History of Friedrich II of Prussia, vol 18
History of Friedrich II of Prussia, vol 18
Book Excerpt
on him from different points. In the
field, 150,000 soldiers, probably the best that ever were; and in
garrison, up and down (his Country being, by nature, the least
defensible of all Countries), near 40,000, which he reckons of
inferior quality. So stands the account. [Stenzel, iv. 308, 306,
v. 39; Ranke, iii. 415; Preuss, ii, 389, 43, 124; &c. &c.;--
substantially true, I doubt not; but little or nothing of it so
definite and conclusively distinct as it ought, in all items, to
have been by this time,--had poor Dryasdust known what he was
doing.] These are, arithmetically precise, his resources,--PLUS
only what may lie in his own head and heart, or funded in the other
heads and hearts, especially in those 150,000, which he and his
Fathers have been diligently disciplining, to good perfection, for
four centuries come the time.
France, urged by Pompadour and the enthusiasms, was first in the field. The French Army, in superb equipment, though privately in poorish state of discipline, took the road e
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