| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER LVII. 
            NORTHERN AND EASTERN EUROPE, 1787-1796
         
              
             THE first
        partition of Poland and the Constitution of 1775, guaranteed by Russia, had
        placed it at the mercy of that Power, more especially by means of the Permanent
        Council, composed of Russian partisans, and directed by the Russian ambassador.
        King Stanislaus Poniatowski himself was the mere
        creature of the Empress Catharine II, and had disgusted the Poles by the subserviency which
        he displayed towards her and Potemkin. Poland, in short, was administered
        almost as if it already formed a Russian province. Rumours were
        afloat of a fresh partition, which should reduce it in reality to that
        condition, when the breaking out of the war between Russia and the Porte, in
        1787, seemed to offer an opportunity for throwing off the Russian yoke. The
        patriot party, led by Ignatius and Stanislaus Potocki, Kollontay, Kosciuszko, Malachowski,
        and others, determined to embrace it.
   Catharine II,
        desirous that the Poles should assist her in her war against the Turks,
        proposed an alliance for that purpose to Stanislaus Augustus and the Permanent
        Council. Such an alliance, however, was contrary to ancient treaties subsisting
        between Poland and the Porte; and King Stanislaus, however willing to assist
        his mistress, was unable to do so without appealing to the constitutional, or four
        years’ diet, which was to meet in October, 1788. A complete change had now been
        effected in the political aspect of Europe through the triple alliance between
        Great Britain, the United Provinces, and Prussia, with a view to oppose the
        designs of Russia and Austria; and the Polish patriots, reckoning on the aid of
        Prussia and her allies, resolved to make a stand for liberty. Great efforts
        were made by men of talent and energy to be elected as nuncios to an Assembly
        which, it was believed, would alter and fix the destinies of their country.
        Their first triumph was to convert the Diet, the day after it met, into a
        Confederation, thus obviating the liberum veto, and leaving
        matters to be decided by a majority of votes. A note presented to the Diet by
        Count Bucholtz, the Prussian Minister, October
        12th, strongly protesting, in the name of his master, against the alliance
        proposed by Russia, inspired the patriots with unbounded confidence, especially
        as the Prussian Cabinet appeared resolved to support its policy by arms; and
        the Russian ambassador found himself compelled to withdraw his proposal of an
        alliance.
   Thus encouraged,
        the Diet, in spite of the threats of Russia, abolished the Permanent Council,
        January 18th, 1789, increased the army, and instituted a Council of War,
        independent of the King. But further reforms were too long delayed. It is
        probable that if the Constitution of May 3rd, 1791, had been established a year
        or two earlier, before the union of Prussia and Russia, with regard to the
        affairs of France, had altered all Frederick William’s views as to Poland, she
        would not have lost the Prussian alliance, and that her liberties might have
        been saved. There was, however, another condition necessary to secure the
        continued friendship of Prussia. That Power had long coveted the possession of
        Danzig and Thorn. In April, 1789, the Marquis Lucchesini was sent to Warsaw to negotiate for the cession of those places, with
        instructions to denounce as an imposture the idea that Frederick William
        desired a fresh partition of Poland. Certain compensations were to be offered
        to the Poles, and especially an advantageous treaty of commerce with Prussia,
        England, and Holland. Several of the patriot party were of opinion that the
        cession should be made. It was advocated by the English Ministry, though not by
        the merchants of England; and probably it might have secured the Prussian
        alliance, and have deprived that country of any motive for a second partition
        of Poland. But it was opposed by a numerous party in the Diet, and especially
        by those who were in the interest of Russia. Prussia, in consequence, abandoned
        the project for the present, but she still kept her eyes fixed in that
        direction. Meanwhile, as a war with Austria appeared imminent, Frederick
        William, towards the end of 1789, expressed his desire of forming an
        intimate connection with the Poles; and urged them to fix, as soon as possible,
        their form of government. In January, 1790, the Prussian Minister signified
        that his Court approved of all the reforms hitherto adopted by the Diet;
        proposed a defensive alliance, coupled with a reduction of duties on Polish
        commodities; and though he concealed not how much the cession of Thorn and
        Danzig was desired, he did not insist upon that point, and all mention of it was
        omitted in the defensive treaty concluded at Warsaw, March 29th. In the treaty
        concluded between Prussia and the Ottoman Porte in the previous January, it had
        been agreed that Galicia, which had fallen to the share of Austria in the first
        partition of Poland in 1772, should be wrested from her; and the Cabinet of
        Berlin was inclined to restore this province, or, at all events, a part of it,
        containing the salt works of Wieliczka, to the Poles,
        as an equivalent for the cession of Danzig and Thorn. But the majority of the
        Diet were averse to cede those ports, especially Danzig, the key of the
        Vistula, and the subject was therefore dropped. The sixth article of the Treaty
        of Warsaw is the most important, as having direct reference to Russia. It
        purported that if any foreign Power whatever, in consequence of preceding acts
        and stipulations, should assume the right of meddling in the internal affairs
        of the Polish Republic, his Prussian Majesty would first employ his good
        offices to prevent any hostilities that might arise from such a pretension; and
        that if these should fail, and Poland should be attacked, he would consider
        himself bound to afford the assistance stipulated in the present treaty, by
        which it was agreed that Prussia should furnish 30,000 men.
