible, and seemed to have but little understanding of the form of compo- sition. I shall say nothing more to him about all that. Hybrids are never successful in literature. I was extremely unwell, confined to my bed even ; but now, in spite of the dispersion of all matters of interest, I am well, industrious, and not cheerful. In friendship as of old, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. 262 Humboldt's Letters. 144. HUMBOLDT TO BETTINA TON ARNIM. (Copy in Yarnhagen's Handwriting.) BERLIN, June nth, 1851. You could not doubt, dear lady Baroness, that I would respond with the greatest warmth to your wishes for a composer of such sterling merit as * * * * In consequence of malignant prejudices against music, originated by my brother, and transmitted through the King to me, my voice upon a subject which no one ever mentions to me, is somewhat lacking in tone, particularly when church music is in question. What with Warsaw, Olmuetz, Russian Grand Dukes, and, to name something of a higher order, Rauch's inspiring master-piece, it was impossible hitherto to obtain a hearing. Warsaw is now succeeded by Hanover, by the visit to your royal friend and mine. I have not yet seen our monarch at Potsdam again, and surrounded by all the horrors of a cosmic transmigration, shall wait for the returning tide from Warsaw (the alluvium of Batavian and Mecklen- burgh highnesses), and when the rock-bound seas are calm again, I shall go to work systematically, as your Humboldt's Letters. 263 cheerful and genial letter inspires me. But at this gloomy period everything oral is unheard, and what is written is scarcely noticed. The latter, however, is an insuperable necessity. In order, then, to accomplish so attainable a purpose, a very brief writing addressed im- mediately to the King, will be required, to be delivered by me with a warm recommendation. Our excellent friend asks the King for a trifling assistance in point of funds, to enable him to travel to Munich. The state- ment of a specific amount is not necessary, but it will simplify the matter. The man's delicate sense of honor will not be offended by my suggestion, as the request is made not for himself, but for a noble service to the cause of art. With all devotion and grateful reverence, your most faithful and obedient A. V. HUMBOLDT. 145. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEff. POTTSDAM, November 1st, 1851. You have given me an inexpressible pleasure, my dear, my noble friend, by your kind letter. I am 264 Humboldt's Letters. heavily in your debt, and my long silence and apparent neglect might have provoked some suspicions of cool- ness or diversity on matters of opinion. With a man of your mind and goodness of heart I ought to have entertained no such apprehensions. Before I received your dear letter with Baader's portrait, it was my inten- tion to bring you personally the third volume of Kosmos (two parts in one), now finished with great difficulty, and which unfortunately is exclusively astronomical. I was certain of a kind reception, and your letter of the 24th of October, which had been left behind in my house at Berlin, confirmed my purpose. Ottilie von Goethe gives me cheering news in regard to your health. As usual you will combat her opinion. But what astonished me was, that the president of the council, usually cold as a glacier, was delighted with Ottilie, and is entirely disposed to gratify her wish for the appoint- ment of Wolfgang, at the Prussian embassy at Rome. Was it necessary, however, for Wolfgang, after publish- ing a very able little work on Nature and Legislation, to go to press with a collection of poems, containing but rare gleams of imagination ? Written with the devotion of better days, in a time of gloom and feebleness, by A. v. HUMBOLDT. On the 24th of November, 1851, Varnhagen wrote Humboldt's Letters. 265 in his diary: "Backbiters are busy with Humboldt. Littleness and mediocrity, conscious of their nothing- ness beside him, combine their envy and spite, and thereby hope to be something. The one comes to the other with smiles, and makes him the confidant of the dislike he entertains, and of the foibles and defects he claims to have detected. The other welcomes the sug- gestion, responds with similar remarks, they clasp each other's hands, and are fast friends in enmity of the hero. Those who pretend to be the most faithful lend them- selves to such intrigues. Singly they amount to nothing, but when lumped together they constitute a stumbling- block, which obstructs the light of day, interferes with what is good, and destroys life and spirits : such vermin tormented Goethe, and now they torment Humboldt. I know these fellows by experience ; in Rahel's time I have seen my fill of it ! The brothers, the nieces, how glad they would be to make common cause with the most inferior beings, to place their united mediocrity above the genial power of heart and mind, by which even they were yet constantly lighted and warmed ! Humboldt's weak points are well known, he does nothing in secret, men see him as he is ; but his great- ness is unimpaired, the greatness of his mind and the equal greatness of his heart. And eighty years what a bulwark ! Who will dare assail it ? 12 266 Humboldt's Letters. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEK. BERLIN, January 28*A, 1852. HERE is my Cosmic present, my dear friend ! I choose not to bring it myself lest it should seem that I dare not come without it. Cast a look at p. 1 25, Mars p. 511, and the concluding passage p. 625 631. I may call to-morrow, Thursday, at one o'clock, may I not ? I shall be sure to come. With the old attachment, which will never grow cold, A. v. HUMBOLDT. WEDNESDAY. With two yellow pamphlets, to his friend of many years, Varnhagen von Ense, with old admiration and attachment. The author. On the 29th January, 1852, Varnhagen's journal reads as follows: "Humboldt came at one o'clock, wonder- fully robust for his time of life ! Speaks with indignant scorn of the coup &etat in France, the undisguised out- rage, the arbitrary banishments, and particularly the robbery of the estates of the Orleans family. The King Humboldt's Letters. 267 was at first full of rejoicing, he and the court saw nothing offensive in the crime committed against the people, the legislature, the law, and the sanctity of oaths, but that the adventurer preserves universal suffrage, rests upon the people, practises socialism, and even wants to be emperor ; this is what makes him detested ! Humboldt is of opinion that in the revolu- tion of February the establishment of the Provisional Government, which was immediately obeyed throughout France, was a piece of even greater audacity than the present usurpation of the one man who has already been president, and worn the name of government for three years. I reminded him of the parliament, and the com- mittee of fifty at Frankfort-on-the-Main. In the dispo- sition to acquiesce, he sees that national feeling of unity and cohesion which, among Frenchmen, suppresses all party feeling. Humboldt says there is no doubt that Louis Bonaparte is a son of Admiral Verhuel, and his brother, Morny, a son of General Flahault, who, he says, lived with both the sisters, the Queen of Holland and the Queen of Naples. Of Persigny Fialin de Persigny he speaks with the utmost contempt, calling him a raw, unkempt non-commissioned ofiicer, who still arrogates to himself discoveries about the pyramids. Passing on to our own affairs, he deplored the narrowness, the pitiful character of our ministry ; he considers Raumer the most stupid of them all, stupid and unmannerly 268 Humboldt's Letters. both ; the King is cross and peevish, capricious, and prone to excuse himself by saying that he is powerless, and must be governed by his ministers. On the 30th of January, 1852, Yarnhagen adds: " Humboldt takes a lively interest in the widow of the philologist F. ; her husband has done much work for him. At Humboldt's urgent advice, she has petitioned the King for a pension, and Humboldt and Boekh were to support the petition by their signatures. But F. was a democrat, not an active, but an avowed one, and the King might have heard of it. To neutralize this, Hum- boldt proposed to request Stahl to join in countersign- ing the petition. His own name can now accomplish nothing with the King ! On what days have we fallen, when Humboldt asks Stahl to give him countenance 1" 147. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, Feb. 5th, 1852. I BELIEVE, my dear friend, that the letter I have just received, will greatly confirm your ideas about Paris. Galuski, the translator of the second volume of Kosmos, is a man of noble instincts, great talents, and much Humboldt's Letters. 269 philological learning, but very moderate in his love of liberty. What he says of his first impression, is a pretty impudent expression of this moderation. He also was seized with a marvellous dread of coming events. My opinion has always been that the wildest republic cannot do so much and such enduring harm to the intellectual progress of mankind, and to their con- sciousness of right and honor, as le regime de mon oncle, le despotisme eclaire^ dogmatique, mitteux, which applies all the arts of civilization to subject a people to the caprices of an individual. Read, to increase your abhorrence of such degradation, which threatens to spread like a pestilence, in the " Journal des Debats" of this morning (February 3d), the reasons for drawing up a list of recommendations of those who might be elected (according to the " Constitutional)." The " Spenersche Zeitung " of yesterday did not fail to follow suit with a communication in favor of a similar set of proposals for our second chamber ! I hope soon to procure for you the Histoire de 1'Aca- demie (by Bartholmess). I have made many vain efforts to advance the interests of Professor F.'s widow. Your most attached, A. HUMBOLDT. 270 Humboldt's Letters. SUPPLEMENT. " Spenersche Zeitung," of 1852, Feb. 4, No. 29. The transactions in reference to the formation of the second Chamber have repeatedly been the subject of our com- munications. It is perhaps not equally well known, that at this moment the attention of higher circles is also directed to the formation of the Second Chamber. The present electoral law presents the right of suffrage as one to be exercised or not at the option of the voter, without a corresponding obligation on his part. A law compelling men to vote would seem to be equally inex- pedient and impracticable. But by refraining from voting in any number, the voters repose the decision of the question in the hands of an unknown minority, who, by exercising their privilege, frequently bring about a state of things by which representation is given, not to the political views of the constituency, but to their very opposite. The principles had in view in fixing the reconstruction of the First Chamber, have, by force of logical inference, led to the proposals to alter the elec- toral law for the Second Chamber in this manner, that His Majesty, the Ring, shall appoint in each district, long before the election, a government candidate, who shall be the representative, unless the majority of the voters should at the election record their preference for another. The specific arguments in support of such a plan will appear to-morrow in connexion with its details. Humboldt's Letters. 271 148. HUMBOLDT TO VAKNHAGEN. BERLIN, February 12th, 1852. IT may interest you, dear friend, to see collected on one sheet all the efforts making by the Orleans dynasty to counteract the robbery. The Duchess of Orleans sends the paper by the Princess of Prussia. Are you acquainted with a candidate for theological honors, named William S., of Dresden, disguised under the name of Wilfried von der Neun, who torments me by sending aphorisms in manuscript ? Yours, A. v. HT. Be kind enough to return the enclosed at your early convenience. 149. HTTMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, March 23d, 1852. ONE of the many inconveniences of old age is that of liability to attempts at conversion. Do you care to 272 Humboldt's Letters. deposit this curious, good-natured letter among your psychological curiosities ? (The man who is entirely con- vinced of Bernadotte's salvation, circuitously informs me that Satan wields the baton of command in my heart, as in that of Goethe, that of the pious Kant, and that of Wieland.) And our parliament ! ! If necessary the cities must be expunged from the face of the earth such is the desire of our diplomatist at the Diet. With heartfelt attachment, Yours, A. HT. TUESDAY, late at uight. The enclosed letter from August. Grau, of Mont- gomery County, Ohio, dated February 6, 1852, contains the following : " A gentleman who has travelled over a large portion of the earth, who, by the publication of so many excellent writings, has erected for himself so durable and so resplendent a monument on the field of literature and science, is not to be named by any German without the greatest esteem. When the names of great warriors who have spilt the blood of their fellow-men upon the battle-field shall be forgotten, your name will blaze for hundreds and thousands of years in the annals of history. But it is singular, at the same time, that the greatest natu- ralists, philosophers, and astronomers who have occu- Humboldt's Letters. 273 pied the principal portion of their lives with new inventions, and with investigations into the elementary powers of nature, are often totally indifferent to their salvation or perdition in the world to come. Goethe, Schiller, Wieland, and Kant, were all distinguished characters and brilliant ideals, and in their walk and conversation were more or less observant of what are called the laws of morality, so as probably to abstain from cards, nine-pins, playhouses, and dancing, but their sphere of operations did not reach into eternity, and the fate of their fellow-men in the other world their salvation was of little interest to them." After launch- ing into further sanctified regrets at the scarcity of true godliness, and its absence even in princes and royal chaplains, the writer continues : " The last King of Prussia, and his truly royal Louise, had some know- ledge of a state of regeneration, as well as the last King of Sweden, the former French Marshal Bernadotte, Prince of Ponte Corvo. A poor peasant was better able to enlighten him on the means of salvation than one of the first bishops of the Lutheran church. O, Sir Privy Councillor, while I do full justice to your unble- mished life, your high character as a statesman, and your acquirements as a man of science; and while I rejoice that Berlin ay, that Prussia may boast of such a man as your Excellency, yet my joy would turn into holy exultation if I should have the honor of seeing 12* 274 Humboldt's Letters. you a warm disciple of Him who died upon Golgotha, Without Him, Lord Chamberlain, with all our acquire- ments, with all our boasted knowledge, we are singu- larly unhappy." Further on, the letter reads : " Goethe says, on a certain occasion, that during the whole course of his long life he had not spent four happy weeks. These are the words of a great man of science. If Christ has not taken up his residence in our hearts, who else can be there but Satan ? One of them, surely, must be there one must wield the baton of command. It is manifestly impossible at one and the same time to serve two masters! Worthy sir, my gracious Lord Chamberlain, I am penetrated with great esteem for you and your lofty merits ; I love and revere you. I am not worthy to unlace your shoes. This is the unconstrained language of my heart ; although I have occupied myself with acquiring the elements of seventeen different languages, and can even at this day read the writings of the New Testament in seven different tongues. But I have not only been firmly convinced of the truth of the Christian religion for thirty-one years, but experience the influence of the Holy Ghost from day to day, and almost from hour to hour." The letter is subscribed, " Your Grace's most devoted servant and brother in Christ, Augustus Grau." Hum- boldt adds the remark : " An attempt at conversion, from the State of Ohio." Humboldtfs Letters. 275 ISO. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEX. BERLIN, March 13^ 1853. THE confusion of my lonely life, my dear friend of many years, at a time of such profound moral degrada- tion, leaves me in a harassing uncertainty as to whether I have or have not sent you the seventh volume of my brother's complete works. I am greatly ashamed, but I know that you have not yet learned to be angry with me. The article against Capodistrias, the demand for the surrender of Strasburg, sounds like the irony of fate upon our present humility With ancient love and reverence, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. The death of Leopold von Buch bows me deeply. A happy blending of the most noble, philanthropic senti- ments, momentary impulses, and a little despotism of opinion ; one of the few men who have a physiognomy. He has given a new form to his science ; he was one of the greatest illustrations of our times ; our friendship has endured sixty-three years, unruffled, although we often tilled the same field. I found him, in Freiberg, in 1791, where he had come to the Mining Academy before myself, although five years younger. His funeral 276 Humboldt's Letters. appeared like a prelude to my own, C'est comme cela que je serai dimanche. And in what a condition do I leave the world I who lived in 1789? But centuries are as seconds in the mighty development of advancing humanity. The swelling curve, however, has its little indentations, and it is irksome to be found in such an interval of decadence. 151. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, March 14th, 1853. HEAETY thanks for the comfort derived from the characteristic word of Fontenelle's, hitherto unknown to me but twenty years are too short to see anything better! Tour Buelow von Dennewitz is great and good news to me ! The treasure of the warm-blooded Leopold von Buch I return inclosed. May not Fried- rich Schlegel's astronomical vision be connected with conversations I had with him at Vienna on the certainty that we shall see the southern cross rise again in Ger- many, where it has already shone in historic ages ? Let me remind you of a passage in my Kosmos (II. p. 333), which derives some interest for you from its reliable chronological date. "It was not more than 2900 years Humboldt's Letters. 277 before our era that the cross became invisible in North- ern Germany. The constellation had ascended as far as the tenth degree above the horizon. When it dis- appeared from the Baltic skies, the pyramid of Cheops had already stood five hundred years. The shepherd nation of the Hyksos invaded Egypt seven hundred years later. The past becomes apparently less remote when we can measure it by reference to memorable events." Persevere in your diligence upon Buelow von Denne- witz, who became very dear t.o me in Paris. Fond of music, he was very affable in the family of Lafayette, in the little chateau of Lagrange, at Paris Lafayette's country-seat, where Buelow was quartered. Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. I shall bring volume VI. myself. NOTE BY YARXHAGEX. As a comfort for his eighty years, I had written to Humboldt that even these could be transformed into a comparative youth, as appeared by Fontenelle's example, who, at the age of a hundred years, attempted to pick up a fan dropped by a lady and. unable to do it as quickly as he wished, exclaimed, " Que, n'ai je plus mes quatre vingt ans /' J Of Friedrich Schlegel I had told him, that shortly before his death, he prophesied to Tieck, at Dresden, that, at no very remote period, though he could not exactly define it, a mighty change would take place in the heavens, the great constel- lations would leave their places, and combine to form an immense cross. 278 Humboldt's Letters. 153. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, August 15th, 1853. SEPARATED from you, my dear intellectual friend, by the prolongation of my dreary sojourn at Potsdam, my first approach to you is to petition. You, you alone are my literary adviser, you who combine such depths of feeling with so wonderful a command of the harmonies of language. In my extreme old age, timidity in regard to my own powers increases in an almost morbid degree. A separate volume is to contain a selection of the sonnets of my brother, in which there is not always a perfect consonance between form and substance. I crave your permission to come to you to-morrow, Tues- day, at one o'clock, to read you a preface I have been compelled to write ! By all means send a verbal assent by the bearer. With indestructible friendship, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. Humboldt's Letters. 279 153. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, August 31**, 1853. FOB once in this gloomy time, when a fell simoom blows from the Pruth to the Tajo, I have had a real and a keen delight your return, your encouraging message, and even the assistance I implored. Your superb letter finds me at the bon d tirer of a little, I hope unpretending, preface to the sonnets. As it will be unfortunately impossible to-morrow (on Friday the King arrives at Potsdam, when I must hand him a good many things, according to promise), I take the liberty of sending you my proof sheets this evening. I beseech you to be severe in your treatment of these sheets, with which I have incorporated a remarkable fragment (in illustration of the ideas and frames of mind manifested in the " Letters to a Lady Friend") and to note on a separate piece of paper what I ought to alter, and especially what I ought to substitute. I follow you implicitly. I dislike the phrase on page 4, " Schoen errun gene Himmelsgabe."* Beautifully extorted gift of heaven. 280 Humboldt's Letters. The pious fragment is an autograph, nearly illegible, and requiring some emendation in the construction of the sentences ; thus on page 1 1 : Perhaps you prefer the phrase " bei Annerkenung." The phrase is heavy, even now. On p. 14 you will not disapprove of " eben nicht," in place of " haben nie gerade," which is still more verna- cular. The four lines stand there like a fallen aerolith. They must be preserved at all hazards, if only on account of their freedom. Could not you help out page 13 below somewhat? Is the close of the phrase "voice of conscience has laid" clear to you ? It is not so to me. Perhaps a few words would make the sense clear. Roma, the verses to me from Albano, and all the cho- ruses and Pindarus will form another volume. With old affection and profound esteem, Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. The saddest news of Arago's family ; swollen hands and feet, diabetes, and almost blindness ! Forty years of life go with him ! ! Humboldt's Letters. 281 154. HTTMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, September Id, 1853. A THOUSAND pardons for troubling you in suffer- ing! I have adopted every suggestion, taken every hint. But I should like also to insert the reflection you made in regard to p. 6. Would you approve of the following interpolation : " A long sojourn at Rome, and perhaps a lively interest in certain epochs of Italian poetry, appear to have imbued my brother with a par- ticular preference for a little lyric form, which, if melody is not to be sacrificed, closely fetters the thought, but which he handled with a freedom, the result of intention and confidence." Or would you have it, "which he freely handled with the confidence of a clear intention," or, " which he handled with a freedom of which he was perfectly conscious ?" " When the poet, urged by his realistic and individual peculiarity, felt most keenly the desire of welding ideas into the flood of sentiment." Be good enough to return me your MS., which is a treasure of critical research. Very thankfully, yours, HUMBOLDT. 282 Humboldt's Letters. NOTE BY YARNHAGEN. I selected "which he handled with a freedom of which he was perfectly conscious," as most in accordance with the metaphor of the fetters, and as otherwise clearly indicative of the idea intended to be conveyed. Varnhagen reports under date of September 9th, 1853, in his diary: " Humboldt had advised me of his coming ; he came about half-past one o'clock, and remained till half-past two o'clock, a mere visit, nothing of business; he felt the necessity of unburdening himself of many things. First he vented his bitter and indig- nant scorn on the speeches of the King in Elbing and Hirschberg, and on the utter absence of vigor, which makes itself known in such disconnected ebullitions. Then he spoke with the utmost contempt of von Raumer, the Minister of Public Worship and Instruction, of his brutality and insolence, his hatred of all science, his pernicious activity. ' The King,' Humboldt said, * hates and despises all his ministers, but this one particularly, and speaks of him as of an ass ; What particularly nettles him is, that Raumer opposes all the King's wishes, and he keeps him in office nevertheless, as he keeps all of them, because he has them, and every change is a troublesome affair.' The case of the brothers Schlagin- tweit was cited as an instance. The King wished to aid them in their voyage to the Himalaya Mountains ; the minister refused ; the King ordered him to hear the opinion of Humboldt, which was a most favorable one, Humboldt's Letters. 283 but Raumer insisted upon his opinion, which, he said, was not changed by Humboldt. Then the King, who confessed himself to be powerless against his minister, wrote to Bunseu, who took the matter in hand, and the brothers Schlagintweit now receive English aid. And the very same King, who pretends to be so jealous of his prerogatives, permits them to be thus encroached upon ? ' Yes, sometimes he delights in playing the part of a constitutional monarch, absolves himself from all responsibility when the matter is a delicate one, answers demands made upon him by adverting to the difficulty of obtaining the signatures of his ministers, and even pretends to regard that "baggage, the state" as something with which he had little concern, accuses the ministers of forgetting him in their devotion to that " baggage, the state," &c., <" o* s 302 Humboldt's Letters. lea HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEtf. BERLIN, July IMh, 1854. SUCH a rough " Hind Pomeranian !"* direct answer, dear friend, you could certainly not expect from me ! I have no idea of the question about the animation of pinewood at the King's table, where everybody believes in it as in the Persian host seen in the air at the Eichsfeld. The " drama" of the " Kreuz Zeitung," like everything emanating from this bad party, sick with mental poverty, bears the stamp of cowardly malice ! You are not to be pitied, for you possess a treasure in the power of animating recollections of the great period of 1813. I have always kept at a respectful distance from the Revue des Deux Mondes, which is edited with spirit and address. Two parties may hate the same thing without hating it from the same motives. The present Liberals there think themselves justified in barking, but not biting, after the fashion of the Berlin * The province of Pomerania is divided into " Vorpommern" Fore Pomerania, and " Hinterpommern" Hind Pomerania; i. e. Pomerania before and behind the Oder. Tr. Huinboldt's Letters. 303 muzzles, " because, without the rescuer* they would all have been drenched in blood." Credat Judceu* ApeUa! Your faithful, A. v. HUMBOLDT. Monday. At another funeral !f A workman, unknown to me, addressed me at the funeral of Benjamin Constant : " N'est-ce pas, mon bon Monsieur, vous n'avez rien de si beau en Prusse, mais ce sera bien plus beau quand nous enterrerons M. de la Fayette." HUMBOLDT TO VAKNHAGEff. BERLIN, July 29th, 1854. IN Spain, the virtuous rebels, like the virtuous order of St. John on the Wilhelmsplatz, have raised the cry of " Long live chastity !" " Viva el pudor" (Isabella) ! " Viva la moralidad" (disinterested Christina) ! But, will you, dear friend, think it possible (July, 1854!) that the Minister of Public Worship and Instruction, * Louis Napoleon. Tr. f Of M. Borsig, a machinist, a few days after that of Mad. Amalia Beer. The old man of eighty-five attended both of them. 304 Humboldt's Letters. though hitherto without success, is also shouting " Viva el pudor !" He has quite officially demanded a royal order for the imprisonment in the arsenal of the wanton group* which so wantonly disport themselves on the bridge ; all this without fear from the press, since the new press law, promulgated by the Diet at Frankfort, only resembles the ingenious Berlin muzzles, not yet exhibited in the Muenchen Crystal Palace, which prevent authors from biting only, but not from barking. The third cry, " Viva la libertad !" has succeeded in the Peninsula, after all, in spite of the disavowals of good society. Your faithful A. v. HUMBOLDT. AT NIGHT. 165. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, July 31s/, 1854. ALAS ! no ! I was in error thinking that the monu- ment for Weimar was definitely bought, only that the enlargement of it, desired by our excellent lady friend, was given up. In the circles with which I am acquainted * In marble. TV. Humboldt's Letters. 305 we cannot hope for an active participation. The expres- sion, " Is not art itself a vestment ?" is fine and felicitous. Most gratefully yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. Monday, waiting for the train to leave. In the United States there has, it is true, arisen a great love for me, but the whole there presents to my mind the sad spectacle of liberty reduced to a mere mechanism in the element of utility, exercising little ennobling or elevating influence upon mind and soul, which, after all, should be the ami of political liberty. Hence indifference on the subject of slavery. But the United States are a Cartesian vortex, carrying every- thing with them, grading everything to the level of monotony. lee. YARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, January 8ih, 1855. I HAVE to thank your Excellency most heartily that, in dispensing bounties, you always think with favor also of me ! Xo one shall surpass me in anxiety to receive, in estimation of the gift, and in gratitude for the noble donor ! This preface, at once temperate in form, rich in 306 Humboldt's Letters. substance, and elegiac in tone, is the worthiest and most lasting monument of the prince,* of whom I hear on every side accounts which make one mourn his loss in the prime of life. I shall try to procure his work which is so highly recommended by your Excellency. The gloomy cover of mist which veils the light of day, corresponds with the sentiments by which I at least feel myself weighed down. I have not succeeded in becoming cheerful for some days. With the warmest wishes for you, in faithful reve- rence and most grateful submission, immutably Your Excellency's most obedient, VAKNTHAGEN VON EJSTSE. 167. HUMBOLDT TO BERLIN, April 2Sth, 1855. REVERED FEIEND A strange missionary experiment, enveloped in a somewhat idyllic ghost story, political and religious, in a style of singular " finish" and bom- bast, which I cannot refrain from showing to you. I take it to be the work of a male author. The saturnalia of despotism and of flatteries, the wan- * Waldemar of Prussia, the traveller in India and Brazil. Tr. Humboldt's Letters. 307 ton festival of oblivion (as if there was no history of 1813 and '14) > is now played out among the free insular people, a kind of monkey comedy. There is only this consolation which uplifts my spirit, that out of all this something will arise, which both parties do not at all intend. That is, le principe^ which outlives us all. I am so cruel as to include you too. To my brother, Wilhelm, the Kassel book seems to have done good up there. In old attachment and reverence, Your faithful A. HUMBOLDT. WEDNESDAY. Be good enough to return the ghost story, by all means. XOTE BY YARXHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT'S LETTEE OP APRIL 26TH, 1855. A " stranger is emboldened to transmit words of power to the spirit" u They are given to her with the order to repeat them." In case Humboldt should answer, he is requested to send the letter with the chiffre A. W., to the store on the left of the house, at No. 120 Linden Street, and receive further details. A wanderer is described as sitting down to rest Brother "Wilhelm appears to brother Alexan- der and exhorts him to think of the kingdom of heaven, and how splendid it is up there, how misty on earth. As a token of identity, he reminds him of the eighteenth warm birthday, " where they swore to love each other," an oath which reaches beyond the portals of death, and which he now fulfils. It is a bombastic farrago, frequently repeating the word " finish," which strikes the reader as eminently inappropriate. Of the above-named direction Humboldt observes : " That it is the boarding-school of Frau von "Wenkstern and Widow Poppe." 308 Humboldt's Letters. 168. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEtf. BERLIN, August 9^ 1855. I HAD already heard with sorrow from the gifted Princess von Wittgenstein, that you, noble friend, suf- fered more than usually. Receive me with indulgence on Saturday, about 10 o'clock, in spite of my long absence, and of my inconvenient trilogy, Berlin, Tegel, and Potsdam. I shall then also bring you a few lines of thanks to your cousin, the Imperial Brazilian Charge d' Affaires in Madrid. His history, founded upon archi- val monuments, seems to become of great importance ; but what a strange missive without adding the first pages, and notes also without a beginning.* I doubt of my ever catching those commencements in my cos- inic disorder. As I spent almost an hour alone with the Prince of Prussia yesterday, I shall be able to tell you something not uninteresting, although not at all decisive. The Prince, whom I take to be veracious, * Historia general de Brazil, tomo primeiro. The pieces wanting here he had already sent as specimens. Humboldt's Letters. 309 assures me of having always asserted, faithful to his principles, that war would probably have been avoided, if Prussia and Austria had from the first co-operated actively with the Western powers against Russia. They answered in St. Petersburg that the Emperor would not have yielded, but this the Prince doubted With old attachment, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. THUESDAT. You wih 1 explain to me orally the mythological name of Sorocaba.* Varnhagen narrates in his diary, under date of August llth, 1855 : "About 1 o'clock Humboldt came, look- ing well, quite vigorous, in fresh and lively spirits; when he make a worse impression a short time ago, as Dirichlet thought, it was the eflect of sickness, and is passed now. First, he spoke of the book of my cousin, which he praised, for which he thanks him (in a letter). The expression Sorocaba I cannot explain to him. Humboldt was but recently made a knight of the great Brazilian order, on account of an arbitration between Brazil and Venezuela, respecting a large tract * Francisco Adolfo de Yarnhagen's dedication of his book to the Emperor over his own signature. The title-page contains the words : " For urn socio do Institute Historico do Brazil, Natural de Sorocaba' (the native place of the author, west of Eio Janeiro). 310 Humboldt's Letters. of land. c Formerly they intended, in Rio de Janeiro, to arrest me as a dangerous spy, and to send me back to Europe, the order drawn up for the pur- pose is still shown there as a curiosity; now they make me an arbitrator ! I, of course, decided for Brazil, because I wanted the large order; the Republic of Venezuela has none to confer !' These words, spoken in the gayest irony, I interrupted with the exclamation, 4 How times change !' ' Yes ; the order of arrest, and then the insignia of the great order!' 'Oh, no,' I replied, ' I did not think of this personal affair, but of the historical ; formerly the pope was the general arbi- trator !' Humboldt saw the last volumes of the life of Stein on my table, and expressed his displeasure on the external arrangement, the meagreness of the text, and the unsifted character of this book; he thought that the gold snuff-box, with brilliants, which the King had already sent to Pertz for these volumes, was entirely too much. Injustice, crying and mean, perpetrated by Stein against old Prince Wittgenstein. Pertz, too, he said, was unjust to Wittgenstein. Stein had not at all been a firm character, no one had changed views and judgments more easily. (Beyme said the same thing, and adduced instances of it.) His early liberal ideas on national eco- nomy, civil institutions, commerce, and trades, were a product of the times, which he afterwards entirely renounced and disputed when the current of opinioc Humboldt's Letters. 31 1 set in that direction. He surrendered his former senti- ments so shamefully that his former friend, Kunth, who remained faithful to them, but also wished to avoid committing Stein, burned more than three hundred of Stein's letters, because, as he thought, they would bring nothing but disgrace on the revered man, and would show him in the greatest contradiction with himself. Of the Prince of Prussia, Humboldt said that he had told every one in St. Petersburg, as well as here, that the war would have been avoided if Prussia had from the first acted resolutely. The Emperor Nicholas would have yielded. The imperial family he represented as harmonious, including the Grand Duke Constantme, who did not seem so dangerous to him as usually described. The Emperor's mother used to say they were all mere children, and that she must remain with them in order to keep them together. The war was severely felt, business at a standstill, the country drained of men, the armies not very numerous ; Poland, the Baltic countries, and Finland but weakly garrisoned ; the greater part of their forces was in the Crimea ; the losses immense and irreparable. Gortschakoff reports that the daily com- bats cost him 180-200 men a frightful number for a month ; that Nesselrode contemplates a renewal of negotiations, but before that heavy blows would first be dealt on one side or on the other. Sebastopol itself was by no means considered out of danger. The Prince has 312 Humboldt's Letters. gone from here to Erdmannsdorf to the King ; thence he hastens on to Baden. The King has Lieutenant-General von Gerlach, with him in Erdmannsdorf, among others, also Radowitz, in case he is not * already tired of him, as happens so easily.' Humboldt talks of Radowitz decidedly as of a Jesuit, calls him Ignatius, mocks him, and jests on him a long time. 'The great destinies of Italy' leave the King very indifferent ; but a colored pane of glass, a quaint device on an old monument, a family name, enlist his greatest interest, occupy, and amuse him ; and for such trifles Radowitz was the right man ! The same is the case with Bunsen, with whom the King corresponds on theological and patristic curi- osities. He has asked him to write articles in the papers against the Bishop of Mainz ; but Bunsen makes the condition to be allowed to refer in his articles to the command of the King, since otherwise they would pos- sess neither influence nor effect. Humboldt thinks Bunsen would not resist a call hither, even if it was not official, but only a personal one by the King. The Duke of Coburg-Gotha desires an enlargement of his territory and a higher title that of a c King of Ostphalia' is already proposed. The King jestingly calls him by that title already. He counts upon England and France, and willingly flatters and accommodates Bonaparte, who would meet with little difficulty in being the recog- nised Protector of a new Rhenish Confederation. So Humboldt's Letters. , 313 much for Germany and Teutonism. It is betrayed most assiduously by its sworn defenders. Finally, Humboldt added: 'When a man has the misfortune to be com- pelled to live among such wretches as this Gerlach, Raumer, and the rest who have crept into this Court.' .... He went from me to the Koethener Strasse to look at a picture, and left me much excited. I could not keep in mind and write down one-tenth of all he said." Varnhagen adds, on the 12th of August, Humboldt said of the situation of Prussia, it reminded him of a trial he once heard in Paris; the lawyer had to ask damages for a box on the ear, and had exclaimed triumphantly at the close : " Au fond nous n'avons pas re9u le soufflet, nous n'avons eu que le geste ! " 160. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEK BERLIN, January 13th, 1856. SMILE, dear friend (you are fully justified !) at the strange lines of Princess Lieven, and at my troublesome inquiry. Madame de Quitzow, who has not written to me for twenty-five years, wants to know, whether the 14 314 Humboldt's Letters. Emperor Paul, in the epoch of his political insanity, had made the proposition through Kotzebue, that the ministers for foreign affairs should measure swords personally instead of the armies. I was at that time (1799 and 1800) in the deltas of South America, and was entirely ignorant of the anecdote which the Russian Princess now, as it appears to me, so occidental in her predilections, desires to corroborate. The obscure re- searches I have made would seem to lead to the result that the duel was to be waged not by the ministers but by the monarchs themselves. I pray you, noble friend, to write me a few lines on what your excellent memory supplies, and still more I pray you to tell me consoling words about your health at the return of the injurious cold weather. Bunsen writes me that he expects a fourth edition of his letters. Does the great reading demand for this excellent or rather useful book indicate that the German public is less chloroformed against action than we had supposed? Dubito. The German landlord of a (dicunt) very dirty hotel, which glories in my name in California for many years beside a more cleanly one of " Jenny Lind," sends me German California papers from time to time. In a discourse on the moral and intellectual state of the English, the \ French, and the Germans, the editor recently said : " We Germans are a nation of thinkers, deeply occupied with the world of ideas, we also have the great advan- Humboldt's Letters. 315 tage before the members of other nations who live here, that we care little or not at all about civil or political affairs." Thus we boast on the shores of the Pacific, buy the " Zeichen der Zeit," but hardly 5 per cent of us go to the primary elections. It is inconvenient, we think. With old love and reverence, Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. Was not the young Tyrolese very amiable poet Adolf Pichler (properly speaking a geologist by trade) with you ? I do not believe in peace during this quite .... or at least uncomfortable humiliating * year, though certainly in useless diplomatic transactions. NOTE BY YARNHAGEN. In the third line stands " Madame de Quitzow," clearly a mistake instead of " Madame de Lieven." What may have been the reason that that name, here entirely without mean- ing, should have protruded itself) cannot be guessed. LATER NOTE BY YARNHAGEN. The Princess Lieven is closely con- nected with the late Minister Guizot, they even say secretly married to him. Guizot, pronounced German easily sounds Quitzow, a well- known name in the Mark. Humboldt, always inclined to jesting, and particularly here, may have given her this surname perhaps current already at the court with full intention. [This is quite right] * These two words are illegible. 316 Humboldt's Letters. 170. THE PRINCESS LIEYEN TO HUMBOLDT. PARIS, January Sth, 1856. You have not forgotten me, my dear Baron. I know that by two kind messages which Baron Brockhausen brought me from you. I have charged him to testify my lively gratitude ; but I now prefer to express it myself. On this occasion, it serves me as the passport to a question which I take the liberty of addressing you. Can you, who know everything, remember the follow- ing fact? In 1799 or 1800, the Emperor Paul took it into his head to propose a combat on a tilted field, where England, Russia, Austria, and I know not what other power, should adjust their differences by the per- sons of their Prime Ministers, Pitt, Thugut, etc. The task of drawing up this invitation was assigned to Kotzebue, and the article inserted in the "Hamburg Gazette." This is my very distinct recollection. I have not dreamed any part of it. Could you complete the tradition ? I can meet with no one who remembers it. I have thought you might be able to sustain my Humboldt's Letters. 317 memory, and I hope so still, for I am suspected of hav- ing lost my wits. Paul I. was not such a fool, after all. Do you not consider the follies of our time much greater ? What a chaos ? And for what ? . . . . My dear Baron, J live here in a little intimate circle of old friends, who are your friends also, and who hold you in affectionate remembrance. What a pleasure we should have in seeing you here, and together forgetting the troubles of the hour ! O that men and things were worth more at this day ! Is this an old woman's com- mission with which I trouble you ? Adieu, my dear Baron. I ask your recollection and regard, and promise a bountiful return. Ever yours, THE PEINCESS LIEVEN. YARNHAGEff TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, January 27^, 1856. WITH joyful thanks I profit by your Excellency's goodness in sending me the copy of your beautiful response to the deputies of the city of Berlin. Were it not presumption to praise, where praise has already become a habit and a superfluity, I should say that the 31 8 Humboldt's Letters. speech is as full of sterling merit as of noble intention. The brightest passage, to my mind, is the (I hesitate whether to call it felicitous or masterly) allusion to the King, in terms so dignified and delicate, so warm and graceful ; and every pure heart must at once acknow- ledge, that in this connexion the remark was singularly appropriate and beautiful. In your Excellency's last favor, the expression, " Madame de Quitzow," at first puzzled me a good deal. But I may boast of having solved the riddle by the power of the head as the Jews say, where we speak of cudgelling our brains and am constrained to acknowledge that the little sally is not only a good joke, but proportionably a mild measure of punishment. The Grand Duke of Saxe Weimar desired to see me ; but I found myself chained down to my rheumatic complaint. With faithful reverence and most grateful devotion, unalterably your Excellency's most obedient, VARNHAGEIST VON ENSE. 173. HUMBOLDT TO VA.RNHAGEN. BERLIN, January 28th, 1856. MY far from dormant ambition has been abundantly gratified by the grateful praise bestowed by the great Humboldt's Letters. 319 master of our language (to avoid the expression rheto- rician), upon my manner of speaking of the King, and my relations with him. In praising that with which the party praised is but scantily supplied, we point him to the honorable road, and justify ourselves before the people. A man of the woods, who is supposed to have been tamed at court, is in need of such justification. Madame Quitzow, whom. I could not sooner obtain from the King, I now repose in your hands, as your own. Our former minister, General Thiele, was firmly persuaded that the Guizots of the neighborhood of Montpellier were disguised remnants, softened in pronunciation, Frenchified and Protestantized, of the emigrated Quit- zo\vs* from Langkloder. And your poor excellent Dora, who pities all your friends for the sufferings she knows so well how to alleviate ! Give her my kindest regards. Your faithful A. HUMBOLDT. AT NIGHT. The Grand Duke, whom you escaped, sends much love. He has curious theories, probably imbibed some- where or other (Bosotia was near to ancient Attica), * A Brandenburg family of the Middle Ages, who came near hang- ing one of the Electors of Brandenburg, predecessor of the Kings of Prussia. They were representatives of those " Kobber Knights" who long successfully resisted the introduction of regular government by the Electors. Tr. 320 Humboldt's Letters. and misunderstood. There are two classes of sculptors, the one inferior, to which Rauch inclines, and which works inward from without, while the better (repre- sented by Rietschel) works outward from within. But what an exposure. Philarete Chasles in the " Journal des Debats !" I wrote to Paris : " Yulgaire dans les idees comme dans les formes des langage, indigne d'un litte- rateur du College de France." 173. HUMBOLDT TO YAKNHAGEff. BERLIN, THURSDAY, Feb. 1th, 1856. As it would be impossible that you, dear friend, should not have seen the new book by Montalembert (the friend and companion of the Abbe Lammenais on his journey to Rome), I hope to give you a little plea- sure by offering you the King's copy for a few days (five or six). The only thing racy in it is the conclusion, levelled at the present state of affairs in France, p. 284 to 298. I wish it were possible to have the whole of it translated and published in Germany. Most gratefully yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. How is our excellent Dora doing ? I had a patri- archal time yesterday until seven o'clock, at Potsdam, at Humboldt's Letters. 321 a christening of a child of a very handsome and accom- plished daughter of my Siberian waiting-man's, Seifert, who,* a traveller named Moellhausen, who, at Baron Gerolt's and my recommendation, accompanied the great exploring expedition of Captain W hippie, of San Luis, San Francisco, and Panama, in the capacity of topographer and draughtsman for the American Govern- ment. It is about a year since the King appointed young Moellhausen custodian of the palace library at Potsdam. An excellent article by Laboulaye, on the domestic Institution, and the flagitious Pierce's extension of the outrage upon territory, hitherto free, met my eye yes- terday in the " Journal des Debats," of the 5th of February, I believe ! Keep the very commonplace verses " Oh, Gentle Jim." 174. VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, March 14th, 1856. TOUR Excellency's kind and precious gift come into the seclusion forced upon me by the rude relapse of * ''is married to," evidently omitted in the original Humboldt took a great interest in Moellhausen, and wrote a preface to his book on the above journey. Tr. 14* 322 Humboldt's Letters. winter, brighter and more enlivening than the sun- beams which accompany them ! Receive my repeated thanks and the assurance that I know how to appreciate every one of them, and most of all the beneficent inten- tion, which remember me so well, and gladden my heart so cheerily ! The pencil lines of the dying Heine are a valued keepsake, and shall be continued to be devoutly treasured in the envelope superscribed by your Excel- lency. The boon of to-day, the significant combination of Archimedes and Franklin in reference to their tomb- stones, I have also read with the warmest appreciation. I see that you do not dread the wind or the weather, and that, fortunately, you need not dread them, when a duty of honor is to be performed. The present time imposes curious tasks upon us ! The ' death of a chief of police in a duel is probably unprecedented in the communities of modern Europe. The summoning of a Minister of Foreign Affairs to Paris, to attend at the close of important negotiations, with a box of writing sand from the Mark,* has also a fabulous aspect. How- ever, Allah is great ! In the most faithful reverence and most grateful devotion, I remain immutably Your Excellency's most obedient, YABNHAGEN VON ENSE. * The Mark Brandenburg, a very sandy province, sometimes face- tiously called the sand-box of the Holy Roman Empire. TV. Humboldt's Letters. 323 175. HTJMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BEKLIN, April Uth, 1856. I COULD not but speak, being the Nestor of Prussian mining officials, and prone to boast of my calling. My reliance upon your indulgence, dear and worthy friend, is so great, that I am emboldened to send even you a copy of these unimportant lines. Count B. deserved this praise. Free from opinion of any kind, he is useful to the art of mining, and still occupies himself with scien- tific pursuits since he has resigned the direction. With unshaken constancy, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. NOTE BY VABXHAGEN. Enclosed was the address delivered at the fiftieth anniversary of the entrance into the royal miners of his Excellency the Actual Privy Councillor and Captain of Miners, Count Beust. April 9th, 1856. 324 Humboldt's Letters. 176. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, September llth, 1856. KNOWING the warm interest you take, ray dear friend, in the slavery question, and in what concerns myself, I send you the last letter of Gerolt, which was very long in coming, but which will certainly command your attention. Most unfortunately Buchanan will be the next President, and not Fremont, the traveller of great acquirements, who has four times travelled* the land route to San Francisco, surveying the country over which he passed, to whom it is owing that California did become a free State. Do not return the letter, nor the enclosure. On the heels of this African absurdity comes another folly, of a more serious cast, though richly fraught with ridicule, not royalistic so much as aristocratically Bernese, and spiced with a little railroad speculation as to whether the route by the way of Neufchatel or that by way of Chaux de Fonds is to be preferred ! And the heroic Count,* who executes the coup d'etat a 1# Napoleon, whence did he derive his * Pourtales, conspicuous in the Neufchatel embroglio. 7h Humboldt's Letters. 325 inspiration ? From Berlin, while we have a minister at the Diet, whom at this day we pretend never to have recognised. How are these things to be reconciled ? "We shall have a similar fate with our three ultramarine possessions, the Jade, the Zollern, discovered by Colum- bus Stillfried, and Neufchatel. I feel for the Constanti- nopolitan Pourtales, who finds himself involved in an awkward conflict between his dynasty (the Prussian earldom) and his official liberalism. It is fortunate that the mouth of the English Parliament is still closed. Your faithful A. v. HUMBOLDT. 177. THE PRUSSIAN MINISTER RESIDENT, YON GEROLT, TO HUMBOLDT. NEW YORK, August 25th, 1856. My MOST DEAK AND HONORED PATRON! Since my last letter to your Excellency, of the 8th inst., I was made happy by your favor of the 27th of July, from which I learn, with the most sincere regret, of your temporary indisposition. For the information it contains I return your Excellency my most hearty thanks, and hasten to comply with your wish by send- ing two extracts from papers published here (the " New 326 Humboldt's Letters. York Herald" and the " Courrier des. Etats Unis"), containing your publication on the subject of slavery in Cuba, as well as the excuse published by Mr. Thrasher, which is, it must be confessed, exceedingly lame. The affair has excited great attention here, and could not but be welcome to the opponents of slavery, who have made Fremont their candidate. Some days ago, his German supporters, many thou- sands in number, held a mass meeting in his support, and honored him with a splendid torch-light procession in the evening. The slavery question is becoming more alarming from day to day. While the House of Representatives refuse to appropriate moneys for the support of the army, news is daily coming in from Kansas of bloody conflicts between the free-soilers and the slaveholders. It is hoped, however, that after the presidential election (in November), domestic peace will be restored. The unwholesome climate in Washington has driven me out for a few days, as the heat was intolerable last month, and now the fever and ague begins. I am going to Albany to-day, to attend the meeting of naturalists to which I have been invited. I expect to meet a number of savans of distinction there, and to report the details to your Excellency hereafter. Mr. Heine is very much delighted with the expression of your Excellency in his favor. Humboldt's Letters. 327 Mr. C and the beau moncle have retreated to the mountains and the sea-baths long ago, and I shall not see him for three or four weeks to come. Mr. Fillmore would be the best President ; but he ap- pears to have little hope of succeeding against Fremont and Buchanan ; and theKnownothings have lost all credit. My poor wife and children are counting the hours which must elapse before my return, and I am not less anxious to find all that is dear to me again in the country of my home, next year, at the close of the Congress. The approaching departure of the mail for England compels me to close this letter, which I do with the most heartfelt wishes for your Excellency's continued well-being. With immutable reverence and affection, I remain your Excellency's most devoted GEEOLT. 178. VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, September 13ih, 1856. THE great influence of the name of your Excellency in the United States, as in America in general, is a gratify- ing sign of the improvement of those countries in civiliza- tion, and a sure pledge of the ultimate triumph of the 328 Humboldt's Letters. philanthropic principles which you have consistently advocated through the course of a long and eventful life. I thank you heartily for the letter of M. v. Gerolt, and its printed inclosure, which will be a valuable addi- tion to my collections. At this moment, it is true, the chances of Fremont are a little doubtful ; nevertheless the latest accounts represent the zeal of his supporters as very great and by no means hopeless. Our domestic events domestic in their origin though the scene be laid abroad it would be more agreeable to pass in silence, as it is difficult to find the proper expres- sion with which to characterize them, and impracticable to make use of those expressions when found. The most consoling observation to be made is that of unani- mous condemnation on all hands, where there are no private ends to gain. For the veritable Prussian of the good old school such things as Jade, Neufchatel, and even Zollern, are at all times nothing but distractions, having no legitimate concern with the core of the Prus- sian state. In regard to Neufchatel, I fear that a momentary favorable nod of France is over valued, and will lead to inextricable entanglements ; Reynard* is apt to incite his friends to dangerous adventures ; the escape from them is their affair, and he takes a malicious plea- sure in looking on. * The Fox, i. e. Louis Napoleon. Tr Humboldt's Letters. 329 The other day Lady Bettina von Arnim contributed to my collections near a thousand autographs. One of the most valuable is a letter from your Excellency to Lud- wig Achim von Arnim, on petrifactions ; it is not dated, but I refer it to the third decade of the present century. I well know on what day I write these lines. It pre- cedes the day more widely and more enthusiastically celebrated than any other. May it please your Excel- lency to accept the modest tribute of my warm good wishes with kind favor! In faithful reverence and grateful devotion, Your Excellency's most obedient, VABNHAGEN vox ENSE. 17Q. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, September 22d, 1856. THE Grand Duke of Weimar, who has just left, com- missions me to beg of you as a particular favor, the permission for him to visit you to-morrow (on Tuesday) between nine and eleven o'clock. He is determined to see you in person. A. v. HUMBOLDT. MONDAY. 330 Humboldt's Letters. ISO. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, Sept. 23d, 1856. CHER ET introuvdble AMI ! How the improbable can become real ! How royal huntsmen and royal coachmen cannot find you, cannot look for your direction in the prosaic directory. I send this direction at this moment to the Grand Duke, who has the anguish of having detained my revered friend. May he be more fortunate in a new attempt. The enclosed sheet is a Berlin curiosity for your archives. Faithfully yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. TUESDAY, 2 O'CLOCK. 181. (ENCLOSED.) GRAND DUKE CHARLES ALEXANDER OF SAXE WEIMAR TO HUMBOLDT. AT THE CHATEAU OP BERLIN, Tuesday Morning. HAD I had the skill of the Marquis of St. Germain, of whom, if I am not mistaken, it is told that one fine Humboldt's Letters. 331 morning he departed through four gates at one and the same time, I could not have been more desirous to find M. von Varnhagen than I was. Nevertheless, it was all in vain. No one could tell me where he lived, and it was of no use to take the measure of the " Mauren- strasse." Nature having made me the most obstinate of all Grand Dukes, I still persist in my intention to see the invisible, and hasten to attain that consummation by requesting your Excellency to tell me where M. de Varnhagen actually does live. Pardon my repeated importunities ; but in conscience I know of no route which could be shorter or more direct. I remain, with the inextinguishable attachment of the most devoted admiration and veneration for your Excellency, CHARLES ALEXANDER. 183. VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BEELIN, September 24ft, 1856. YOUR EXCELLENCY : You have had not a little trouble on my account lately, which I lament with shame. Most of all I regret having missed your kind visit, which is always an honor as well as a good fortune. That the Grand Duke could 332 Humboldt's Letters. not find me yesterday, although he drove up and down the Maurenstrasse, and made several inquiries, would be incomprehensible if the servants of a Court were not a very peculiar fraternity. It is nearly thirty years that I have resided in the largest house in the street, which the Grand Duke himself has entered in visiting Prince Wilhelm of Baden. To-day, however, he arrived punc- tually at eight o'clock, was very pleasant and aifable, spoke with a good deal of frankness and much cordiality, and mentioned your Excellency with great esteem and gratitude. His real errand did not appear until his visit came to a close ; in referring him to me, your Excellency has done me great honor, but you have also involved me in no inconsiderable perplexity. The affair is of great importance, and may lay the foundation for the happiness of a worthy man ; the wish itself is credi- table to the Grand Duke, and it will give me great pleasure in any way to subserve his noble purpose. I shall take it into consideration, and, if a result is attain- able, shall respectfully submit it to your Excellency. At the first blush, I named young H., which, however, led to nothing, the Grand Duke doubting the extent of his acquaintance with the French language. The visit lasted nearly an hour, and much that was said was remarkable; my share in the conversation must have been unpleasant, at least the physical part of it, which is entirely ruined and quite unintelligible from Humboldt's Letters. 333 coughing; influenza, and rheumatic compression of the chest. With the best wishes for your Excellency's welfare, I remain in profound reverence and gratitude, Your obedient YAENHAGKN voif ENSE. 183. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, Sep. 24th, 1856. BEFORE I bury myself again for some days in Pots- dam, a sacrifice to the Queen and to her solitude, I shall, dear friend, justify the Grand Duke and myself. The Grand Duke visited you, which honors him, not to consult you, but out of respect for your fine talents and your character, because he had, as he said, inherited the idea from his house, that one must see two men in Berlin, you and me. That we must both accept with gratitude as an inheritance from the old gentleman and the Imperial Highness, who is a worthy lady. He had not at all the idea to speak with you of what he seeks and never will find (equal inclination for science and poetry, history of geographical discoveries, art, painting, gems and sculpture, refined social manners, fluent French speaking and writing, also reading aloud). That bantling is yet unborn. I sai^j^aviserai^ and quite 334 Humboldt's Letters. casually I added, that I would ask your opinion. Only when taking leave, which he introduced officially by very far-fetched phrases on the "noble grey-haired youth," he asked me whether it would be contrary to my wishes to submit the problem to you also. The visit had for its motive the manifestation of inherited reverence, and a desire to produce an effect, which must be connected with some self-denial at eight o'clock in the morning, on the day of departure. To vaccinate him with our excellent H., we might send the latter for four months to Paris and London ; but would a mind like H.'s put up with it ? J*en doubte. Most cordially, your A. v. HUMBOLDT. WEDNESDAY. Gerlach intends to separate himself from the King, and to oust Reyher, whereby he would still remain quite near the King, ay, even nearer than at present, for the cause of little animosities (electricity from contact) would then disappear. 184. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEK POTSDAM, November 9th, 1856. I FORGOT to inform you, my revered friend, that I fulfilled punctually your wish to send to Weimar the Humboldt's Letters. 335 letter you addressed me, and to recommend urgently the proposed "Private Secretary," and all this a few days after I knew your intention. A German letter from Prince Metternich, expressing sentiments full of graceful language, will interest you. I present you the letter for your archival collection The occasion was a moulding in plaster and copy, partly by the Prince's own hand, of an old Egyptian column of granite, which he had received twenty-five years ago from Mehemed Ali. The old Prince gave me this copy, three-fourths of a foot in height, to decipher the long inscription in Demotic writing. This has been done by Dr. Brugsch, the talented young Egyptologist, author of a Demotic Grammar, universally admired in other countries. Dr. Brugsch, who had the first edition of his Grammar printed in Latin, when he was still in the first class of August's Gymnasium* (the second edition is written in French), has found a good deal of very remarkable astronomy in the inscription; and in order to give pleasure to the old Prince, Brugsch has published the whole under the name of " Stele. Metter- nich," in the " Journal for the Orient," and in the " Athenee." Brugsch was in Egypt for two years, at the expense of the King; he is the son of a poor sergeant, and is familiar with Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, Coptic, and Persian. * The Koelnische Gymnasium, Berlin, of which August was director. 336 Humboldt's Letters. Pardon my horrid writing, illegible, and in wild, incorrect style. The letter of the maccaroni King* to Louis Philippe, in the " Spenersche Zeitung," will not have escaped you, I hope. Non v'a bisogno entirely as Rochow-Seiffart (in his first manner) to the Elbingers : " It is not at all necessary that my people think ; I think for them ; the people, who have betrayed me so often, submit to my power." Your faithful A. HUMBOLDT. 185. METTERNICH TO HUMBOLDT. KOENIGSWART, October 14^, 1856. MY OLD FKIEND ! I received gratefully the informa- tion on the stele which Herr Brugsch calls by my name, and I beg of you to hand over to the learned investi- gator the words you find inclosed. After my return to Vienna, I shall avail myself of the interpretation, already so instructive, of the monument, to point out the way * The King of Naples, known in this country as King Bomba. In Naples the best maccaroni is manufactured. "Was this letter really directed to Louis Philippe, or was there not a mistake in the name? Was not Louis Philippe dead before that time? Translator. Humboldt's Letters. 337 to archaeologists in which they may obtain copies, by an advertisement. I did not doubt that I could not do better than to address you for light on the scientific value of the present of Mehemed Ali, which for many years slept in my multifarious collections, and of which I was quite ignorant. May you and Herr Brugsch receive my most sincere thanks. I have had the good fortune to find the King in excellent health, and in the usual kind disposition towards myself. Great recollections in long lives are a fine bond between man and man, the power of which is well tried when it has resisted the storms of time. It is more than half a century since my first intercourse with the young heir-apparent. What vicissitudes have occupied this long, interval is matter of history. That they have never deprived me of the confidence of the two kings, father and son, is with me a source of pride that is to say, of a sensation which the term peace of mind and heart would better characterize than the unsafe word that has escaped my pen. You, three years my senior, have just celebrated your eighty-seventh birthday. That you and I have understood " the art of living," we -may confess. That we shall do well to cultivate it still longer, is not to be denied. With sincere friendship and esteem, METTERNICH. 15 338 Humboldt's Letters. ise. HUMBOLDT TO YABNHAGEN. BERLIN, November 20$,, 1856. I WANT your literary aid, my noble friend. Our great landscape painter, Hildebrandt, who was in Brazil, Ca- nada, Egypt, Palestine, Greece, and recently at the North Cape, has executed an admirable aquarelle picture of my " Interior Household," in order to replace a smaller one sold in many hundreds of copies in America. " La renom- mee, fruit d'une longue patience de vivre, augmente arec I'imbecilite." I am compelled to make an inscription to this picture of mine, with my own hand. This is no easy task. I pray that you will visit me on Saturday, at one o'clock, if it is possible to you. You shall guide me. Your most grateful THURSDAY. A. v. HFMBOLDT. 137. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, November 21st, 1856. I YESTERDAY prayed, dear friend, that you should mnke me the pleasure of your visit on Saturday. I Humboldt's Letters. 339 pray today that you will not come ; I hear with sorrow that you suffer much. The great picture of Hildebrandt remains yet a long time in my house. Every later day will also be useful to me. I only beg of you that you will kindly announce to me the day, beforehand, on which I may expect you. Choose the twelfth hour, under any circumstances, because I am sure to be free then. I also am in a condition in which I desire to run out of my skin.* As an old man, I suffer as from musquito bites ; and moreover, a hyper-christian, Mr. Foster (living at Brussels), consults me from time to time, whether I believe that the souls of the lower ani- mals, such as bed-bugs and musquitoes, are included in the scheme of salvation, and destined to go to heaven. So they threaten me up there too, where I shall find the animal souls, well known to me from the Orinoco, chanting a hymn of praise. In old friendship, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. FRIDAY. And the disgraceful party which sells negro children, and distributes canes of honor, as the Russian Emperor does swords of honor, and Graefe's noses of honor, who prove that all white workmen should rather be slaves than free have succeeded. What a crime ! * A German proverbial expression for feeling very uncomfortable. Tr. 340 Humboldt's Letters. Nov. 22d, 1856. Yarnhagen writes in his diary: "I started at half-past 12 o'clock, and drove to Hum- boldt in the pouring rain. He was rejoiced at my coming, and soon led me to an adjoining room, where hung Hildebrandt's great aquarelle picture, in a frame ; an excellent picture, indeed, in the rich variety of which the sitting figure of Humboldt predominates. Now came the question about the inscription to be chosen for it. I had rightly expected that he did not so much expect propositions from me, as my approval of those chosen by him already. Contrary to my expectation, no short sentence, but a longer speech, a rhetorical com- position, which happily compares the searching traveller with the returned man of science. Some alterations were approved in the beginning, but disapproved again in the end. Hildebrandt gave the picture not to Herr von Humboldt, but to his valet Seiffert. It is to be engraved. We looked at the rooms, in three of them ; his apparatus of study is strewn about ; all three warmed to 19 degrees Reaumur, an intolerable tem- perature for me. A library hall not warmed. Pictures painted by Madame Gaggiotti, whose talents he praised highly ; he wondered and rejoiced that I knew her too. He complained of itching ; I said it was a well-known complaint, pruritus. " Senilis," he immediately added. In a box he had a living chameleon, which he showed me, and of which he said, that it was the only animal Humboldt's Letters. 341 which was able to direct one of its eyes upwards, and at the same time the other downwards ; that our parsons only were able to do the same, with one eye directed to heaven and the other to the good things of this world. We talked of Neufchatel too ; he said that the King was full of good hopes, and counted upon Louis Bonaparte ; that Manteuffel did not see things in such a favorable light, but made merry of them. The Russian Chancellor, Graf von ISTesselrode, said to Hum- boldt on his last visit, that the present constitution and position of Switzerland made the best impression on him, and were such as to win esteem and favor for the republic. 188. HUMBOLDT TO VAENHAGEN. BERLIN, November 30$, 1856. ESTEEMED FKIEXD: AT this moment I receive a letter from a pupil, deserving of moderate praise for clearness of thought and diction. I shall not write before having first come to see you, my dear friend. The last fifteen lines of the letter are utterly illegible and unintelligible to me. I had written to him about the laying of the telegraph cable between Ireland and Newfoundland, but had not made him any offer. I cannot read what is underscored! 342 Humboldt's Letters. Keep my pupil's letter by all means, including the infor- mation that I am the subject of discussion in the Belgian Chambers, as a materialist and republican, who ought to be discharged ! "Where the dinner of the Baron d'Arhim (Arnim) took place, I cannot guess. I may have said, that I was as liberal as Arago, but certainly not that I was a Republican. Deposit M. Jobard in your archives, my friend, Your faithful, A. v. HUMBOLDT. SUNDAY. What men believe and disbelieve does not generally become a subject of contention until after they have been officially buried and bepreached by Sydow.* The " Spenersche Zeitung," besides discussing Neuf- chatel and the evacuation of the Danubian principalities, contains a daily health return about five little silkworms of Fintelmann, the court gardener. How all things diminish in importance! I have often written letters dated from the hill of Sans Souci, which formerly was historical. Now the Peacock's Island becomes historical by the still life of two caterpillars. Thus the world moves. It must be remembered that when the Angora goats made illustrious the administration of Richelieu in France, the Moniteur contained the announcement : " Le moral des chevres s'ameliore de jour en jour." * A fashionable preacher in Berlin. Tr. Humboldt's Letters. 343 188. CHARLES ALEXANDER, GRAND DUKE OF SAXE-WEIMAR, TO HUMBOLDT. WEIMAB, November 29^ 1856. As I fortunately have the honor to be known, truly known to your Excellency, I may flatter myself that you will not estimate my gratitude for your services and those of M. de Varnhagen, by the length of time which has elapsed since the day I received your letter of the 31st, and the present time. My sincere thanks shall here receive a place. They have been delayed by the very nature of the transaction. Such could not but be the effect, for in an affair of that kind it is impossible to form a sudden resolution, and accordingly I now write for the sole purpose of not appearing ungrateful, and because, on the other hand, it is necessary to secure the possibility of forming a fixed resolve. To do this I must have time and freedom of election. Both are secured by the kindness of yourself and M. Yarnhagen, for you join in proposing to send the young man so as to enable me in the first place to make his acquaintance. The question arises, when can this be done ? for I do not care to begin by calling * * * here with the trombone 344 Humboldt's Letters. of an appointment. Nothing remains, therefore, but to beg your Excellency to make inquiries at what time the gentleman would be at leisure and inclined to undertake a journey to the bank of the Jim. Having asked this question, I would pause above all things, in order to proceed to the expression of my thanks for the important news you have the goodness to communicate. If I add the question, whether your Excellency will kindly send me the map for an admiring inspection, and if you should possibly find this question wonderfully troublesome, I take refuge under the shelter of your goodness to me, which has often made me proud, and to-day, perhaps, indiscreet. Yet I am proud of your goodness, which is ever coupled with truth, and in the latter I put my trust, that you will decisively reject my petition, if it troubles you, to whom, in reverence, I remain the most grateful scholar, CHARLES ALEXANDER. 190. JOBARD TO HUMBOLDT. BRUSSELS, November 26^ 1856. MONSIEUR LE BARON: PERHAPS you will not be displeased to learn the role Humboldt's Letters. 345 you have been made to play in the unfortunate debate of our religious politics. The old Minister Dechamps, who sat on your right at the dinner of the Baron of Arhim, and who was so much astonished at hearing you say that you were as much of a Republican as your friend Arago, having associated your name with those of the illustrious believers who profess the Catholic faith, a liberal journal this morning answered him as follows : " M. Dechamps, in the last homily delivered by him in the Chamber, cited the name of M. de Humboldt to prove that science could well be made subservient to the creed. It must be admitted, as Mr. Devaux showed, that the example could not have been worse chosen. M. de Humboldt is one of those rationalists, pure and simple, against whom M. Dechamps has already written so many letters. If M. Humboldt had taught in Bel- gium he would most certainly have been pursued in pastoral letters, and discharged by M. Dechamps, if M. Dechamps had been the Minister. Nevertheless, it is thus that history is written, and thus that the most important questions of our intellectual and moral future are appreciated !" Here is another unmixed and undisguised political opinion : " As often and so sure as you base your church upon human obtuseness, the gates of the mind will not pre- 15* 346 Humboldt's Letters. vail against it, because there will always be consummate fools, old fools, and little fools, to uphold and repair it. Pure reason has not the same chance." Yours, ever devotedly, JOBABD. 191. LINES BY YARNHAGEN ON HILDEBRANDT'S PAINTING OF HUMBOLDT'S APARTMENTS, AND THE MOTTO ATTACHED. (TRANSLATED BY CHARLES GOEPP, ESQ., AT EASTON, PA.) THIS was the latest, the peaceful home, where the mighty explorer, Early ascender of summits, reposed on the heights of his glory. Hall of the Castle of Knowledge, the limner has deftly restored thee I Lofty and light, rich hung with trophies of noble endeavor ; Treasures of nature and art, and of love, and the weapons of science. While in the midst sits, earnestly glad, thoughtfully commanding All the profusion around, himself thy sovereign, breathing Speech and significant life into every shape of the picture ; Plying the wonderful shuttle of thought, until it produces, Painting and painted at once, fresh images, brighter and brighter.* YARNHAGEN VON ENSE. BERLIN, December 1st, 1856. * Spaetes Daheim des einst in ruestig kaempfender Jugend Weitgewanderten Forschers, der, gleichwie Hoehen der Erde, Hoehen des Ruhmes erstieg, hat dargestellt uns der Maler, Schoen, reich ausgestattet mit heriiichen Schoetzen des Wissens : Humboldt's Letters. 347 103. HUMBOLDT TO VAKNHAGEN. BERLIN, December 3d, 1856. * So my pedestrian prose has led you back, my friend, to the regions of the noblest of rhythms ! It would make me proud, if the universe were not entitled to your favor. With even more modesty than the poor^ for whose benefit the old man with the moss-grown beard* exhibits himself for the small compensation of five silver groschen. With what excellent taste you have transferred the English " home" into " Daheim." Indescribably beautiful is your poetry, full of grace "Werke der Kunst, der Natur, und Schrift und Geraeth des Gelehrten. Aber ibn selbst inmitten des neidenswerthen Besitzthums Seheu wir froh sein Reich mit sinnigem Blicke beherrschen, Deutende Sprache verleihen dem wundervollen Gemaelde, Durch lichtvoller Gedanken beredsam gluckliche Fiigung Schaffend ein neues Bild, ein geistiges, staunendem Anschaun I * Bemoostes Haupt is an expression often applied to a student who has grown grey without passing an examination, and which, in this connexion, has an effect at once humorous and pathetic, which is inimi table. Tr. 348 Humboldt's Letters. and delicacy, and of a solemn monition of what should have been extracted from nature and art, and the weapon of science. If my brother William, who, in his correspondence with Wolf, discoursed so largely on lax and severe hexameters, could but have lived to witness this family honor ! .Your advice, even when not clothed in verse, is law to me. I shall follow it at once ; and you have made matters a great deal easier than they were. Aleajacta sit ! Could you, perhaps, dear friend, transfer the last ten syllables (or lines) of the Grand Ducal letter into your classic chirography, so as possibly to enable me to guess what it is that I am understood to have promised. Fremont's portrait reminds one vividly of Chateau- briand. A biography of the former has just appeared in New York, dedicated to me " Memoirs of the Life and Public Services of John Charles Fremont, by John Bigelow (?)