literature of the very trite proverb—
Poeta
nascitur, non fit. The spectacle of that heavy
German Muse, with her feet crammed into pointed slippers,
executing, with incredible conscientiousness, now
the stately measure of a Versailles minuet, and now
the spritely steps of a Parisian jig, would be either
ludicrous or pathetic—one hardly knows
which—were it not so certainly neither the
one nor the other, but simply dreary with an unutterable
dreariness, from which the eyes of men avert themselves
in shuddering dismay. Frederick himself felt
that there was something wrong—something,
but not really very much. All that was wanted
was a little expert advice; and obviously Voltaire
was the man to supply it—Voltaire, the one
true heir of the Great Age, the dramatist who had
revived the glories of Racine (did not Frederick’s
tears flow almost as copiously over
Mahomet
as over
Britannicus?), the epic poet who had
eclipsed Homer and Virgil (had not Frederick every
right to judge, since he had read the ‘Iliad’
in French prose and the ‘Aeneid’ in French
verse?), the lyric master whose odes and whose epistles
occasionally even surpassed (Frederick Confessed it
with amazement) those of the Marquis de la Fare.
Voltaire, there could be no doubt, would do just what
was needed; he would know how to squeeze in a little
further the waist of the German Calliope, to apply
with his deft fingers precisely the right dab of rouge
to her cheeks, to instil into her movements the last
nuances of correct deportment. And, if
he did that, of what consequence were the blemishes
of his personal character? ’On peut apprendre
de bonnes choses d’un scelerat.’
And, besides, though Voltaire might be a rogue, Frederick
felt quite convinced that he could keep him in order.
A crack or two of the master’s whip—a
coldness in the royal demeanour, a hint at a stoppage
of the pension—and the monkey would put
an end to his tricks soon enough. It never seems
to have occurred to Frederick that the possession
of genius might imply a quality of spirit which was
not that of an ordinary man. This was his great,
his fundamental error. It was the ingenuous error
of a cynic. He knew that he was under no delusion
as to Voltaire’s faults, and so he supposed
that he could be under no delusion as to his merits.
He innocently imagined that the capacity for great
writing was something that could be as easily separated
from the owner of it as a hat or a glove. ’C’est
bien dommage qu’une ame aussi lache soit unie
a un aussi beau genie.’ C’est bien dommage!—as
if there was nothing more extraordinary in such a
combination than that of a pretty woman and an ugly
dress. And so Frederick held his whip a little
tighter, and reminded himself once more that, in spite
of that beau genie, it was a monkey that he
had to deal with. But he was wrong: it was
not a monkey; it was a devil, which is a very different
thing.