   Meanwhile the
        framing of the new Constitution was proceeding very slowly, and it was not
        promulgated till May 3rd, 1791. The principal articles of it were, that the
        Roman Catholic faith should be the religion of the State, though dissenters
        were allowed the exercise of their worship, and full participation in all civil
        rights; the liberum veto was abolished; and, what was
        most important of all, the Crown was declared hereditary. The discussion of
        this article had been attended with great difficulties. To many of the Poles,
        to abandon the right of election seemed to be to sacrifice their liberties,
        especially as every noble might aspire to the Throne. The succession was
        settled, upon the death of King Stanislaus, upon Frederick Augustus, Elector of
        Saxony, and, in the event of his decease without male issue, on the husband
        whom he might select for his daughter, with the consent of the States. Should
        the reigning House become extinct, then the elective right was to revert to the
        nation. The Elector of Saxony, however, was far from being dazzled with the
        splendid but precarious offer of the Polish Crown. He replied evasively, and
        delayed a definitive answer till April, 1792; when he gave a conditional
        assent, dependent on the approval of the neighboring Courts, and on certain
        changes to be made in the Constitution. The Constitution of May 3rd, and especially
        the article respecting the hereditary succession of the Crown, was far from
        being popular. This article was carried in the Diet only by a small majority,
        while of sixty Dietines or provincial
        Diets, only ten adopted it. Yet the elective right had mainly contributed to
        nourish anarchy in Poland, and to afford the neighboring Powers a pretence for interfering in its affairs. The Russian
        party, by way of thwarting the designs of Prussia on Danzig and Thorn, had
        contrived to obtain the insertion of an article prohibiting, under any
        circumstance, the transfer of any portion of the territory or sovereign rights
        of Poland to a foreign Power. The Prussian Cabinet was much opposed to the new
        Polish Constitution. They dreaded that, as the Kingdom was to become
        hereditary, it might, by a marriage with the Elector’s daughter, fall into the
        hands of a Russian or Austrian Prince, or of a small German Prince entirely
        dependent on Austria or Russia. But Frederick William at that time dreaded a
        breach with Russia, and was therefore desirous of conciliating the Poles; and
        he consequently both directly, and through his Ambassador, Lucchesini,
        announced, both at Warsaw and Dresden, his satisfaction at the happy revolution
        which had been accomplished. These, however, as appeared from the result, were
        mere perfidious compliments, on which the Poles laid too much stress.
   The Empress
        Catharine II, on the other hand, viewed the proceedings of the Poles with a
        displeasure which she did not attempt to conceal. Although the new Constitution
        substituted an hereditary for an elective monarchy, and maintained the nobility
        and their privileges, yet the patriot nobles, by their liberal measures, and
        especially by demanding the citizenship of Warsaw, seemed to adopt the doctrine
        of equality; and Catharine pretended to recognize in the enthusiasm which
        reigned in Poland, the germ of those principles which agitated France, and
        menaced every throne in Europe. The altered state of things at the commencement
        of 1792 enabled her to wreak her vengeance on the unhappy Poles. The Courts of
        Berlin and Vienna were now reconciled, and jointly occupied in the war against
        France, while the Peace of Jassy, between Russia and the Turks, to which
        the English and Dutch had acceded, enabled Catharine to dispose freely of her
        forces. Her first plan was to occupy Poland; but from this she was deterred by
        the good understanding between Austria and Prussia. It was necessary,
        therefore, to conciliate those Powers, as well as to offer them some allurement
        for the prosecution of the French war, which interested her much, though she
        took no part in it. Both the German Powers wanted compensation for their risks
        and expenses in the war against France; Prussia desired a Polish province, and
        the imagination of the Austrian Emperor Francis II was inflamed by Catharine’s
        suggestion of an exchange of Belgium for some Bavarian territory. It was not
        difficult for Catharine to get up a strong party in Poland itself, where she
        had already numerous adherents, and where many of the grandees were disgusted
        at being excluded by the new Constitution from all chance of the throne. Among
        these last the principal were Felix Potocki, Severin Rzewuski, and Branicki, the
        Crown General. These nobles were invited to St. Petersburg, and formed with the
        Russian Cabinet a conspiracy for the overthrow of the Polish Constitution. King
        Stanislaus, the slave of Catharine, lent himself to the same design. All the
        projected reforms were delayed; the public offices were filled with the open or
        secret adherents of Russia; Branicki was
        appointed Minister at War, and all preparations for defence were neglected.
   The result of
        these plots was manifested by the Confederation of Targowitz,
        May, 1792, formed with the avowed object of restoring what may be called the
        Russian Constitution of 1775. About the same time Catharine published a sort of
        manifesto, in which she declared the new Constitution illegal and dangerous,
        and intimated to the Poles that they must return to their ancient laws, or she
        would constrain them by force. The manifesto of the Confederation had also been
        prepared at St. Petersburg, and Potocki, Branicki, and Rzewuski only
        returned into Poland with the Russian troops. The majority of the Poles,
        however, still continued to retain their confidence in King Stanislaus and in
        the King of Prussia. The Diet, after publishing a Declaration in answer to that
        of Russia, and declaring their intention to defend their rights, adjourned
        themselves, May 30th, for an indefinite period, and thus put themselves in the
        power of Stanislaus and his ministry. Stanislaus for a while kept up
        appearances, and he addressed a letter to Frederick William II calling on him
        for the aid stipulated by the Treaty of Warsaw (May 31st). The Prussian king,
        in his answer (June 8th), stated what was true enough as to his private
        sentiments, but not as to his public acts, that he had never approved of the
        new Constitution, though he had done nothing to hinder it; that, but for this
        Constitution, and the measures taken to uphold it, Russia would never have
        resorted to coercive measures; that, whatever his friendship for Stanislaus,
        the state of things had completely altered since the defensive alliance was
        made; that the present conjuncture, having arisen since the Constitution of May
        3rd, could not be brought under the obligations of the Treaty of Warsaw; that
        consequently he was not bound to oppose the present attacks of Russia, so long
        as the patriotic party persisted in their views; but if this party would
        reconsider them, he would unite with Russia and Austria in endeavoring to
        conciliate matters.
   It is true enough
        that the French declaration of war against Austria, and the alliance of Prussia
        with the latter Power, had made a great alteration in the state of things,
        though hardly enough to release Frederick William from his solemn obligations.
        It has been alleged in his defence that he was
        alarmed at the resemblance between some of the speeches made in the Diet and
        those of the French revolutionists; and that to carry on a war with Russia and
        France at the same time was an absolute impossibility. We have, however, before
        had occasion to remark, that the war with France was little more than a screen
        and pretence for Prussia’s selfish designs
        upon Poland. In fact, months before Catharine had avowed her designs, and when
        the war between Austria and France, though imminent, was not yet declared, the
        Cabinets of Berlin and St. Petersburg had already come to an understanding upon
        the affairs of Poland; and Catharine had offered Frederick William a share in
        the second partition of that country, provided that, in conjunction with
        Austria, he should consent to march against France.
   Kosciuszko.