." The dedication says : " To Alexander von Humboldt this memoir of one whose genius he was among the first to discover and acknowledge, is respect- fully inscribed by the author." Delicate words, a little artificially combined. There is a copy of the letter written to him from Sans Souci, in the King's name, in 1850, accompanying the great prize medal for science and art, upon his having projected the most extensive barometrical level ever executed, from Missouri to the South Sea. It closes with the words of which Sans Humboldt's Letters. 349 Souci has no reason to be ashamed : " La Calif ornie r qui a NOBLEMENT rcsiste & Tintroduction de Vesclavage^ sera dignement representee par un ami de la liberte et des progres de V intelligence."* The biography has passages of a strange romantic interest. At one *lime cold and hunger have driven a party to fury and almost phrensy, when they all pray and sjng, and then an oath from Fremont that there shall not in any case be a resort to cannibalism. As soon as my own curiosity is satis- fied I shall send you the book. For the present, you may occupy yourself with the miracle performed by the chaplain of an army division in Magdeburg, on a Mr. Assemann, in Quedlinburg. I have lighted upon it in my capacity of naturalist. It is to be found on p. 34. Gratefully yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. NOTE BY VARXHAGEN. The water color paintings by Hildebrandt, that of Humboldt among them, were exhibited in the hall of the Art Union, for the benefit of the poor. Price of admission, five silber- groschen.f Suicide a Folly and a Crime ; Two Sermons by Dr. Crusius, Chap- lain of a Division of the Army: Magdeburg, 1855. 8vo. The miracle consists in this, that one, who under the qualms of a guilty conscience, was long occupied with thoughts of suicide, was suddenly cured of them, permanently, by an invocation of the name of Jesus. The * California, which has nobly resisted the introduction of slavery, will be worthily represented by a Mend of liberty and of the progress of intelligence. f About eleven cents. 350 Humboldt's Letters. production is also remarkable as containing, on p. 34, the following allusion to Schleiermacher : "It is said of a distinguished divine, that he was once sorely tempted to commit suicide. Such is the influence which suffering of body and mind may exercise even upon good and godly men." 103. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, December 11th, 1856. ANOTHER grateful, unconstrained, and amiable letter from the Grand Duke. He fixes February for the visit, and desires the drama to open with a request to search the archives. The permission being given, the material part is to follow, as he says, symbolically. You will arrange that with care, my dear friend. We are approaching the goal of our wishes. I have another funeral to-morrow at the column in Tegel, which, under the hand of Thorwalsden, promises Hope. The oldest niece (daughter) of my brother, the wife of General Hedemann, born in Paris in 1800, a few days after Madame von Humboldt's return from Spain, has departed after much suffering (liver complaint connected with dropsy), an amiable, cheerful house. Humboldt's Letters. 351 wife, who enjoyed good health for forty years in a very happy marriage. I live to bury all my kith and kin. Yours, A. v. H. WEDNESDAY EVENING. 104. CHARLES ALEXANDER, GRAND DUKE OF SAXE-WEIMAR, TO HUMBOLDT. WEIMAR, December 16^, 1856. LIKE unto Nature, eternally invoked, eternally giving, because eternally bountiful, you respond with ever returning goodness to every repeated solicitation. The proposal of your Excellency in regard to the young man of science, as suggested by the plan of M. de Yarnhagen, is so excellent, that I can only beg for its speedy execu- tion. For that purpose, it would seem desirable that M. de Varnhagen should instil the idea into the young men that our plentiful archives would repay a thorough search, if I could be induced to sanction it. I would do so at once, permitting the material part to follow here- after. The period beginning with February of next year would seem to me best adapted for the literary investigation. The real object of the journey should 352 Humboldt's Letters. remain a secret, so that I shall be entirely at liberty to see him, to appoint him, or not to appoint him. I thank you with all my heart for that printed inclo- sure. This task also, by no means an easy one, you have performed with a master hand, and could do so better than any one else, because you, more than most men, have spoken to the world by noble actions. I shall appropriate the Journal of Petermann. My veneration for you is the pledge of the effective truth of my aspirations. I beg you to preserve your interest in it, and your goodness also, being your most grateful admirer and servant, CHARLES ALEXANDER. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEK BERLIN, Feb. 7 to, 1857. WHEN I read anything in Berlin that enlists my poli- tical or literary attention, my first thought is of you. Lasaulx of Munich, of Baader's tribe, was only known to me as a man of the " Kreuz Zeitung" and of Schubert's World of Darkness, and the new historical work he sends me contains little originality of views, but it mani- fests, by way of allusion, a wealth of positive know- Humboldt's Letters. 353 ledge, which I had not expected of the man. Numerous citations indicate a great preference for the views of my brother. The Slavonic passage in regard to the Messiah is also remarkable, and the notes present a rich collec- tion of antiquities. I should not look for anything of the sort from President Gerlach and his brother, to whom Professor Gelzer of Basle, and others, of opinions opposite to his, have been officially referred in the Neufchatel negotiations. If Lasaulx is not agreeable to you on account of his wishes for the restoration of the ancient German empire, you may find it interesting to skim over the work, and glance at the notes. My cutaneous disease is much better, as also my noc- turnal diligence. The fourth and last volume of Kos- mos will consist of two pans, i. 6., of two volumes, each of thirty-five sheets, the first of which has already left the press. Both the parts, however, are to appear together, to avoid spoiling the effect of a continuous description, beginning with the internal warmth of the earth, and ending with the different races of man. The presumptuous want of caution with which the pitiful Neufchatel affair is carried on here, exposes Prus- sia to great humiliation at Paris. Waterloo will be avenged on Prussia as it has been on Russia. Yours most truly, A. v. HT. 354 Humboldt's Letters. ise. VABNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, Feb. 9th, 1857. YOUR Excellency will receive, accompanying this, with my most hearty thanks, the book so kindly lent me. I have read it with varied emotions, I might say with painful interest. True, the author makes conces- sions, and opens up points of view, which I should not have expected any more than the luxurious learning of his manifold citations. But the pretty collection of notes fails to mantle the kernel of the text, which is extremely bitter; the apology of negro slavery, the brutal praise of warfare and of standing armies, and the beneficence of aristocratic revolutions, in spite of his far-fetched compliments, which look like invitations to be converted, the author really offers nothing but the fare of the " Kreuz Zeitung," in a preparation somewhat more delicate han that of Professor Leo, whose " mire of cultivation " and " scrofulous rabble " are here cooked up with spices. Latet anguis in herba! I must say that I always take the alarm when philosophers under- take to measure the course and the stage of human development, and to combine the meagre dates of our Humboldt's Letters. 355 puny history, of at most a few thousand years, with laws for the possibilities of millions of years. Neither Fichte, nor Schelling, nor Steffens, nor Hegel, were par- ticularly fortunate in their essays ; the assignment of the ages is best left to the poets. What is especially singular in our author is that he confesses to a strong doubt of his own doctrine, for he " cannot practically renounce the national Ideal of a restored emperor and empire, although his theoretical faith in their realization is slight" (p. 157). One who writes thus has written his own sentence. A friendly answer at the hands of your Excellency the author may hope to receive, an approving one you will not be able to give him. To hear that your welfare, your activity, your energy, continue unaltered and progressive, is refreshing and encouraging to us authors, who stand in need of great example to protect us from flagging in our daily work, oXfyov rs (jp/Xov rs. The views of the new volume of Kosmos give me great delight, and, as Schiller said when Goethe produced one of his masterpieces, " I thank the gods that they have suffered me to live to see it." The Neufchatel affair, even hi its present stage, has in it much that is disheartening, and I was from the first opposed to our negotiations at Paris, which had all the appearance of snares, in which much may yet be entan gled. The zeal displayed by many is not at all sincere, but seems an excellent means for the attainment of 356 Humboldt's Letters. other ends, and will probably be successful. Never- theless, I am without anxiety for the future, the light cannot be extinguished and must triumph ; it is only the moment of darkness that is hard to bear. With the best wishes, in the greatest veneration and devotion, I remain your Excellency's most obedient, VAENHAGEN VON ENSE. 197- VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, February 20th, 1857. WILL your Excellency pardon me for trespassing on your valuable time a moment ? Not for myself, but for a literary project from which I cannot withhold my personal interest, if only on the score of old acquaintance! Professor Francis Hoffmann, of Wuerzburg, is engaged upon the publication of the works of Francis von Baader, which he pursues with self-sacrificing perseverance. I may say against wind and tide. He is about closing the enterprise with a sketch of the life of his author, and is anxious not to pass over unmentioned the fact, that Baader attended the Mining Academy at Freiberg, at the same time with your Excellency. It would be in- Humboldt's Letters. 357 valuable to him to obtain a word of reference to the matter from yourself, a bare hint as to whether any relation of moment took place between you, or whether he made any impression upon you ? I would not pre- sume to trouble your Excellency, if I did not take for granted that either a memento, or the contents of a single line, would dispose of the matter ! The crowd and your Excellency's early departure prevented me from making my salutation at the Artists' Festival. It is more than twenty years since I have ventured into such deep waters. Strange reports are in circulation. I hope it is only a jest that presents M. Niebuhr as the Future Minister of finance, and M. Wagener as Privy Councillor, with a seat in the cabinet. With a repeated request of your indulgence, I remain, with the most profound esteem, and in the most sincere devotion, Your Excellency's most obedient, VABNHAGEX VON ENSE. On Humboldt's attack of sickness, Yarnhagen's diary of February 27, 1857, contains the following: "M. Hermann Grimm called, coming from Humboldt's apart- ments, where he had conversed with Seiffert, the valet. It is not a cold that has befallen Humboldt, but a far more serious attack, a paralytic stroke. After the court 358 Humboldt's Letters. ball oh Tuesday evening he felt unwell, in the night he left his bed to drink some water wished to avoid dis- turbing the servant and fell upon the floor. Seiffert awoke with the noise, and found his master speechless and unconscious ; it was some time before he revived. Privy Councillor Schoenlein is not sanguine; he had not a very good night. Humboldt's loss would be irreparable. He is a coun- terpoise to so much that is mean and contemptible, which, after his death, would boldly seek the light and glory in its own depravity. The honor and influence of science are embodied in him, and both would sink if he were taken away. There is not now a name in Germany, or in Europe, like his, not an influence in Berlin more exten- sive or more generally recognised than his. And how painful would his loss be to me ! His name and his inter- course is attached to fifty years of my life, he has known those who were near and dear to us of old ! Under March 14th, Varnhagen narrates in his diary : " When the King was with Humboldt, Schoenlein said to the latter, that he would not be able for some time to stand firmly on his left side, to which Humboldt rejoined : i For all that, it will not be necessary for me to sit on the right with Gerlach.' "* * Leader of the most reactionary part7. 3h Humboldt's Letters. 359 198. VARNHAQEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, March 17&, 1857. deny myself the pleasure to offer to your Excellency my most heartfelt congratulations for your happy and perfect recovery ! The finest and most powerful testimony of it is the letter to Privy Councillor Boeckh, which appeared in the papers this morning, and which no epithet of praise will suffice to describe. Such an invocation has never yet fallen to the lot of any man, and the receiver will not fail to honor and appreciate it as the most precious of all the gifts bestowed upon him. How fresh must have been the mind, and how warm the heart, from which it emanates, and how sterling and graceful at once is its expression ! Even its narrative form its Herodotic narrative, I might call it is of inestimable value, and shows us a beautiful combination of youth preserved and old age achieved. May your Excellency pardon this overflow of senti- ment ! You have no need of my words, but to me it is not possible to suppress them, and I therefore will give free vent to my most fervent desire, that the radiating star, covered for a moment by a cloud, may 360 Humboldt's Letters. still shine upon us for a long time in accustomed splen- dor, and may forebode, as heretofore, health and wealth at home and abroad. With profound veneration and gratitude, Ever faithfully your most devoted VARNHAGEI* VON ENSE. These lines are not so presumptuous as to expect an answer. 199. HUMBOLDT TO YAENHAGEN. BERLIN, March 19th, 1857 at Night. How should I deny myself the pleasure to thank you, the dearest, ablest, and most attached of my friends. Not indulgence no, praising expressions on my address to Boeckh a praise of form, of the vesture of thought has been my lot from the lips of the master of language, and of the delicate turns of good-will. You caused me great joy, more than you anticipated. What my nervous affection was, which produced a paralysis of such short duration, with the functions of the brain remaining entirely free, with pulse unchanged, with preservation of sight, and of all motion of the extremities subject to will, I cannot divine. There are Hurnboldt's Letters. 361 magnetic storms (the polar light), electric storms in the douds, nervous storms in man, heavy and light ones perhaps, also, sheet lightning, foreboding the others. I had serious thoughts of death, comme un homme gui part, ayant encore beaucoup de lettres d ecrire. Other interests, which for ever remain alive in me, bind me to the memories of yesterday ! ! I believe myself in full convalescence; but as I had to rest much on the bed without occupation, sadness and displeasure of the world have increased in me. This I say to you alone. I shall soon come to you, and thank you orally from the depths of my soul. All around us puts us to shame. In most intimate friendship, your most faithful A. v. HUMBOLDT. Varnhagen writes in his diary, March 19th, 1857: " Unexpectedly a letter from Humboldt ! I had writ- ten under my congratulation, that these lines were not so immodest as to expect an answer. But he, neverthe- less ans^yers, and in the most obliging, most heart-glad- dening manner. He gives a remarkable report of his sickness. The bad reports were all untrue, at least exaggerated ; he never lost consciousness or language, his pulse remained as usual. Yet he did not conceal from himself, that it might be the end. " I had serious thoughts of death, comme un homme qui part, ayant encore beaucoup de lettres a 6crire 1" Grand and fine is 10 362 Humboldt's Letters. what he adds : " Other interests, which remain for ever alive in me, bind me to the memories of yesterday ! ! (of the 18th of March!)* I believe myself in full convalescence, but as I had to rest much on the bed without occupation, sadness and displeasure with the world have increased in me. This I say to you alone." soo. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, April th, 1857. IF you, dear friend, understand the letter of the Grand Duke as I do, must go. I had proposed that he should come to Weimar, under the pretext of studying the archives ; he would bring a letter of intro- duction from you or me ; should be invited to court and if he did not please, should simply be asked whether he meant to return to . That this should be a shib- boleth as a bad end of the drama, quod Deus avertat. I also proposed to advance the stipulated sum of money. On this head the tyrant does not answer dis- tinctly. goes, I think, by way of Berlin. Shall * Day of the Prussian Revolution of 1848. Humboldt's Letters. 363 we then give him the letter of recommendation with the galvanic stimulants ? I do as you wish. Your faithful A. V. HUMBOLDT. MONDAY. Keep the letter of the Grand Duke, which ends nicely, and in good taste. 201. KAKL ALEXANDER, GRAND DUKE OP SAXE-WEIMAR, TO HUMBOLDT. WEMAB, April 3d, 1857. A MISUNDERSTANDING is the key to my behavior towards . I believed and expected that he, after he had, in January, I believe, asked the permission to search our archives, would immediately come hither. Then only of course I would have paid his expenses. Just in these last days I wondered neither to hear nor to see anything of . Then arrived the second letter of your Excellency, which, asking explanation of me, gives explanation; and I hasten to answer it by saying that may come in about ten days, and I would be prepared in any case to make the payment, the amount of which your Excellency 364 Humboldt's Letters. yourself named. According to understanding, both of us, I and the traveller, would consider ourselves entirely free yet, and therefore observe due discretion on the proper cause of this journey. Dante would have spoken still more truly if he had said : " Yiver ch' e un correr a 1'eterna gioventu." You prove it, for eternally your immortal spirit rejuvenates, its excellence is also a proof of this. In grateful reverence and love, your faithfully most submissive KARL ALEXANDER. VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, April *lth, 185t. TOUR Excellency's kind and very much desired com- munications I forwarded in haste to that is to say, the substance of it. It is to be hoped that will start immediately, but I expect first to receive an answer from him, and as I do not believe that in the short time the Grand Duke has left him, he can make the detour by way of Berlin, it will be best for him to receive the letter of introduction in Weimar. The Grand Duke insists upon discretion, and justly so ! Humboldt's Letters. 