         King Stanislaus
        issued a proclamation, July 4th, calling on the Poles to defend their
        independence, and asserting that he was resolved to share their fortunes. Yet,
        instead of proceeding to the camp, he remained at Warsaw, though the Russian
        army, 100,000 strong, had entered Poland in May. He had, indeed, already
        entered into a secret understanding with Russia; and had written a letter to
        the Empress proposing to her Prince Constantine as his successor, imploring her
        to take a compassionate view of his situation. He had also prevented the Polish
        army, of which his nephew Joseph Poniatowski was
        commander-in-chief, from undertaking anything important, had in fact forbidden
        his nephew to venture upon a battle. Yet the Poles had proved in several
        skirmishes that they had not degenerated from their ancient valour. In these affairs, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, who had received
        his military education in France, and completed it under Grates and Washington
        in the American war of liberation, distinguished himself by his valour and conduct. His exploit at Dubienka, July 17th, where, with 4,000 Poles, he had
        maintained his post against the efforts of 18,000 Russians, showed what might
        have been accomplished by courage and resolution. Yet a few days after (July
        23rd) Stanislaus acceded to the Confederation of Targowitz.
        Felix Potocki was proclaimed Marshal of the
        Confederation, August 2nd, which was now called the “Confederation of the
        Crown”; an armistice was concluded, the command of the Polish army was restored
        to the ancient generals, the troops assembled near Warsaw were dismissed, and
        the Russians occupied Praga, a suburb of that
        city. The confederates of Targowitz being now masters
        of the Government, appointed an executive Commission of six, who assumed the
        sovereign power, and left the King not a shadow of authority.
   The Prussians were
        now to play their part. A treaty for the partition of Poland had been signed
        between the Cabinets of Berlin and St. Petersburg, January 4th, 1793, and soon
        after a Prussian army occupied Great Poland. On January 16th, Prussia published
        a Declaration stating that the grounds for this step were, the disturbances
        that had arisen in Poland in consequence of the new Constitution, established
        without consulting neighboring Powers; the secret agitations still kept up, to
        the danger of the public peace; and especially the propagation of French
        principles in Poland, which excited in the King of Prussia apprehensions for
        the safety of his own dominions. Under these circumstances, being about to
        undertake another campaign, he had come to an agreement with the Courts of
        Vienna and St. Petersburg that it would be impolitic to leave an enemy behind
        him; and it only remained for the well-disposed inhabitants to deserve his
        protection by their quiet behaviour. This was
        followed by another Declaration, directed against Danzig, February 24th, and
        charging the inhabitants with having displayed for a long series of years, an
        unfriendly feeling towards Prussia, harbouring the
        dangerous sect of Jacobins, supplying the enemy with provisions, etc. Nothing
        could be more unfounded than these charges against the Poles of entertaining
        French revolutionary principles. So far from there being any Jacobin clubs in
        Poland, her most distinguished orators denounced the French levellers, who in turn abused the Poles, and ridiculed
        their new Constitution. Prussia was in every sense of the word the aggressor,
        without the shadow of a legal pretext. The Council and citizens of Danzig
        offered to surrender, on condition that their ancient constitution should be
        preserved, and that the fortifications of the town should remain in possession
        of the municipality, and be garrisoned by their troops. These terms were
        refused, Danzig was blockaded by General Von Raumer,
        March 8th, the outworks were gradually taken, and on April 8th it opened its
        gates.
   Frederick William
        had on the 25th of March, announced to the States and inhabitants of the
        Palatinates of Posen, Gnesen, Kalisch, Sirada, Lentschitz, Rawa, Plotzk, the town and
        convent of Czenstochowa, the districts Wielun, Cujavia, Dobrzyn, the towns of Danzig and Thorn, that they were
        henceforth to consider themselves Prussian subjects. They were invited to
        assemble as soon as possible in a Diet, in order to settle these matters in an
        amicable manner. But, without waiting for its decision, they were to regard
        Frederick William as their Sovereign, and to present themselves to do homage to
        him. A proclamation of the Russian general, of a similar tenor, appeared April
        7th, announcing that he took possession for the Empress of the counties
        of Poloczk, Vilna, Novogrodek, Brzesc, the greater part of Volhynia,
        of what remained of Podolia, and of the Palatinates of Kiew and Bracklaw. The
        provinces now seized by Frederick William were put on the same footing with
        those previously acquired, and received the name of South Prussia. Homage was
        done to that Sovereign at Posen, May 3rd.
   Diet of Grodno.
        The second partition of Poland, 1793.
    
             The Diet of
        Grodno, which was to sanction the cessions to the two Powers, assembled June
        17th, 1793. The Permanent Council had been previously re-established at the
        instance, or rather by the threats, of Sievers, the Russian ambassador.
        The Diet exhibited the greatest reluctance to enter into the treaties demanded
        by Russia and Prussia for the dismemberment of Poland; and they appealed against
        them, but of course without effect, to all the Courts with which the Republic
        was connected. Finding themselves at length compelled to submit, they
        endeavored to make a separate treaty with Russia, in the hope that Catharine
        would defend them against the claims of Frederick William; and some authors
        have asserted that the Russian Empress made them a promise to that effect,
        although the two Courts had declared that they would treat only jointly.
        However this may be, the Diet could at first be brought only to appoint a
        deputation to treat with Russia. The treaty with that Power, signed July 13th,
        and ratified by the Diet, August 17th, transferred to Russia the provinces
        already named, comprising a surface of 4,553 geographical square miles, and a
        population of more than three million souls.
   The treaty of
        Grodno with Prussia was signed September 25th, 1793. The provinces before
        enumerated, provisionally seized by Frederick William II, were ceded to that
        Sovereign. They contained 1,061 square miles of territory, peopled by more than
        three and a half million souls.
   The Confederation
        of Targowitz having fulfilled its purpose, Catharine
        caused it to be annulled, and the old Constitution was nominally restored,
        September 15th. The Prussian treaty was almost immediately followed by a treaty
        of alliance between the Polish Republic and the Empress Catharine, October
        16th. This convention, under the names of an indissoluble union and defensive
        alliance, virtually rendered the Poles subject to Russia. The King and Republic
        of Poland engaged to leave the direction of military and political matters to
        the Empress and her successors; her troops were to have free entry into Poland;
        and the Republic was to conclude no treaties with foreign Powers, nor even to
        negotiate with them, except in concert with Russia.
   Among the last
        acts of the Diet of Grodno were a revision of the Constitution, the restoration
        of the King to the prerogatives of which he had been deprived by the
        Confederation of Targowitz, and the readjustment of what
        remained of Poland into eleven Palatinates, eight in Poland and three in
        Lithuania. It separated November 24th, after annulling all the acts of the
        Confederation of Targowitz, and thus, among other
        things, reestablishing a military order for those who should distinguish
        themselves in a war against Russia! For suffering these decrees to pass,
        through inadvertence, Sievers was superseded in the Russian embassy
        by General Igelstrom, a man of still more violent
        character. Igelstrom compelled the King and Permanent
        Council to cancel the Decrees by what was called a Universal,
        January 10th, 1794.
   After the
        disastrous campaign of 1792 several of the Polish Fresh patriots, as Kollentay, Ignatius Potocki,
        Kosciuszko, and others, had retired into Saxony. But they were still animated
        with the hope of rescuing their country from oppression; and it was not long
        before an arbitrary act of the Russian ambassador seemed to offer an
        opportunity for accomplishing their purpose. Igelstrom had directed the Permanent Council to reduce the Polish army to 15,000 men.
        This measure, besides wounding the national feelings, was unjust in a pecuniary
        point of view. Many officers had purchased their posts, and depended on them
        for subsistence; some were in advance for the pay of the soldiers, others had
        enlisted them at their own expense. This offence was given at a moment when the
        national feeling was already in a state of fermentation. Much excitement and turbulence
        had been displayed in the Dietines assembled
        in February, 1794, for the elections under the new Constitution. The symptoms
        were so alarming that Igelstrom deemed it necessary
        to form a Russian camp near Warsaw, to retain that city in obedience. The
        insurrection of 1794 was commenced by Madalinski, a
        general of brigade, stationed at Pultusk, about
        eight leagues from Warsaw. Madalinski, having been
        ordered to reform his corps according to the new regulations, refused to do so
        till they had received their pay, which was two months in arrears; and he
        marched towards Cracow, skirting the provinces recently annexed to Prussia.
        Kosciuszko, who was at Dresden, hearing of this movement, hastened to Cracow,
        where he was proclaimed generalissimo, March 24th, 1794. The Russian garrison
        of that place had marched against Madalinski.
        Kosciuszko, having assembled the citizens, proclaimed the Constitution of May
        3rd, 1791, amidst the greatest enthusiasm. He also issued a proclamation,
        calling on the whole nation to assert their independence, and employed himself
        in organizing his little army, to which he added a number of peasants armed
        with scythes. With these tumultuary forces he attacked and defeated a
        body of 7,000 Russians at Raslawice, April 4th;
        an affair, indeed, of no great importance, but which encouraged the troops with
        hopes of further victories.
   The King and
        Permanent Council, in a Universal published April 11th,
        declared the leaders of the insurrection rebels and traitors, ordered them to
        be brought to trial, exhorted the Poles to obedience, warned them by the
        example of France of the dangers of rebellion. To this, however, little heed
        was given. The forces of Kosciuszko increased daily, and Igelstrom,
        distrusting the garrison of Warsaw, first occupied the castle and other posts
        with Russian soldiers; subsequently, being compelled to weaken his troops there
        by detaching some of them against the insurgents, he resolved to disarm the
        Polish garrison. But this scheme got wind, and the insurrectionary leaders resolved
        to anticipate it. On the night of April 16th, the Polish garrison and the
        citizens of Warsaw flew to arms and massacred the Russians wherever they were
        found in small numbers. A fight ensued in the streets, the Russians retreating
        from one quarter to another, till at last, after a resistance of thirty-six
        hours, which cost the Russians more than 4,000 men, killed, wounded, or made
        prisoners, Igelstrom, with the remainder of his
        troops, succeeded in escaping from the town, and took refuge in the Prussian
        camp in the vicinity. The citizens of Warsaw now signed the new Confederation,
        and recognized Kosciuszko as their commander-in-chief; King Stanislaus was
        deprived of his authority, but treated with the respect due to his rank.
   The news of this
        insurrection was the signal for a rising in General Lithuania. The citizens of
        Vilna flew to arms on the night of April 23rd, and massacred or made prisoners
        nearly all the Russian garrison. A similar scene took place at Grodno. A
        criminal tribunal erected at Vilna condemned to death the Bishop Kossakowski, a partisan of Russia. The insurrection now
        spread rapidly through all the Palatinates. The entire Polish army declared for
        Kosciuszko; the regiments which had entered the Russian service deserted en masse, and ranged themselves under
        his colours. An ordinance, published at the camp
        of Polanice, May 10th, 1794, established a
        National or Supreme Council of eight members for the government of the
        Republic. The King was entirely set aside, though suffered to retain his title.
        Kosciuszko himself had been invested with dictatorial power, which he employed
        only for the good of his country.
   Colonel Manstein now persuaded Frederick William II to enter
        Poland with his army, neglecting the campaign on the Rhine; and, though
        Count Haugwitz and Marshal Mollendorf protested against so open a breach of the
        treaty recently concluded with England and Holland at the Hague, it was decided
        that, in the French war, Prussia should do only what was absolutely
        unavoidable. The Prussian troops invaded Poland in various quarters, and on
        June 3rd, the King himself entered the territory of Cracow with reinforcements,
        intending to form a junction with a Russian corps under General Denisoff. Kosciuszko, to prevent this, attacked Denisoff at Szczekociny,
        June 6th. He was not aware that the Prussians were so near at hand till they
        fell upon his left wing, and by their superior numbers compelled him to retreat
        with considerable loss. He now withdrew to Gora, a town about ten leagues from
        Warsaw, where he entrenched himself. In order to animate the Poles, the Supreme
        Council published a declaration of war against Prussia, June 12th, signed by
        Ignatius Potocki. On the 15th Cracow surrendered to a
        Prussian corps; an event which induced the Emperor Francis II to declare
        himself. A change had taken place in the counsels of the Court of Vienna, now
        directed by Thugut. Early in June, Francis resolved
        to abandon his Belgian provinces, and to seek compensation in Bavaria and
        Poland. Catharine had invited him to intervene in the affairs of Poland by way
        of counterpoise to Prussia, whose ambitious designs she was desirous of
        limiting. Having quitted his army, and returned to Vienna, he directed General D'Arnoncourt to announce by a proclamation, June 30th, that
        to avert the danger arising to the Province of Galicia from the disturbances in
        Poland, he had been ordered to enter that country with his forces. A corp d'armée of
        17,000 Austrians accordingly marched on Brzesc and Dubnow.
   Siege
        of Warsaw.