365 It is convenient for him, and delicate and sparing for the other party. has acted correctly in this respect up to the present time. I am very anxious to see the end of the matter ; taking for granted that there was a good relation present in the germ. Success would give me extraordinary satisfaction. The present you make me of the letter of the Grand Duke delights me very much. Not only the end is in good taste and fine, but the whole style has agreeable turns ; and above all, the reverence for your Excellency expresses itself in a manner, the heartfelt sincerity of which cannot be misunderstood. For some days I have been living entirely in recollec- tions of past times and relations. The correspondence between Gentz and Adam Mueller, just now published by Cotta, keeps me spellbound, and I must contemplate the whole series of those experiences in my reviving recollection. I have known both men early and intimately, and have had much intercourse with them, personally, of a friendly character, in measures generally an adversary. The supeiiority of Gentz over the younger friend, whom he greatly overvalued, never was doubtful to me, and is here confirmed anew ; only at last when the murder of Kotzebue deranges and stupifies the mind, the force of terror drives the statesman, who formerly was fond of clearness, into the gloomy nebulous strata, to which the 366 Humboldt's Letters. *. frightened friend had retreated long before. This cor- respondence is certainly unique in its kind. The trans- actions, disquisitions, mutual influences, inclinations, and feuds are invested with dramatic interest. In Adam Mueller, by-the-by, is contained the complete germ of the " Kreutz Zeitungs" party, though in ideal elevation, still without contact with the real world, and therefore without offensive vulgarities. Your Excellency kindly promised me a few lines on Franz Baader ; may I remind you of them in the most modest manner, and with the remark, that really a few lines only would suffice for the purpose ? In most faithful reverence and most grateful submis- sion, immutably your Excellency's most obedient VARNHAGEN VON ENSE. 203. YARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, April 10th, 1857. I HAVE the pleasure to announce to your Excellency that Herr will start from to Weimar on the 14th. Much as he would have wished to make the detour by way of Berlin, if only to lay at the feet of your Excellency the most cordial expression of his Humboldt's Letters. 367 boundless gratitude for so much friendly intercession, he is compelled by the brief period fixed by the Grand Duke to renounce the realization of that wish for the present. ' I therefore venture to solicit the favor of the introduction to the Grand Duke you were good enough to promise ; a single line would suffice. I would imme- diately despatch it to Weimar, so that Mr. will find it there on his arrival. The young man is well aware that the journey concludes nothing, and that he must be prepared for a denial ; but he is much pleased to see that the long delay in the progress of affairs is ended, and he is at last in motion. By your kind inquiry your Excellency has produced this result, and dispelled the clouds of misconception ; the most grateful heart will acknowledge this with heartfelt devotion ! His sen- timents are warmly shared by myself, in this case, as in so many earlier cases ! With the best wishes for your welfare ; with profound veneration and attachment I remain unalterably, Your Excellency's most obedient VAENHAGEN VON ENSE. ^68 Humboldt's Letters. SO4. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, April 13th, 1851. HERE, my valued friend, is the archivary recommen. dation for , just as prescribed. May the matter be successful. With heartfelt attachment, Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. SOS. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, April 21st, 1851. To my great regret, dear friend, I cannot accept the kind invitation of yourself and your amiable niece to a cup of coffee on Thursday, as I shall return late and much fatigued from Charlottenburg. During my illness, a number of unimportant matters have accumulated, which must be disposed of after dinner, because they are trumpery affairs of orders and dedications, a pre- sentation of Betel in preference to gifts of money. The fourth class* operates like Betel chewing, it occupies * i.e., of the order of the Prussian eagle. Humboldt's Letters. 369 the time, but affords no nourishment. On Thursday the King hopes to close and settle with me. Be pleased to write Professor Hoffmann, of Wuerzburg, that I am grateful for his torso, but no assistance is to be expected from the King, not only (what you must not write), because something like a holy horror of the Catholic zeal of Baader is rooted in the King's mind, but also because all literary assistance dwindles down in the cabinet to a present of forty or forty-five thalers. In preference to the publication in the preface of a miser- able letter of introduction, which may have been written in a moment of ill-humor, I enclose a memorandum as requested. With the same friendship as of old, A. v. HUMBOLDT. (INCLOSURE IN A LETTER FROM HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN.) You ask me, dear friend, what were the earliest im- pressions produced upon me by Franz Baader ! I first saw him in June, 1791, while studying the art of mining in Freiberg, after the journey with George Forster to England, and after my sojourn in the Hamburg Com- mercial Academy of Buesching and Ebeling. For eight months I enjoyed the daily intercourse of this amiable and gifted man. Franz Baader had then published his work on caloric, and his inclinations were all of a che- mico-physical nature, with a slight infusion of ideas 3/o Humboldt's Letters. on the philosophy of physical science. He was active underground, more occupied with practical mining and furnace operations than with geognostic researches ; thorough in the observation of fact, cheerful, and satiri- cal, but always with good taste, and not intolerant of those who differed from him. His imagination was not then specially directed to religious subjects. He was generally popular, and a little feared at the same time, as is so common where there is a consciousness of mental superiority. His political opinions were liberal. It was the period of the Congress of Pillnitz in our neighbor- hood a time and a neighborhood which gave occasion to political utterances. soe. HUMBOLDT TO BERLIN, April 25tfi, 1857. " THE gate of the oracle, the abyss of the archives of state, analogies leading down to the depths of the sea." This is inferior to the last letter. Rafael's manner is not always the same. I am surprised to find that curiosity appears, to have led him to avoid seeing before the journey to Hanover ! Preserve the vapid letter, my dear friend ! The bottom of the sea refers to a map of the Humboldt's Letters. 371 sea from Newfoundland to Ireland, which I recom- mended to the Grand Duke, but which is not to be pro- cured because it was published in Carthage by Perthes ! The Times flatter themselves, in all seriousness, that the French race is on the point of extinction ; well, the pugs are extinct also. Yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. I have disagreeable rudera of the correspondence with a certain Dr. Gross Homnger, in Vienna, who accuses himself of having written against Prussia in 1848, and now asks Prussia to recommend him to the Austrian government. Have you any recollection of him ? NOTE BY YARKHAGEN. " Carthage" means Gotha, a town not far from "Weimar, but under the sovereignty of the Duke of Saxe-Coburg, between whom and his cousin there is a constant rivalry, such as of old existed between Rome and Carthage. 307. CHARLES ALEXANDER, GRAND DUKE OF SAKE- WEIMAR, TO HUMBOLDT. YOUR Excellency's letter was duly received by the hands of Mr. . Accept my thanks for these lines, for this new token of your constant kindness to me. 372 Humboldt's Letters. The bearer is for the present immersed in the abyss of my archives. As soon as I shall return from Hanover, where an invitation will detain me a few days,* to seek him out, awaiting further developments at the hand of time, like the people at the gate of the oracle. Analogies lead me from deep to lower deep, and then I descend from the archives to the bottom of the sea. How am I to obtain the map of which you wrote ? When I inquired for it in Gotha, some time ago, the inquiry was futile. So I return to the source, ever rich and bounteous, of whom I subscribe myself the most grateful and obedient CHARLES ALEXANDER. VIENNA, April 22d, 1857. SOS. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, May 28th, 1857. I AM uneasy, my dear friend, about Weimar. The Grand Duke is everywhere, except in Weimar "Athens." What will become of our warmly recommended ? Has he been spoken to by the eloquent Prince ? You have not wished me joy to the order bestowed upon me by * An ellipse, probably of Grand Ducal origin. TV. Humboldt's Letters. 373 the "Hamburg Moniteur" as Grand Officier, which Guizot gave me fifteen years ago. Raumer's conversa- tion is very interesting ; he was at Pesth, at Milan, dined with the Archduke, apd called on Cavour. He has again returned with something of a hankering after the Austrian regime in Lombardy, like the Republicans when they visit the United States, where arsenic, the torture, or Fremont-worshipping negroes, cause a criminal colic to Cuba-mad Buchanan. Multa sunt eadem sed aliter. The Russian Minister of Enlighten- ment, Noroff, who had a leg shot off by the thigh at Borodino, and who has carried his wooden leg to Jerusalem and Egypt, and even to the top of the Pyramids, is here, and attends as a guest, sitting among the students, the lectures of Johannes Mueller and Diderici. His companion, the young Count Ouwaroff, the author of a great work on Hellenic antiquities in the Chersonese, attends the lectures of Michelet and Boeckh. Both are very agreeable men. The former is accused of being over spiritual, but not intolerant ; both are much pleased with the freedom of our student life, and with the absence of policemen from our uni- versity building. I did not care to disabuse the mind of the one-legged Raumer, as they will leave soon. Decipitur mundus. With old affection, your tiresome A. V. HUMBOLDT. 374 Humboldt's Letters. NOTE BY VARNHAGEX. " The United States, where arsenic, the torture, er Fremont-worshipping negroes, cause a criminal colic to Cuba-mad Buchanan." This passage alludes to the circumstance, that at a hotel in Washington, the President, and many others with him, * were seized with a violent colic after dinner, so that suspicions of poison were entertained ; and it was only after a legal investigation that the whole was found to have been caused by impure water. BY THE TRANSLATOR. " Fremont-worshipping negroes" must refer to the slaves who were reported to be in insurrection soon after the accession of President Buchanan, in Tennessee or Kentucky, and of whom it was said, that they believed Fremont and all his men to be encamped at the bottom of the Cumberland river, ready to emerge for their delivery. S00. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEff. POTSDAM, THURSDAY. In haste, June 4th, 1857. A TRULY grand ducal letter, indelicate without excuse, cutting off every prospect, as he said " Au revoir" on going away, after the preconcerted shibboleth. Silence as to the costs, which are unnecessarily heavy. You and I shall cease "steering in the ocean of investiga- tion," as acquaintance w r ith the party proposed does not suffice to determine him. I have a mind to answer some- what mockingly. It may be agreeable to you, my Humboldt's Letters. 375 esteemed friend, to enrich your archives with an auto- graphy of Thiers, who is now an Orleanist. Duvergier de Hauranne also came here after a pilgrimage to Eisenach. The Duchess is going to England. Preserve both letters, the bad one and that which is simply good. Yours, A. v. HT. On Saturday I expect to come to Berlin with the King. The Queen is coming on Monday. sio. CHARLES ALEXANDER, GRAND DUKE OF SAXE- WEIMAR, TO HUMBOLDT. ETTERSBURG, June 1, 1857. YOUR Excellency has probably learned already, that I have seen, repeatedly conversed with, but finally re- frained from appointing . He interested me, I may say he pleased me, but I thought I could not recognise in him the secretary who could not only keep me informed of everything of moment in the spheres of science, art, and literature, but should attend to my correspondence, my intercourse, verbal and social, in various languages ; and to appoint him at hazard I feared to venture. To 376 Humboldt's Letters. retreat was, then, the only resource. I did so in order to steer further in the ocean of investigation. Whether you will continue, even in this matter, to cast upon me, as a star of good omen, the light of the goodness ever extended to me is what I may be permitted to wish, but can hardly be permitted to hope although we agreed that the acquaintance of the party was not to include his selection. I shall now retire into various forest solitudes of Thu- ringia with a number of books, among which I anticipate particular pleasure from the perusal of Earth's itinerary. I bow in reverence before such endurance in the love of science, before such indomitable energy ; how much the more must I do so before his prototype, before you ? Remaining your most devoted, most grateful servant, CHARLES ALEXANDER. Sll. THIERS TO HUMBOLDT. (FROM THE FRENCH.) PARIS, May Uth, 1857. MY DEAR M. DE HUMBOLDT I take the liberty of commending to your goodness shown so often to myself and to Frenchmen generally, M. Duvergier de Hau- ranne, who goes to Germany to show it to his young son. Humboldt's Letters. 377 You know our country too well for me to tell you what important and always honorable part has been sustained by M. Duvergier de Hauranne in our assemblies, where he has ever been faithful to the cause of rational liberty ; and not faithful alone, but eminently useful. Having returned to private life and devoted himself to study, he goes to see your excellent country, and I thought I could not do better than to recommend him to your kindness. To his young son it will be an imperishable recollection to have seen the illustrious savan who does the greatest honor to the century, and whom we French- men have the vanity to consider as French, and belong- ing to us no less than to Germany. I do not write on current affairs here, for M. Duver- gier de Hauranne knows them, and can make you acquainted with them better than any other man. Accept the renewed homage of my respectful attach- ment. A. THIEES. sis. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, June 19th, 1857. To my greatest joy, a beautiful portrait of yourself was brought me by Mr. Richard Zeune, during an excursion to Tegel. I know not which most to admire, 378 Humboldt's Letters. the fresh, vivid, characteristic likeness of features so dear to me (the talent of the skilful Miss Ludmilla Assing), or the writing of your hand, so pregnant in thought and expression. The latter I have copied myself and shown it to my friends, because it is to be ranked with the best of what our language contains in the sententious compression of ideas. The unexpected arrival of the brothers Schlagintweit from Cashmere, Thibet, and the Kuen Luen mountains, which bound Thibet on the north, as the Himalaya on the south, has unreasonably delayed my acknowledgment of your kindness, as they are going to the King at Marienbad, without, it is to be hoped, the three hundred and forty boxes they have brought with them. All the passes, even those most convenient for travel, are 18,000 feet high. From the liberal grand ducal power (not liberal in the prosaic sense of filthy lucre), not a syllable, pro- bably because he is expecting us to send him fresh proposals, fresh victims. No one but the honorary Hungarian monk* and the princess is now a riddle to me. Yours most faithfully, A. V. HUMBOLDT. The Emperor Napoleon has adroitly mended what before was dubious, by means of very amiable letters, rich in delicate turns of language, addressed to me by * Liszt. Humboldt's Letters. 379 Prince ISTapoleon (plon plon), and Walewski. As Nie- btihr, the Prussian Cabinet Councillor, is publishing a book on Noric Antiquities, nothing remains to cause surprise, not even the FREE canvass for the free election in free France. I believe a few weeks in Branitz will be of benefit to you. 313. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, June 30&; 1857. I AM at a loss for words to express to you, my honored Mend, and to the amiable and brilliant artist and authoress, Ludmilla Assing, what pleasure you have provided for my solitude, by " Elisa von Ahlefeldt," a pleasure still to be enjoyed by all who will deprive me of it for a few days. Who can read without emotion a fate so tender, so simple, told in such glowing language, by Miss Ludmilla ; who can escape the most anxious reflec- tions about the tortures of sentiment which the most noble and cultivated of mankind are skilled in inflicting on themselves about passion half-dogmatic in character, for the gratification of which the difficult institution of official marriage is inadequate. Elisa von Ahlefeldt loved Adolph von Luetzow, but only as the vigorous representative of a noble political sentiment. The mo- 380 Humboldt's Letters. tive for the disruption of the fetters, indelicate on his part, has something depressing. Immerman wishes to be loved, dreads the constraint of marriage, as Elisa does, but marries nevertheless ! ! The man who most occu- pies my thoughts in all these matters is Friesen, who worked so hard with me at the Mexican atlas in 1807, who was so dear to me, and to whom I was so much. I have mentioned him with tenderness in the Essai Poli- tique sur la Nouvelle Espagne. Had I known the beau- tiful work of Miss Ludmilla, I would gladly have offered her a few lines. Her book, however, will go through many editions. As I am unfortunately compelled to go to Tegel for a night, I inquire, my dear friend, whether I may call upon you at three o'clock on Friday, and whether I may hope then to find Miss Ludmilla with you. So much skill in art and literary genius united in one and the same person is a rare luxury. It might lead to misfortunes. The course of the world refuses to admit of great exceptions to its compensatory system of pleasure and sadness. Your A. v. HUMBOLDT. TUESDAY. In great haste, and incorrect. (Inclosed, a Letter from Friesen, of the year 180T, with this Super- scription by Humboldt. ) A little gift for Miss Ludmilla Assing, the brilliant authoress of Elisa von Ahlefeldt, an autograph of my dear Humboldt's Letters. 381 young friend Friesen, with sentiments of sincere thank- fulness. A. v. HUMBOLDT. JUNE 30&, 1857. Varnhagen's diary of July 4, 1857, contains the fol- lowing : " Yesterday Humboldt spoke of the time when he lived in a house at the side of George's Garden, and was so assiduous in his magnetic observations that he once stinted himself of sleep for seven successive days and nights in order to examine the state of things every half hour ; after that he changed the watch with substi- tutes. This was hi 1807, just fifty years ago. I often saw the little house in which the experiments were made, when I visited Johannes von Mueller, who also lived in a house at the side of the same garden ; or Fichte who lived in a garden house in the middle of the garden. When old George, a wealthy distiller, showed the gar- den to his friends, Humboldt went on to say, he never failed to boast of 'his learned men.' 'Here I have the famous Mueller ; there is Humboldt, and there is Fichte, but he is only a philosopher, I believe.' " 382 Humboldt's Letters. 214. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, July 6th, 1857. So ignorant of German poetry as to know nothing of the fame of Mr. - of what he calls the dreary Mecklenburg, I must ask you, my dear friend, to spe- cify the degree of politeness with which the man ought to be answered. Eight volumes, a compensation of forty louis d'or, four for myself, four, as usual, for the King, and a nonsensical letter, are before me. The man appears to have sung of the great Napoleon and Ney, but to have vainly knocked at the door of Napo- leon III., Stephanie, Walewski, and Edgar Ney. It is made my duty forthwith to read a Trajan, a Bianca, and a Henry IV. Neither does he seem to have an extravagant idea of what is to be obtained from the King, a circumstance which discourages me from deli- vering the treasure. Elisa von Ahlefeldt has given great pleasure in Tegel, where I went with Kaulbach yester- day, as delicate and pure in taste. Not in Tegel but in Berlin, some court chaplains or officers, anxious to acquire the title of consistorial councillors, may have mooted the ecclesiastical question, whether a husband Humboldt's Letters. 