   Kosciuszko had
        retired from Gora to Warsaw. That city was unfortified, and Kosciuszko covered
        it on its western side by an entrenched camp. He had been followed by Frederick
        William, who took up a position at Vola, about a league from Warsaw. Many
        assaults had been delivered, Kosciuszko’s entrenchments were falling gradually
        into the hands of the Prussians, and the capture of Warsaw appeared imminent,
        when Frederick William suddenly departed (September 6th). The reason for his
        retreat was the breaking out of an insurrection in the provinces recently
        annexed to Prussia. The Prussian yoke was much more intolerable to the Poles
        than the Russian. All civil employments in the subjugated provinces were filled
        by Germans; the inhabitants were subject to a civil and criminal code,
        published in German, and were forced to learn that tongue. The withdrawal of
        the Prussian troops for the siege of Warsaw affording an opportunity, an
        insurrection broke out in Siradia, August 23rd,
        and soon spread to the other provinces of Great Poland. The towns of
        Posen, Petrikau, and one or two others, having
        Prussian garrisons, were alone retained in obedience. Kosciuszko took advantage
        of the rebellion to dispatch Dembrowski with
        a considerable corps into West Prussia. Dembrowski seized
        the town of Bromberg and the magazines collected there, and compelled the
        inhabitants to take an oath of fealty to the Polish Republic; an exploit which
        occasioned such alarm at Berlin that Prince Hohenlohe with his corps was
        recalled from the Rhine.
   But this success
        was only partial and temporary. A Russian army under Knoring and Souboff had assembled in Lithuania, and as it
        advanced, that of the Poles melted away. The Lithuanians under General Chlewinski were entirely defeated August 12th, Vilna
        was compelled to open its gates, and the whole province was speedily recovered
        by the Russians. Early in September, Suvorov, recalled from the Turkish
        frontiers, entered Volliynia with 20,000
        men, and directed his march upon Warsaw. On the 18th he dislodged the Polish
        general Sierakowski, posted with 15,000 men at Krupczyce,
        near Brzesc, and defeated him next day on the
        banks of the Bug. The Poles lost 6,000 men and thirty guns on this bloody day.
        Suvorov having formed a junction with Prince Repnin,
        who was marching on Warsaw from Grodno, Kosciuszko hastened to oppose them.
        At Maciejowice he met the corps of
        General Fersen, who was waiting for Repnin and Suvorov, and immediately attacked him,
        October 10th. But the reinforcements which Kosciuszko expected did not arrive;
        the Russians, irritated by the carnage at Warsaw, fell upon the Poles, and made
        a terrible slaughter. As the fate of the day hung doubtful, Kosciuszko, with
        his principal officers and the elite of his cavalry, dashed into the thickest
        of the fight, when his horse having fallen with him, he was made prisoner. He
        had received some severe wounds, and was long insensible. On recovering his
        consciousness he is said to have uttered the words, Finis Poloniae! On this fatal day, 3,000 more prisoners,
        including many distinguished officers, and all the artillery and baggage, fell
        into the hands of the Russians; the field of battle was strewed with the bodies
        of 6,000 Poles.
   The news of the
        disaster struck Warsaw with consternation. Nevertheless the revolutionary
        leaders resolved not to abandon the national cause. The command-in-chief was
        confided to Wawrzecki, and Prince Poniatowski was directed to march to the aid of Dembrowski and Madalinski,
        who were returning from their expedition into Prussia. Poniatowski,
        by attacking the Prussians at Sochaczen, October
        22nd, occasioned a diversion which enabled the two generals to effect their
        retreat to Warsaw.
   De Favrat, the commander of the Prussian army, crossed the
        Vistula at Viszgorod, and surrounded Warsaw on
        the western side, while the Russians, under Derfelden and Fersen, invested the suburb of Praga,
        on the right bank of the Vistula. They were joined towards the end of October
        by Suvorov. Praga, though defended by 100 guns,
        was assaulted and taken by the Russians, and being chiefly built of wood, was
        almost entirely destroyed by fire, November 4th. In Warsaw the magistrates were
        desirous of capitulating, but the troops would not hear of it. At length the
        National Council and General Wawrzecki replaced
        the sovereign power in the hands of Stanislaus; the latter retired with the
        troops and 122 guns, November 7th; and two days after, Suvorov, after repairing
        the bridge over the Vistula, which had been burnt, entered Warsaw. Such was the
        end of the Polish insurrection of 1794. The more distinguished patriots were
        proscribed, their estates were confiscated, and those who had been captured
        were thrown into dungeons at St. Petersburg, while some thousands of Poles were
        transported to Siberia.
   Third partition of
        Poland
   Russia, Austria,
        and Prussia now quietly divided their prey, and Poland was blotted out from the
        map of Europe. It was arranged by the Convention of St. Petersburg, January
        3rd, 1795, that besides the Duchy of Courland, a former fief of Poland, Russia
        should have the Duchy of Semigallia, the district of Pilten, Samogitia, part of
        the Palatinates of Troki and Chelm, the remainder of those of Vilna, Novogrodek, Brzesc, and Volhynia. To Austria were assigned the town and greater
        part of the Palatinate of Cracow, the Palatinates of Sandomierz and
        Lublin, and part of those of Chelm, Podlachia, and Masovia. The
        lot of Prussia was the remains of the Palatinates of Rawa and Plotzk, part of Masovia, including
        Warsaw, which the Prussians had not been able to take, and portions of Podlachia, Troki, and Cracovia. Each of these three shares contained a population
        of about 1,000,000 souls, some a little more or less. This division was
        confirmed by a threefold treaty between the Powers, signed at St. Petersburg,
        October 24th, 1795. Disputes had, however, arisen between Austria and Prussia
        about the division of Cracovia, the situation of
        which renders it important as the key both of Galicia and Silesia. The Prussians
        were in possession of Cracow, and seemed disposed to retain it by force. The
        point was reserved for future negotiation under the arbitration of the Empress.
        It was only through her threat to retain Warsaw that the Prussians were brought
        to evacuate Cracovia. The Austrians entered that
        province in January, 1796, when the Russians retired from Warsaw, and a
        Prussian garrison was admitted. The demarcation of Cracovia was
        finally regulated under Russian mediation, October 21st, 1796.
   In October, 1795,
        King Stanislaus, who had been sent into a kind of banishment at Grodno, was
        directed to lay down the crown of Poland, which he had worn since 1764. He
        signed the Act of Abdication, November 25th. A pension of 200,000 ducats was
        assigned to him. After the accession of Paul I he took up his residence at St.
        Petersburg, in which city he died February 12th, 1798. Pierre de Biron,
        last Duke of Courland, had abdicated in favour of
        Catharine at St. Petersburg, March 28th, 1795.