383 and a friend are both allowable ? The Berliners manage to talk about and to soil whatever comes into their fingers. Most gratefully fully yours, A. V. HUMBOLDT. MONDAY NIGHT. I shall send for the two volumes again in a day or two. My best and most grateful compliments to Miss Lud- milla, the poetic artist, who combines the poet and the painter. S15. VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, July Sth, 1857. THE two volumes of poetry kindly sent by your Excellency, no doubt manifest considerable literary cul- ture, and a skilful management of language and of metre ; but this would seem to exhaust the truthful measure of their praise. The number of men of this order of talent is very large, and where there are not further excellences they can hardly be called otherwise than ordinary. The claims advanced on the basis of such performances are frequently exorbitant, and such is 384 Humboldt's Letters. the case in the present instance, where not appreciation merely, but actual remuneration is demanded. The author is not known to me, and his reputation certainly far from extensive. That his youth has been hard, and that his present condition is far from pleasant, is much to be deplored, but the manner in which he seeks to better himself, by supplication to the powerful bestow- ing praise upon men of all parties and all shades of party, without a conviction of his own, is none the less disreputable, as well as his letter to your Excellency, which has received the proper epithet at your hands. In the answer with which you will honor him, the severe expressions I have used are sure of being softened to the full extent of what is desirable by your inexhaustible and unchangeable humanity and goodness. My niece, Ludmilla, thanks you from the fulness of her heart for the friendly interests your Excellency has so kindly manifested, and which she will never cease to count among the greatest treasures of which she could possibly become possessed ! Yesterday we paid a visit to Madame Gagiotti Richards, and found her, more beautiful than ever, in the midst of her artistic occupations. The whole family entertain the most enthusiastic veneration for you, and this alone would make them dear to us ; the personal attractions of the beautiful artist are enchanting. At the present day nothing literary is permitted to Humboldt's Letters. 385 make its appearance, be it ever so peaceful and inoffen- sive, without giving rise to manifestation of priestcraft and zealotry. The little book could not escape the universal fate, and the author must expect to meet with many an offensive objurgation on this head. But she has had the good fortune de manger son pain blanc le premier, she has reaped the praises of your Excel- lency, and may now quietly leave the black bread of detraction untouched ! "We mean to leave for Dresden on Monday, and hope to find your Excellency again in excellent health at the end of a few weeks ! With profound veneration and grateful devotion, Your obedient VABNHAGEN VON ENSE. 316. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, September IBtJi, 1857. AN inquiry about letters and packages of the 8th and 22d of August, gives me the gratifying certainty of your return to monastic Berlin, where (supplement to No. 215 of Tante Voss, Sept. 15) "God in History"* is accused of rationalism and sinful Romanism on account Title of a work by Chevalier Bunsen. 386 Humboldt's Letters. of a kiss extorted from M. Merle d'Aubigne", and not yet sufficiently explained, and where (what is much more refreshing) pastor Kind boasts of having been kissed on the shoulder by a young Italian chambermaid at Naples, with the warmth of semi-conversion to Evangelism. As my monotonous birth-day has already brought in more than three hundred letters and pack- ages, I never know anything about the dates of arrival ; but I well remember having received a letter with a black margin of the 15th of July, from your distinguished relative Adolfo de Varnhagen in Madrid, and also a fragment of his history. I shall thank him heartily. His history is not without interest. You know that an attempt was made to get rid of M. von der Heydt, whose independent activity is disagreeable to his colleagues, by the appointment of a commission of finance in the coun- cil of state. But the man has acted with considerable energy, and the King has adjourned the whole commis- sion, which was the work of ISTiebuhr. With heartfelt friendship, WEDNESDAY. Yours, A. v. H. My respects to your talented niece. I believe " God in History" has acted unwisely in accepting the King's invitation, even after so many repetitions. I esteem him, but he will be accused of many things of which he is innocent. Humboldt's Letters. 387 Sl*7. HU^BOLDT TO VAKSTHAGEN. BERLIN, October Uth, 1857. (WITH LETTER FROM GEOTZ AND GARVE RETURNED.) MY best thanks ! I had already received the letters and enjoyed them. Nothing can add more to the glory of my brother. Strange that Ancillon could so long deceive so shrewd a man as Gentz. A. v. HT. Varnhagen's diary of Dec. 3d, 1857, reads as follows : " I called on Humboldt ; M. von Olfers was just going, and told me that Rauch had died in Dresden. Next General Count von der Groeben took his leave ; he was very cordial, and pleased with my offer to send him a man who will repnblish the poems of Schenkendorf. Humboldt was full of cordiality for Ludmilla and my- self; told me about the King, about Schoenlein, about the Princess of Prussia, about Doctor Lassalle, whose work* he had read accurately in three nights, and of Friesen ; spoke of the * Kreuz Zeitung' with contempt, praised the Count von der Groeben as a man of honor, and von der * The Philosophy of Heraclitus the Obscuro of Ephesus. 388 Humboldt's Letters. Heydt for his determination to leave the cabinet. He had a letter from the Queen. The King wishes to see him, and he therefore drives to Charlottenburg. He is hale and hearty. I read much in Lassalle. Even the external appearance of so great and important a work excites reverence. On me it makes a> peculiar impres- sion to witness the downfall, one by one, of the stays and rivets by which my inveterate opinions have been upheld. Every one who has grown old has to observe and experience such things ; but in our times the changes are quicker and more powerful than in former times, and I am peculiarly sensible to them. Even where the contents do not matter to me, where I do not lose in the matter, because the subjects do not belong directly to my province, the phenomenon is nevertheless somewhat disagreeable. Such is again my lot in regard to Schleiermacher ; his work on Heraclitus was hitherto the last word, the final disposition of all questions relating to that philosopher ; even Hegel's adverse hints had not been able to overturn this authority. One could rest upon it as on a downy pil- low, when lo ! a new critic comes, and snatches it from under us. True, Lassalle supplies its place with another, which is large and well stuffed, but still the change is uncomfortable. And yet I am pleased with this unrest of intellectual efforts, this ingenuity, learning, progress, which asks no fear or favor." Humboldt's Letters. 389 sis. HUMBOLDT TO BERLIN, January llth, 1858. REVERED FRIEND, I, too, am a sufferer from the returning cutaneous affection, an unwelcome conse- quence of old age. You have, at least, unconditional freedom, and can attend to your comfort ; to me there is no freedom granted ; I am molested by all ; most unmercifully and inexorably by the mail. The kind memento of Mrs. Sarah Martin is very honorable to me. I owe it, like many other things, to you. Suffer me to make you the interpreter of my gratitude and of my faithful reverence for the talented lady, and for her brother, so dear to me, Mr. John Taylor. The news from Livingstone interests me chiefly on account of his views of the susceptibility of the negro race to civiliza- tion, at a time when France on the one hand, and Xorth America on the other, are most shamelessly subserving the capture of slaves in Africa, under the flimsy pretext of introducing free laborers. The politi- cal news from India, by Captain Meadows Taylor, was unimportant. Perhaps it is agreeable to you to add to your archives some original letters of Count Walewski, 390 Humboldt's Letters. Prince Napoleon, who goes to Egypt, son of King Jerome, Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, and a copy of a very finely-written letter of the Pasha of Egypt, the original of which I was obliged to present to Dr. Brugsch. Dr. Michael Sachs could not be prevented from cele- brating me in Hebrew.* Many kind greetings to the noble General von Pfuel, whom I shall visit as soon as possible. Yours faithfully, always equally illegible, A. V. HUMBOLDT. 310. PRINCE NAPOLEON, SON OF JEROME, TO HUMBOLDT. PARIS, Oct. 13th, 1857. MONSIEUR LE BARON, Mons. Mariette sent to me, only a few days ago, your 'letter of July, in which you speak of Dr. Brugsch, and of his having sent me a Demotic Grammar, which I have not yet received. I mention this, so that you cannot accuse me of negli- gence in answering you. To-day I do not feel the courage in me to speak to you even of science. Your heart and your mind must be much afflicted by the sickness of your sovereign and friend, who causes us * A Life of Huraboldt was written in Hebrew by Mr. Sachs. Humboldt's Letters. 391 great sorrow. I say us, because the few days which I passed at Berlin made me appreciate the eminent qua- lities of the King, and attached me very much to him. May God preserve his life ! I wish it from my heart. Receive, Monsieur le Baron, the assurance of my high esteem. NAPOLEON. Varnhagen reports in his diary under February 18th, 1858 : " I went to Humboldt. With a wonderful pre- sence of mind he immediately thinks of all the things of which our presence can remind him ; he tells most flattering things to Ludmilla on her book, for the second edition of which (which he declares to be inevitable), he will give her a passage on Friesen,* which he had indeed intended to communicate to the ' Turners ' of Leipzig, as an inscription on the monument intended to be erected in Friesen' s honor, but which, after a prelimi nary inquiry, appears to have been forgotten by them. He is out of humor with the Grand Duke of Saxe- Weimar, who robbed him and the brothers Schlagin- tweit of some hours, by repeated visits ; they soon found out that he did not want to inform himself about those things they had prepared for him, but that he only wanted to have spoken with them ; he also gave to each one the Falkenorden.f About he made * One of the founders, " der Turnkunst." f Order of the Falcon. 392 Humboldt's Letters. the same excuse to Humboldt as he made to me, that noble birth was indispensable, which Humboldt thinks quite detestable, and moreover entirely in harmony with the personal prejudices of the Grand Duke ; the father, he says, who also was not very remarkable, had at least concealed this sentiment, but the son expresses it openly ; once, after a man who was not of noble birth had left the company, he had with great satisfaction given utterance to his delight, saying, 'Now we are among ourselves ! ' Another time, when some one observed that thirteen were at the table, he replied for consolation, that two among them were not nobles, and therefore did not count ! and this he said to Humboldt in French, because, he said, these two would certainly not understand that! Humboldt complained bitterly of the mass of letters by which he was visited ; he had to read at least 400 of them in one month ; many com- menced, c Noble old man,' or, ' Noble youthful old man ;' or also in this fashion : ' Caroline and I are happy ; our fate is in your hands.'* He praised Princess Victoria, saying, that she was not pretty, but had pleasing simple manners, and an eye full of soul." * Meaning " Caroline and I can get married, if you will help us to some money." Humboldt's Letters. 393 sso. VARNHAGEN TO HUMBOLDT. BERLIN, February 19&, 1858. You see, dear friend, that in spite of many little cavils of Mr. d'Avezac, who has learned to quote from Malte- Brun, your cousin does you much honor. But it is incomprehensible that Mr. d'Avezac knows nothing at all of the map of Juan de la Cose, of 1500, published by me in 1830, six years before the death of Colon, and of a work in large quarto, under the title "Geschichte des Seefahrers Hitter Martin Behaim, von W. Ghillany and Alex. Humboldt, 1853," where the origin of the name of " America" is discussed. A. HT. The ravages of a single night. The noble, youthful old man, Yecchio della Montagna. Accompanying the book, " Considerations Geogra- phiques sur PHistoire du Brezil, Examen critique d'une nouvelle histoire generate du Brezil, par M. Francois Adolphe de Yarnhagen. Rapport fait par M. d'Avezac, Paris, 1857-58." 17* 394 Humboldt's Letters. ssi. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. BERLIN, March 1th, 1858. I PRESUME that yon, dear friend, have not seen the indiscreet, almost talentless, book of ISTormanby. I shall not return it to Lady Bloorafield without offering it to you. Skip over it according to the index, and send it kindly back to me in four or five days. It depicts a badly played comedy. My reverence to your amiable niece. Your most attached A. v. HUMBOLDT. SUNDAY NIGHT. " A Year of Revolution. From a journal kept in Paris in 1848. By the Marquis of ISTormanby, K.G. London, 1857. 2 vols. in 8vo." Varnhagen remarks in his diary, under March 8th, 1858: "Humboldt sends me, with kind lines, the book of the Marquis of Normanby on the revolution of 1848. He calls it an indiscreet book, and almost talentless. I call it stupid, and perfidious in its contents; it shows Humboldt's Letters. 395 the evil results of meddling with diplomacy, particularly if unofficial, as was that of the Marquis at the time. Lamartine as well as Cavaignac gave far too much heed to him. He is one of the dullest and most tedious Eng- lishmen ever heard of." March 9th, 1858. Varnhagen adds this further re- mark on Normanby : " Read a little more of Normanby. He is a poor fool, but his bad book is good enough to expose the paltriness of Louis Philippe, the villany of Guizot, and the pernicious influences of sneaks and sharpers. His forte consists in the perfect success with which he flattens down to insufferable monotony the enlivening and exhilarating effects of the torrent of events." 222. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEK BERLIN, April 13f.% 1858. I AM touched by the kindness of your letter, and the souvenir from your talented niece, Miss Ludmilla. As Illaire called yesterday, I have made every preparation to be of use to M , the esteemed clergyman of , in the acquisition of one of those toys, which, if they do not nourish, yet afford an agreeable diversion, like 396 Humboldt's Letters. that enjoyed by the knights of old, who galloped over a course covered with obstructions, and the prospect of escape from the infernal regions of the fourth class.* I shall write to Illaire for the third class, but beseech you to jog my memory. 's title ! I believe he does not preach has even ceased to administer the little wafers which refuse to unite with the bread, their chemical kinsman. I believe, however, he is a Pro- testant power in . For the benefit of your soul and Miss Ludmilla's, I inclose some phantasies on the antediluvian universal absence of rain in the Berlin world, and on the con- suming fire, sure to be occasioned by a little forgotten potash, in the midst of innocent felspar of the granite formation, on the day of judgment : " de la geologie hebra'izante," as I have been imprudent enough to style it in " Kosmos." Yours, A. v. HT. TUESDAY. * I.e. of the order of the Prussian Eagle. The sentence reads thus : " Da gestern Illaire bei mir war, so habe ich alles vorbereitet, Herrn dem vielgeachteten Geistlicheu in .... nuetzlich fuer eines der Spielwerke zu werden, welche zwar nicht naehren, aber eine augenehme Zerstreuung, auch des spaet aiisgefuehrten Reitens mit Hindernissen, Aussicht zur Errettung aus der Unterwelc dervier ten Klasse gewaehren." As it stands, the clause printed by us in italics makes nonsense. Translator. Humboldt's Letters. 397 (" Thoughts on the first Rainbow, in connexion with certain Geological Facts." London: 1852. The author is W. Bateman Byng, but it was sent to Humboldt by Mr. F. A. Fokker, of Hamburg, a superannuated pilot captain.) On the 24th of April, 1858, Varnhagen obseryes in his diary : " Humboldt was very droll yesterday, in speaking of the letters he receives. A number of ladies in Eiberfeld have conspired to labor at his conversion, by means of anonymous letters, and have informed him of their design. Such letters are received from time to tune. Somebody in Nebraska asks him what. becomes of the swallows in winter. I suggested that this inquiry must be for ever on the wing. Of course,' he replied ; 1 1 don't know any more than other folks, but,' he added, with jocose gravity, : ' I took care not to write that to the man in Nebraska, for it is never safe to make such admissions.' " sss. HUMBOLDT TO YARNHAGEN. POTSDAM, June 19th, 1858. TEDIOUS on the whole, and full of internal contradic- tions, but still historical in reference to the mythical 'Anierico-Germanism, and unfortunately too true. See 398 Humboldt's Letters. p. 76 to 80, and pp. 33, 35, 75. The charms of a lan- guage without genders. " Fermez les ttvres et serrez les dents.' 1 * " Der '' and " die " fell into lazy mouths, and lapses into " de," and this was corrupted into a neutral, lifeless "the." Page 88 sets forth how my friend Froebel escaped being Blumed. . A. HT. There gloomy Potsdam has kept me too long from your side. NOTE BY YARNHAGEN. This letter accompanied "The German Emigration, and its Importance in the History of Civilization. By Julius Froebel. Leipsic : 1858." A copy sent by Froebel to Hum- boldt. * " Close your lips and set your teeth." In the ' Anglaises pours rire " there is a squib which says, " Ouvrez la louche et serrez les dents et vous parlerez anglais /" Open your mouth and set your teeth, and you will speak English. Humboldt may have had this in his mind and have converted ouvrez into fermez by mistake. Froebel says in page 35 : "After all, the German and the English are but two different dialects, or rather stages of development. The English occupies the higher grade, for it is acknowledged that the attrition of grammatical form corresponds to a higher mental develop- ment." Opposite this passage Humboldt writes " Ah ! " On p. 88, Froebel alludes to the great mission of Austria in the future. Similar passages were to be found in a pamphlet of his, which appeared in 1848 ; they were pointed out to Prince Windisch- graetz by an aide-de-camp, just in time to procure his pardon, while his colleague, Robert Blum, was brutally shot. Humboldt's Letters. 399 S34. HUMBOLDT TO VARNHAGEN. BERLIN, September 9th, at night, 1858. HEARTY thanks, my dear friend, for your affectionate missive. The thanks of the excellent .... is far from indifferent to me. No one here has had the politeness to inform me that my proposal has been accepted. As you and your accomplished niece, Miss Ludmilla, are fond of curiosities, and as my extreme old age has deadened all compunction at the exhibition of my own praises, I send you a letter from Queen Victoria, deli- vered by the Princess of Prussia, and requesting an autograph of some passages from the Views of Nature and Kosmos (poetical descriptions of nature), as well as a letter from the American Secretary of War, who has been accommodating to me for the traveller Moell- hausen, the son-in-law of Seiffert, draughtsman of the two expeditions to the South Sea, and who, mirabile dictu, has dismissed all political animosity on account of my friendship for Fremont. The latter of the com- munications gives me the greater pleasure, of the two, though it is unpardonably extravagant in the use of great names. 