   Thus was completed
        one of the most shameful passages in the history of Europe. Poland, however, or
        rather the great body of the people, could hardly suffer by a change of
        masters. Nine-tenths of the population consisted of wretched serfs, steeped in
        the lowest depths of poverty, ignorance, brutality, and wretchedness. What
        really fell, as a modern writer observes, was the inhuman rule of a few nobles.
        Catharine II did not long outlive these events. She was carried off by
        apoplexy, November 17th, 1796, in the sixty-seventh year of her age. The policy
        of her latter years was marked by her
        hatred of the French Revolution, modified by a paramount regard to her own
        interest. She was also involved at this moment in a war with Persia. Beholding
        England and the greater part of Europe engaged in a war with France, her
        restless ambition made her regret having abandoned her projects for the
        subjugation of Turkey. The anarchy, however, which reigned in Persia since the
        death of Thamas Kouli Khan,
        and which was fomented by Russian policy, just as that of Poland had been for
        its own interested purposes, inspired Catharine with the hope of extending her
        conquests in that direction. She dreamt of nothing less than conquering Persia,
        and reviving the magnificent but impracticable plan of Peter the Great for
        diverting the commerce of the East towards Russia, through the Persian Gulf,
        the Caspian, or the Black Sea. An expedition was undertaken early in 1796,
        under the conduct of Count Valerian Zouboff, one
        of Catharine’s favourites. Derband, the capital of Daghestan,
        was taken. But the army was weakened by disease; and Paul I, on his accession,
        recalled his troops from this hopeless enterprise.
   Catharine was
        succeeded by her son, Paul I Petrowitsch. At
        first he reversed much of the policy of his mother, though he, like her, was a
        determined enemy of the French Revolution. He began his reign by a step which
        testified his disapprobation of the cruelties exercised in Poland. He restored
        to liberty more than 14,000 Poles exiled or imprisoned in consequence of the
        last insurrection. Kosciuszko, Potocki, and many
        others, were not only liberated, but their estates were also restored to them
        on their promising to live peaceably. Paul, accompanied by his son Alexander,
        visited Kosciuszko in his prison, and, being naturally tender-hearted, is said
        to have shed tears at the sight of his misery.
   The Scandinavian
        kingdoms.
    Of the
        Scandinavian kingdoms, Denmark refused to participate in the great convulsion
        that was agitating Europe. Christian VII. remained the nominal Sovereign of that
        country down to his death in 1808, but imbecility of mind rendered him
        incompetent to govern. The affairs of Denmark were administered by the Prince
        Royal, Frederick, afterwards Frederick VI, with the assistance of an able
        Ministry, and especially Count Bernstoff. Under
        this beneficent government Denmark enjoyed a remarkable prosperity. The
        liberties of the people were extended, their grievances abolished, learning,
        science, and education promoted. The French Revolution found, on the other
        hand, no more zealous and active opponent than Gustavus III of Sweden. It was
        this feeling, of which they had in common, that united him with Catharine II.
        The chivalrous but imprudent spirit of Gustavus was flattered with the idea of
        leading the crusade of the Sovereigns against France. He entered into
        correspondence with Monsieur, the Comte d'Artois,
        the Marquis de Bouillé, and other chiefs of the
        emigration. In the spring of 1791 he repaired to Aix-la-Chapelle, under pretence of taking the waters, but in reality to consult
        with the French emigrants; and he was concerned in the preparations for Louis
        XVI’s unfortunate flight to Varennes. After the failure of that enterprise, he
        entertained the hazardous scheme of landing Swedish and Russian troops in the
        Seine, marching upon Paris, and suppressing the Revolution. Gustavus was
        supported in this anti-revolutionary ardour,
        which amounted almost to Quixotism, by Catharine II. She proposed to him,
        through General Pahlen, an intimate alliance,
        and Gustavus readily accepted a proposal which would enable him to be absent
        from his dominions without apprehension as to his powerful neighbor. Such seems
        to have been the chief object of the Treaty of Drottningholm,
        concluded October 19th, 1791.
   A conspiracy for
        assassinating the King had long existed among some of the Swedish nobles. Plots
        had been organized for effecting this object at Aix-la-Chapelle, Stockholm, and
        other places, which had hitherto failed; but the dismissal of the States, and
        the rumoured unconstitutional projects of
        Gustavus, brought them to maturity. One of the chief promoters of the King’s
        assassination was General Pechlin, an old man of
        seventy-two. Several other nobles were implicated in the conspiracy, and
        especially Counts Ribbing and Horn, and Captain Ankarström.
        Impelled to some extent by personal feelings, Ankarström shot the King in the back at a masquerade given at the Opera House at
        Stockholm, March 16th, 1792. Gustavus survived till the 29th. He was forty-six
        years of age at the time of his death. The chief conspirators were captured;
        but Ankarström alone was executed; the rest were
        either banished from Sweden or confined in fortresses. Gustavus Gustavus III’s son, then in his fourteenth year,
        succeeded to the Crown of Sweden, with the title of Gustavus Adolphus IV. Till
        he should attain his majority, the regency was assumed by his uncle Charles,
        Duke of Sudermania, brother of the late King. The
        Swedish Court now adopted a neutral policy; a conduct which produced a
        misunderstanding with the Court of St. Petersburg. Another cause of dissension
        was the publication of a proposed marriage of the young King of Sweden with a
        German princess (October, 1795), in spite of Gustavus’s promise that
        he should be united to the Archduchess Alexandra. Catharine having declared
        that she should consider the proposed marriage of Gustavus Adolphus as a ground
        of rapture, it was not prosecuted. Towards the autumn of 1796 Gustavus IV,
        accompanied by his uncle, paid a visit to the Empress at St. Petersburg. But
        though the young King was much struck with the charms of the Grand Duchess
        Alexandra, he refused to sign the marriage contract, on the ground that it
        contained provisions contrary to the religion which he professed, and to the
        laws and customs of his country. Catharine was furious at this affront. Her
        death, however, prevented any ill consequences from ensuing, and on the
        accession of Paul a good understanding was renewed between the two Courts.
   (The northern
        courts; containing original memoirs of the sovereigns of Sweden and Denmark,
        since 1766)
   GERMANY
             The same spirit
        which produced the Revolution in France penetrated into Germany and even into
        its Courts. It had animated and influenced Frederick the Great and the Emperor
        Joseph II. The vast intellectual movement observable throughout Europe in the
        last half of the eighteenth century had given birth almost to the first German
        literature that can be called original and vernacular. The German authors of
        this period, like the French literati themselves, discarded
        their former classical and French models, and sought in English literature a
        new source of inspiration. The works of most of their distinguished writers
        began to breathe a spirit of liberty. Salzmann, in his romance of Karl
          von Karlsberg, placed before the eyes of his
        numerous readers a striking and perhaps exaggerated picture of the political
        and social evils under which they laboured. The
        epic poet Klopstock gave vent to his aspirations for freedom in several Odes.
        The Dichterbund, or band of poets,
        established at Gottingen about the year 1770, of which Count Stolberg was one
        of the most distinguished members, looked up to Klopstock as their master. In
        many of Stolberg’s pieces love of liberty and hatred of tyrants are expressed
        with a boldness which must have grated strangely on the ears of some of the
        German Sovereigns. But in general these works were in too high a tone to have
        much influence on the people. Schiller’s early tragedies were calculated to
        have more effect, especially his Don Carlos; which, from the
        speeches of the Marquis de Posa, has been
        characterized as a dramatized discourse on the rights of man. Yet when the
        French Revolution broke out, it found no partisan in Schiller. He augured unfavourably of the Constituent Assembly, thought them
        incompetent to establish, or even to conceive, true liberty; foretold the
        catastrophe of a military despotism. Goethe, his contemporary, regarded the
        explosion in France as an unwelcome interruption of the tranquil pleasures of
        polite and cultivated society; Wieland, in his essays on the French Revolution,
        took the popular side. A more direct form of propagating liberal principals
        than by literature was by means of clubs and secret societies. The clubs of
        France were formidable political engines; but, then, their debates were public
        and their objects practical. Such associations would not have been suffered in
        Germany. The reformers of that country had therefore enlisted themselves in a
        secret society called the Order of Illuminati, founded in 1776 by
        Adam Weishaupt, a professor of canon law at
        Ingolstadt, and modelled after the constitution of the Jesuits, whose
        pupil Weishaupt had been. In a few years
        this society numbered thousands of members, belonging chiefly to the higher
        classes. Its principles seem not to have threatened any very immediate or
        alarming danger. Nevertheless it was suppressed by Charles Theodore, Elector of
        Bavaria; Weishaupt was compelled to fly,
        and found a refuge at Gotha. In other German States the Illuminati appear
        to have been left unmolested.
   Little desire was
        manifested in Germany to imitate the movement in France. It was only in
        the Rhenish provinces, where the people came into immediate contact
        with the French, and could be assisted by their armies, that any revolutionary
        spirit was manifested. An appeal was even ventured on for patriotic gifts in
        support of the war of the Empire against French principles, and brought in a
        few hundred thousand florins. The Austrian Freemasons, whom Joseph II had
        patronized, spontaneously suppressed their meetings, in order, as they told the
        Emperor, to relieve him of some of his cares in that season of disturbance.
        Nevertheless Thugut, the Austrian Minister, deemed
        some precaution necessary. Thugut had resided at
        Paris during the early days of the Revolution, and from an acquaintance with
        its scenes and personages, had imbibed a deep hatred of popular government, as
        well as the conviction that if the French Court and clergy had prevented, by
        means of the police, the philosophers and beaux esprits from
        propagating their principles, the outbreak would never have occurred. Hence he
        was led to forbid all social unions, and to subject the press to a rigid
        censorship. No allusions were permitted in the theatre to political or
        religious matters. It was forbidden to represent such plays as Otto
          von Wittelsbach, Hamlet, Macbeth, King John, Richard II, etc., as
        familiarizing the minds of the spectators with the murder or deposition of
        kings; King Lear, lest it should be thought that misfortune turned
        the heads of monarchs; still less plays directly provocative of revolutionary
        ideas, as Egmont, Fiesco, William Tell.
   Haugwitz.
         The affairs of
        Prussia at this period were conducted by Haugwitz,
        a large landed proprietor of Silesia. In a journey which he made into
        Italy, Haugwitz acquired the favour of Leopold, then Grand Duke of Tuscany, and
        after the accession of that Prince to the Imperial throne, and the change
        produced in Prussian policy by the Convention of Reichenbach, he was sent
        ambassador to Vienna. He subsequently entered the Cabinet of Berlin as Minister
        for Foreign Affairs. The fatal estrangement of Prussia from Austria, and from
        the affairs of the Empire, must be chiefly attributed to his policy. Another
        notable Prussian statesman of this period, though by birth a Hanoverian, was
        Baron Hardenberg.
   Italy was destined
        to become before long the scene of Italy, events of the greatest moment. In
        general it may be observed, that although the French Revolution had of course
        its partisans in Italy, the great mass of the Italian people were not favourable to it. They entertained an ancient aversion
        to the French from their frequent attempts and well-known desire to establish
        their dominion in Italy.
   Tanucci
         When Charles of
        Bourbon ascended the throne of Spain in 1759, the Two Sicilies were
        assigned to his second son, Ferdinand IV, then nine years of age. The Prince of
        St. Nicandro, appointed as his governor, was an
        uneducated man, addicted to the sports of the field, and capable only of
        instilling into the youthful monarch a love of his own pursuits. Fortunately,
        however, the Marquis Tanucci, a man of liberal
        and enlightened principles, possessed great influence in the Neapolitan
        counsels, and obtained the ear of the King. The main aims of Tanucci were to set bounds to the pretensions of the
        Pope, and to increase the royal prerogative by reducing the power of the
        nobles. In no part of Italy were feudal privileges more strictly maintained, or
        more oppressive, than in the Neapolitan dominions, and especially in the
        two Calabrias. The barons, like the çi-devant nobles of France, enjoyed exclusive
        rights of hunting and fishing, of grinding corn and baking bread; they named
        the judges and the governors of cities; besides the customary feudal services,
        they claimed the first fruits of the vintage, the harvest, and of all the
        productions of agriculture and pasturage, as well as of custom, dues, etc. Thus
        at one and the same time the people were oppressed, the royal authority was
        almost annihilated, and the treasury deprived of its proper revenues. Tanucci moderated all these abuses, and civilized the
        manners of the country nobles by summoning them to Court. He also introduced
        many reforms into the relations between Naples and the Court of Rome. The
        number of mendicant monks was reduced, and the order of the Jesuits suppressed.
        These reforms produced violent quarrels with the Court of Rome; the political
        disputes between Naples and that Court had caused, indeed, the reform of
        ecclesiastical abuses to be prosecuted with greater ardour in
        the Neapolitan dominions than in Tuscany and Austrian Lombardy. Tanucci had also turned his attention to a reform in
        the laws, which formed an incongruous mixture derived from the Normans,
        Lombards, Aragonese, French, Spaniards,
        Austrians, the former conquerors and possessors of the country.