400 Humboldt's Letters. The regency, indispensable as it is to restore the wasted power of the country, is still, alas ! in the clouds. I hope the Prince of Prussia will abide by his present promise, not to act further without being expressly invested with the title of Regent. But who is to make the first move, when the King is kept in such seclusion, that even I have not seen him since the return ? If the Chambers initiate the matter, the Government stands convicted of pusillanimity. Aleajacta, and the sum of intelligence at stake seems to have been doled out by nature with laudable economy. What knowledge have you, dear friend, of M. Iwan Golowin, whose impudence is so unprecedented as to admit of his photographing me before the public in the most dreadful neglige de costume, meme, as I wrote him in great indignation, en me dotant de deux f antes de francais, venaient instead of mennent, pourrait instead of pouvait. What will men not do to make tools of their neighbors ? I beg you to return me the three curiosities consisting of the copy of Victoria, the letter of the Secretary of War, and Rovira by Golowin, by Sunday morning, when I must go to Tegel with Baron Stockmar, the father. My walk (ma demarche) increases lamentably in senile want of direction. Beware of my patience with life. Reputation keeps pace with imbecility, and the Humboldt's Letters. 401 part of the " dear youth in age," of the " worthy Nestor of all living men of Science," Vecchio della montagna, becomes extremely irksome, though there be in the neighborhood of the Netze, a maiden whom the Nestor is to establish for life at Tegel, because the place is so near to Berlin, that on the slightest hint she can hasten to the city to close my eyes. With the most faithful friendly esteem, Tours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. My wicked friend Lasalle Heraclitus the Obscure has been expelled by the Prince of Prussia and Illaire,* in spite of all my intercession, and in spite of the pro- mises made to me. They led me to hope that after a few weeks (the election being over) the Obscure would return to Pythagoras, the more obscure. What a dis- pensation of justice ! NOTE BY YARNHAGEN. Iwan Golowin had asked Humboldt's per- mission to dedicate to him a Russian drama entitled Rovira, and when Humboldt assented in a hasty French note, he inserted a fac- simile of the note into the book. * Not quite exact, in so far as M. Westphalen, the minister, carried this point in the absence of the parties named, and, as afterwards appeared, without their knowledge. 4-O2 Humboldt's Letters. 325. HUMBOLDT TO LUDMILLA ASSINGk BERLIN, Oct. 12th, 1858. WHAT a day of agitation, of grief, of misfortune was yesterday. I was summoned by the Queen to Potsdam, to take leave of the King. He wept with deep emotion. Returning home at six hi the evening, I opened your letter, my friend ! He has departed from the earth before me, the man of ninety years, the old man of the hills ! It is not enough to say that Germany has lost a great author, him who could most nobly mould our tongue to the expression of the finest sentiments for what is the value of form in the presence of such acute- ness, such pregnant force of mind, such elevation of thought, such knowledge of the world. What he was to me, to me who am now entirely isolated, is incompre- hensible to any mind less refined, less beautiful than yours ; I shall soon come to tell you, Bowed with grief, yours, A. v. HUMBOLDT. ALPHABETIC AL INDEX OF PERSONS ALLUDED TO. The figures opposite the names refer to the numbers of the letters in which they are mentioned. ABERDEEN, Lord, 106. Albert, Prince Consort, 124, 131, 132. Alembert, d', 143. Allan, 46. Alvensleben, 46, 61. Amerigo Vespucci, 36. Ancillon, 22, 217. Arago, Francis, 50, 68, 75, 76, 78, 153, 155, 157. Arndt, E. M., 48. Arnim, Achim von, 64. Assing, Ludmilla, 213, 214, 217, 222, 224, 225. Augustus. Prince of Prussia, 4, 87. Auguste, Princess, 22. B. Baader, Francis, 145, 205. Balzac, 75, 83. Baudin, 128. Bauer, Bruno, 60, 66, 94. Baumgarten, 42. Bavaria, Crown Prince of) 123. Belgium, King o 48. Bettina, 43, 48, 51, 52, 63, 71, 75, 88, 120, 133, 144, 162, 178. Bessel, 48, 111. Beyme, 168. Beust, 175. Beuth, 11. Bigelow, John, 192. Bodelschwingh, von, 106, 107, 116 Bollmann, 19. Bopp, 48. Bresson, 22, 75, 76, 78." Brown, R, 76, 84. Brunei, 75, 76. Buch, Leopold von, 31, 41, 150. Buchanan, James, 176, 208. Buelow, von, 8, 48, 49, 61, 65, 69, 70, 71, 72, 97, 101, 103, 106, Bugeaud, Marshal, 27. Bunsen, 11, 61, 68, 75, 159, 168. C. Cadps, 80. Canino, Princess, 116. Canitz, von, 61, 74, 75, 126, 134. 44 Index. Cardanus, 6, 7. Carolath, 12. Carlyle, Thos., 70. Carriere, M., 70, 132. Chasles, 62, 172. Chateaubriand, 16, 36. Cherubini, 63. Christian VII., King of Denmark, 43, 44, 53, 76, 81. Clanricarde, Marquis of, 41. Columbus, Christopher, 28, 36, 61. Constant, 163. Cornelius, Peter, 142. Gotta, 10, 16, 24, 35, 56. Custine, 71, 73. D. Dahlmann, Prof., 48. Delisle, 17. Dohm, 64. Duchess of Dino (Talleyrand), 75, 76. Duke of Coburg Gotha, 168. Duchess of Orle.ms, 27, 75. 76, 117, 119, 139, 148 Eckermann, 71. Ehrhardt, 7. Eichhorn, 48, 61, 60, 68, 75, 107, 133, 134. Eisner, 11. Encke, 74, 111. Endlicher, 42. Engel, 64. Ettinghausen, 42. Eylert, Bishop, 8. Fallersleben, Hoffmann von, 106. Feuerbacli, Ludwig, 94. Fichte, 99, 196, 213. Fillmore, Millard, 177. Forster, 16. Freiligrath, F., 62. Fremont, 176, 177, 192. Friedrich II., 64, 68. Friedrich Wilhelm III., 8, 22, 35, 42. Friedrich Wilhelm IV., 35, 40, 42, 45, 46, 49, 51, 52, 53, 54, 60, 63, 67, 68, 75, 76, 91, 92, 110, 134, 154, 156, 158, 168, 185. Friesen, 213. Froebel, Julius, 223. Froriep, 159. Fry, Mrs., 46. Gragern, H., 134, 141. Galuski, 125, 135, 147. Galilei, 41. Gama, Vasco de, 28. Gans, E., 7, 25, 29, 30. Gauss, 44. Gay, Mad., 73. Gay Lussac, 88. Gentz, Fr., 36, 202, 217. Gerard, 33, 83. Gerlach, L. von, 68, 92, 159, 168, 183, 195. Gerolt, Baron de, 177. Girardin, Mad, 73. Gneisenau, 159. Gorres, 41. Goethe, J. W., 10, 43,52, 71, 161. Goethe, Ottilie von, 145. Goetze, 28. Golovvin, 224. Grand Duke of Tuscany, Leopold, 88. Grand Duke of Weimar, Charles Alexander, 171, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 189, 193, 194, 200, 201, 202, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 212. Index. 405 Grand Duchess of Weimar, 135, 183. Grau, 149. Gretsch, 41. Grimm Brothers, 40, 48, 51. Guhrauer, 106. Guizot, 48, 49, 60, 62, 99, 106, 172, 221. H. Hanover, King of, 31, 40, 66. Hansen, 81. Hardenberg, Prince, 7. Hedemann, 48, 193. Hegel, 3, 7, 29, 30, 41, 54, 196. Heine, 174, 177. Helfort, Frau von, 75. Hengstenberg, 68, 159. Herschel, 75, 76, 82. Hertzberg, Count, 64. Heyne, 38, 64. Hildebrandt, 186, 187, 191. Hoeninghaus, 76. Hordt, 64. Hormayr, 60, 95, 101, 103. Huegel, Baron, 42. Humboldt. Wilhelm von, 10, 16, 18. 21. 27, 31, 33, 36, 64, 67, 70, 129, 133, 140, 152, 153, 154, 159, 167, 192, 217. Jacobs, Friedrich, 38. Jaeger, 42. Janin, 99. Joburd, 190. Itzstein, 97. Kamptz, 26, 76. Kant, Immanuel, 33, 73, 107. Klein, 64. Konig, 41. Kolowrat, 129. Koreff; 2. Kotzebue, 169, 170. Knes, 38. Kunth, 64. Ladeuberg, 48. Lafayette, Marquis de, 20, 151. Laplace, 16. Lasaulx, 195. Lassalle, 217, 224. Lavater, 6, 105. Leist, 31. Leo, 196. Leonardo da Vinci, 52. Liegnitz, Princess of, 35. Lieven, Princess, 169, 170, 172. Link, 68. Liszt, 68. Loeffler, 64. Louis Philippe, 75, 139, 184, 221, Louise, Princess, 33. Maltzan, 61, 68. Manzoni, 114. Marco Polo, 36. Marheiueke, 41, 68, 94. Mary, Princess, 22. Massmann, 110. Melloni, 68. Melgunoff, 41. Metternich, 35, 42, 45, 68, 75, 76, 85, 98, 106, 122, 130, 137, 181, 185. Meyerbeer, 88, 99. Milner, 104. Mole, 78. Mueffling, 43. MuUer, A., 36, 202. 406 Index. Muller, 0., 16. Mueller, Chancellor, 106. Mueller, Privy Councillor, 28, 68. Muenster, Count, 60. Mundt, Theo. 19. Nacke, 39. Napoleon I., 48, 71, 161. Napoleon III., 141, 146, 147, 212. Neander, 95. Nesselrode, 187. Nicholas, Emperor of Russia, 35. Netherlands, Queen of, 22. Niebuhr, G. B., 40. Niebuhr, M., 154, 212, 216. Normanby, 221. Noroff, 208. 0. Oersted, 44. Oertzen, 26. Olfers, 142. Oltmann, 13. P. Palmerston, Lord, 48, 124. Peel, Robert, 75, 76, 84. Persigny, Fialin, 146. . Pertz, 160. Pichler, 159. Pierce. Franklin, 173. Pourtales, Count, 176. Prescott, 75, 76, 86. Preuss, 105. Prussia, Prince of, 74, 158, 168, 224. Prussia, Princess of, 52. Prutz, R., 90, 104, 106. Piickler, Princess, 26. Quinet, 43. Radowitz, 61, 68, 75, 142, 159, 168 Rahel, 7, 9, 10, 24, 33, 36, 132, 133, 145. Ranke, Leopold, 5, 68, 86, 105, 159. Raphael, 52. Rauch, 25. Raumer, Charles, 41. Raumer, Fred , 23, 64 Raumer, Minister, 154, 168. Recamier, Mad., 36, 75, 76, 87. Redern, 88. Reeden, 64, Reimer, 70. Reitmeyer, 64. Reumont, 75. Riess, 67, 68. Rochow, 45. Robert, 52. Ruesel, 42. Rothes, 75. Rueckert, 59, 75, 113. Ruehle, 25. Rumohr, 68. S. Sachs, 101, 103. Savary, 50. Savigny, 68, 133. Schelling, 41, 52, 54, 64, 75, 196. Schiller, 2, 129, 169. Schlagintweit, Brothers, 154, 212. Schlegel, Aug., 55, 125. Schlegel, Fr., 13, 14, 151. Schleiermacher, 66. Schlosser, 68. Schoenlein, 197. Schwerin, 61. Seekendorf, 60. Index. 407 Schumacher, 41, 81, 111. Seiffert, 50, 173. Sintenis, 41. Spiker, 13, 55, 57. Spontini, 68, 88, 91. Staegemanns, 47. Stael, Mad, 87. Stahl, 159. Stanley, 75, 76. Steffens, 52, 65, 196. Stein, 160, 168. Stieglitz, 30, 33. Stillfried, 176. Stilling, 105. Stollberg, 75. Strauss, 64, 66. T. Talleyrand, 33, 78. Therese, 133. Thiele, 68, 107, 172. Thiers, 48, 102, 115, 116, 211. Thomas, 102, 115. Tkoluk, 65. Tieck, 55. Trubetzkoi, Princess, 73. Uhden, 158. Uwarofif, 68. U. Y. Varnhagen, Fr. A. 168. Victoria, Queen, 124, 227. Voigtlaender, 42. Wittgenstein, 5, 45, 88, 160. Z. Zeune, 16, 212. Zinzendor^ Count, 6, 105. ni iu.tmL.iri 1 ABfD THE NEW *^ INFIDELITY. AN admiring friend of Humboldt probably Mr. Bayard Taylor in a review of his letters to Varn- hagen, published in The Tribune of the 5th mat , thus sums up the religious faith of the great physicist : "From a religious point of view, Humboldt must perhaps be called a materialist philosopher, or perhaps an atheist. Considered from a philosophical stand- point, the term < realist' would seem more appropriate to the views entertained by Humboldt than that of materialist.' But, in stating this, it ought never to be forgotten that Humboldt had been reared and lived in a mental atmosphere, where the idea of positive n had long since ceased to be considered as ^separable from the idea of morality and humanity. In England or America the all but universal oelief is it an unbeliever cannot but be an immoral man at the same time. That belief did not and does not exist m the society in which Humboldt lived. In aU his domgs he might well be called a Christian; in h* faith he was not, nor did he pretend to be." We were not prepared for so full a concession as this from such a source, nor are we quite willing to pronounce so stern a judgment against Humboldt the evidence which lies before us in his wnuogs. The Kosmos, to be sure, nowhere ex- presses that positive belief in a personal God which constantly appears in the writings of Agassiz, and >h is still more prominent in those of Dana Guyot, and Ritter. W e cannot agree with that school of science of which Darwin is perhaps the most prominent living representative, which re- rds it as unscientific to introduce the idea of a frejf First Cause into a& investigation of second causes. Yet we would not infer that Darwin is a* atheist from the merely negative evidence of his recent work on species-nor should we infer thac Humboldt was an atheist or only a materialist, from tne absence of the name and thought 6f a personal God from the pages of the Kosmos. Tfce use of the term LAW by physicists, and the conetant endeavor of science to classify all act-^1 phenomena under natural laws, doubtless tends to produce m minds accustomed to no higher sphere >f thought, a materialistic moda of conception and Of expression. To counteract this tendency Prof. Cooke, in the introduction to his admirable treatise Chemical Physics, carefully distinguishes be- tween law* txdftrces, and defines a law to be th* force is " a direct emanation of Divine Power," he further defines " a natmal lavy to be merely our liuman expression t>f the Divine mode of action in the universe." In the present condition of science, however, and as a matter of convenience in its phraseology, " we are obliged to use language Which implies the existence of separate and distinct forces; but this," continues Prof. C., "is unim- portant so long as we keep the truth in view, and do tot allow ourselves to be led into materialism by the unavoidable imperfections of scientific lan- guage." The danger is, however, that the term law, instead of being regarded merely as a conven- ient expression, from the human stand-point, of certain modes of action by a higher Power, will come itself to be regarded as the Power the caus- ative force, instead of the established sequence. Such a conception of natural law is tyrannical and exclusive most of all, dangerous to the re- ligious conception of a personal God. To grasp the thought of a Divine purpose or feeling, wind- ing its way through the coaiplicated net- work of natural laws daring uncounted ages, maintaining the perfect system of things, and yet regarding the w&nts of the individual universal and yet particu- lar is perhaps impossible to the mind of man un- der its present limitations. Who can understand a particular love which is millions of aeons old, or a thought of God which concerns directly some individual man, and yet which is a thread running through the woof of a creation which to us appears like an eternity ? The rnind sinks down confused aud baffled before such conceptions. To meet these very doubts aad speculations, these inevita- ble questionings of the soul, the Divine revelation of Christianity has a marked adaptation. There we find on every page the conception of a personal God, aad this made vivid through his love manifested in Jesus Christ. He who does not see God in Christ, is hardly likely to see him to any purpose in the material universe. Did then Ilumboidc ever gain a true conception of a personal God ? We own that expressions in these familiar leUers to Varahagen sound more like materialism than the- ismbut Humbohlt must be interpreted from his own eta rid-point. To American readers his. allu- sions to religious subjects will generally be quite distasteful ; yet they can be understood only by me peculiar pnases 01 tjermaa public lile during" the last fifteen or twenty years. The reign of the late King was a glorious intel- lectual era for Prussia, but it was also a time of disgraceful hypocrisy in religion ; of contempt for popular rights avowed in the name of a pivine prerogative ; of bitter oppression and persecution in behalf of which the sacred name of Religion was invoked ; and of outrageous violations of pub- lic promises and legal privileges, under the sayie plea. At the head of these oppressive and unjust measures, soiling their reputations with every species of meanness and compliance, were the so- called " religious party " of the upper classes in Prussia. Piety at the court of Frederick William y , was the best possible investment and its mimic, Hypocrisy, held in her hands all places and power. 81 We do not wonder that when that dishonorable ^ ' V1 period is remembered by noble : minded Germans BO now in exile here for conscience sake, or when its ISQ shams and masks were exposed to a true mind like Humboldt's, for the moment the very name of . Religion should become odious, and that sometimes words should be spoken for which the speaker ro would not be responsible in his cooler moments. ms French Romanism produced French infidelity, and ts. Prussian atate-eccleaiastiasm produced the infidelity of Prussian scholarship. These facts will explain to imany readers the peculiar bitterness tfith which Humboldt speaks of certain religious characters and beliefs. Such expressions were not aimed primarily against Christianity according to our conception of it, but against the shams and pre- c teDses, the injustice and oppression, the titled or {crowned stupidity and conceit, wkich exalted them- j selves in the name of religion. Many things were, said in the openness of his intercourse with Varn- hagen, which he would hardly hare wished re- fh peated so soon after his death. Some of his judg- ments of men and systems were evidently 4rarped ; and it is probable that many of his 4 more tender religious sentiments he woulc such a correspondence. The absence of the religious element even when the death of friends is the subject of correspond- ence, is a melancholy feature of these letters. Yet Humboldt denies the imputation of atheism to his Kosmos by a writer in The Westminster Review. He writes to Varnhagen : "Then follows the denunciation of atheism, i losi signt 01 in ine DOOK. AUU uin r 11017 oiuy eigtii months ago, in the French translation, say, in the ' plainest terms : It is this necessity of things, this '' occult but permanent connection, this periodical return in the progress, development of formation, phenomena, and events, which constitute Nature submissive to a controlling power ? Physics, -as the name itself implies, can only deduce the phenomena of the physical world from the properties of matter ; -- the highest aim of experimental science is therefore to ascend to the existence of the laws, and progres- siyely to generalize the same. Whatever lies beyond :h wiL is no object for physical demonstration, it belongs to of thf another order of more elevated speculations. Im- ^ >l oo marmel Kant, one of the lew philosophers whom no one has yet accused of impiety, has, with rare sagac- ity, indicated the limits of physical explanation in his i renowned Essai sur la Theorie et la Construction rpi des Cieux. Koenigsberg, 1T55." I 1 M Humboldt regarded the doctrine of a personal cents God as lying beyond the sphere of " physical de- monstration," and therefore not properly to be in- prr eluded in .the Kosmos. It would not follow from this that he was an atheist. Yet we think The Tribune is correct in pronouncing Humboldt an in- fidel, according to the more recent developments of cen Infidelity. He had no faith in Christianity as a historical system, as a supernatural revelation, or as a divinely-appointed system of redemption, nslatea Thus, when he had road Bauer's critical attempt to prove the HOB -authenticity of the Gospel, he wrote : " Bruno (Bauer) has found in me a preadainitical concert. When I was a boy, the very Court-preach- ers taught like him. 1 had to join the Church under a minister who also taught us that the evangelists had left some memoranda which, at a later period, Jiad been used as material for fictitious biographies (woraus man spdter Bio^raphieengedichtet.) Many years ago I wrote : ' All positive religions consist of three distinct parts a code of morals which is nearly the same in all of thero, and generally very pure ; a geological chimera, (rve gcologique,) and a myth or a little historical novel, it is the last named of the three elements which, in the course of time, acquires the greatest iiDpoitance.' Again; speaking of Strauss's 'Li.'e of Jisus,' which he calls a 'remarkable book,' he says (April 6, 1842:) 'The critical method of Straus's is excellent. Besides, the book is valuable in giving the entire dogmatical history of the times, ana especially in uncovering the crafty tricks of those thcologjaris who, following the ways of Schleiermach-- er, profess to believe in all forms of the Christian myth, and are pompously followed to the grave by royal carriages, while they slyly substitute a so- called philosophical explanation to all those myths. What 1 dislike in Strauss is the flippancy with wtiich he asserts the generation of organic beings from in- organic matter, of man from Chaldean mud (Ur- scfilamm.) That he thinks lightly of the nebulous rrvolfova I JJf.ni on T)inoreD AND CARLE! ON. THE VAGABOND. A volume of Miscellaneous Papers, treating In colioquia sketches upon Literature, Society, and Art. By ADA& BADEAU. Bound in muslin, izmo, price $1 oo. ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT. A new and popular Biography of this celebrated Savant, including his travels and labors, with an introduction by BAYARD TAYLOR. 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