   Thus Italy
        remained not uninfluenced by the liberal tendencies which marked the eighteenth
        century. The authority of the Papal See had been also reduced in the Duchies of
        Parma and Piacenza, which were likewise governed by a branch of the Spanish
        Bourbons. The new opinions had not made so much progress in Ferdinand IV’s
        kingdom of Sicily as in his Neapolitan dominions. The feudal system was still
        vigorous in that island towards the end of the eighteenth century.
             Tanucci was not so successful in his foreign as in his domestic policy. He
        was a partisan of France, and hence he incurred the displeasure of Ferdinand’s
        queen, the Austrian Princess Caroline, a woman of imperious temper, sister of
        the Emperor Joseph II, and of Marie Antoinette. Tanucci was
        dismissed, and his place filled at first by the Marquis Sambuca, and then by
        Acton, the son of an Irish physician. The Neapolitans were indignant at seeing
        the arms of the French Republic affixed to the hotel of the French Embassy, and
        in January, 1793, a deputation of the citizens presented an address to King
        Ferdinand, supplicating him to declare war against France. It was easy to see
        that the neutrality of Naples could not long be preserved. On the 12th of July,
        1793, a treaty was concluded between Sir W. Hamilton, the English Minister at
        Naples, and Acton, Ferdinand’s chief Minister, by which Ferdinand engaged to
        unite to the British forces in the Mediterranean 6,000 soldiers, four ships of
        the line, four frigates, and the same number of smaller vessels, Great Britain
        undertaking to maintain a respectable fleet in that sea, and to protect
        Neapolitan commerce. The Neapolitans subsequently took part in the occupation
        of Toulon.
   PIUS VI
             The Papal throne
        was filled, at the time of the French Revolution, by Pius VI. His predecessor,
        Clement XIV (Ganganelli), who had risen to the Papacy
        from the condition of a poor monk, had always retained the simple customs of
        his early life. These, however, seemed out of place in an age of inquiry,
        doubt, and disbelief; and it was thought that, when arguments cease to persuade,
        and virtue to move by its example, the best substitutes for them are
        pomp, splendour, and magnificence. The
        Cardinals, therefore, on the death of Clement, in 1774, elected Cardinal Braschi (Pius VI) as his successor. Braschi was handsome in person, eloquent in speech,
        refined in his tastes, of dignified manners, and a generous disposition. On the
        other hand, he was arbitrary and disdainful, and could ill brook opposition. A
        scheme was agitated in his Pontificate, originated by Cardinal Orsini, of uniting
        all Italy in a confederation, of which the Pope was to be the head. The chief
        glory of Pius VI is the draining of the Pontine marshes, a work of
        extraordinary magnitude and labour.
   Pius VI was
        naturally shocked and offended by the novelties and innovations in matters of
        religion which accompanied the breaking out of the French Revolution. The
        respect with which he was treated by the Constituent Assembly soothed and
        appeased him for a time, but the excesses of the Legislative Assembly and of
        the Convention, and especially the loss of Avignon, impelled him to resort to
        his spiritual weapons. Hence the Emperor and the Italian Princes of his party
        had little difficulty in persuading Pius to enter into an offensive league
        against France.
             The situation of
        Tuscany induced the Grand Duke Ferdinand, though so nearly connected with the
        House of Austria, formally to recognize the French Republic, January 16th,
        1793, before the execution of Louis XVI. Tuscany preserved its neutrality till
        the following October, when the appearance of an English fleet in the
        Mediterranean encouraged Ferdinand to declare himself for the allies. Of the
        part taken in the war by Victor Amadeus III, King of Sardinia, we have already
        spoken. The republic of Genoa, secretly inclined to France, maintained for a
        considerable time its neutrality, although summoned by the English and Spanish
        fleet, in October, 1793, to change its policy. The port was now blockaded.
        Venice had also declared herself neutral. The Venetians had lost all public
        spirit and fallen into a sort of political quietism. At the outbreak of the
        French Revolution they determined on the policy of doing nothing; and they
        persisted in their neutrality, though solicited by many Powers, Sardinia,
        Russia, Austria, Naples, to take a part against France. Yet their hatred of
        that country peeped out on all occasions. They sent back to the French Minister
        the note of the Assembly acquainting them with the flight of the King to
        Varennes, because it did not bear Louis’s signature; they refused to reply to
        the notice of the King’s acceptance of the Constitution; they suffered the
        Austrians to violate the neutrality they had declared by marching troops
        through their territories; in October, 1792, when the allies were entering
        France, they authorized their subjects to supply the Emperor and the King of
        Sardinia with arms, provisions, and other necessaries; on the establishment of
        the French Republic they refused to acknowledge it, and though they at length
        consented to receive a chargé d'affaires,
        they would only recognize him with a puerile distinction as the Minister of the
        French nation and not of the republic. These and other grievances of the same
        kind, and especially the reception given to the Regent, under the title of
        Count de Lille, at Verona, towards the end of 1794, drew down upon the Venetian
        Republic the hatred and vengeance of the French, and served at least as
        pretexts for its destruction.
    Respecting
        the Spanish Peninsula, little need be added to what has been already said.
        Although Godoy was despised by every true Spaniard, yet Florida Blanca
        and d'Aranda had been successively
        compelled to give place to him; and, in 1792, he obtained, with the title of
        Duke of Alcudia, the supreme direction of
        affairs. The war, however, which he commenced with France was at first popular.
        The Spaniards, devoted to the Church and to their King, beheld in the
        republicans of France the enemies of both. They contributed largely and spontaneously
        to the war; the feudal lords, as in ancient times, put themselves at the head
        of their vassals, while the smugglers, and even the monks, formed regiments.
        But the enthusiasm of the nation was ill-directed by Godoy; and the successes
        of the Spanish arms, already described, were soon followed by reverses which
        rendered the King anxious to conclude a peace.
   The Portuguese had
        shared with the Spaniards in the French war, and are said to have formed the
        best portion of the Spanish army. The sceptre of
        Portugal had been held, since February, 1777, by Queen Maria I, but her
        intellect having become disordered through religious melancholy, the regency
        was assumed in 1792 by her son Don John, Prince of Brazil, who was governed by
        his confessors.
    
             
 CHAPTER LVIIITHE DIRECTORY 
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