Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Prose - 48. Edward Carpenter “Afar from feminine society”
.
“And as to the loves of Hercules, it is difficult
to record them because of their number. But some
who think that Ioläus was one of them, do to this
day worship and honor him; and make their
loved ones swear fidelity at his tomb.”
—Plutarch,[i]
circa 95 BC
Friedrich the Great, a selection
from “Ioläus”
[Concerning Schiller’s 1787 play] There is little, I believe, in the historical facts relating to [the real-life] Don Karlos to justify this tale of [tragic same-sex love]; but there seems great probability that the incidents were transferred by Schiller from the history of Frederick the Great, of Prussia, when a youth at his father’s court. The devotion that existed between young Frederick and Lieutenant [Hans] von Katte, the anger and severities of the royal parent, the supposed conspiracy, the imprisonment of Frederick, and the execution of Katte, are all reproduced in Schiller’s play.
Katte was a young man of good family and strange but charming personality, who, as soon as he came to Court, being three or four years older than Frederick, exercised a strong attraction upon the latter. The two were always together, and finally, enraged by the harshness of the royal father, they plotted flight to England. They were arrested, and Katte, accused of treason to the throne, was condemned to death. That this sentence was pronounced, not so much for political reasons, as in order to do despite to the affections between him [sic] and the Crown Prince, is strongly suggested by the circumstances. Katte was sent from a distance in order to be executed at Küstrin, in the fortress where the Prince was [later to be] confined, and with instructions that the latter should witness his execution. Carlyle, in his life of Frederick II:
“(Besserer, the chaplain of the Garrison, describing the scene as [the Prince and he] approached the Castle, says:) Here, after long wistful looking about, [Friedrich] did get sight of his beloved [Hans] at a window in the Castle, from whom, he, with politest and most tender expression, speaking in French, took leave, with no little emotion of sorrow.
‘Pardonnez moi, mon cher Katte,’ cried Friedrich. [‘Please forgive me, my dear Katte.’]
‘La mort est douce, pour un si aimable Prince,’ said Katte. [‘Death becomes sweet, if for such a loving Prince.’]
[The Prince and Besserer] fared on; round some angle of the Fortress it appears not in sight of [his beloved], and Friedrich sank in a faint, [fearing he] had seen his last glimpse of Katte in the world.
[However, later, just before the time of execution,] Katte wore, by order, a brown [uniform] exactly like the Prince’s; the Prince [having] already [been] brought down into a lower room to see Katte as he passes – to see Katte die has been the royal order, but they smuggled that into abeyance [with this brief meeting] – and Katte [knew] he shall see him.”
Frederick’s grief and despair were extreme for a time. Then his royal father found him a wife, in the Princess Elizabeth of Brunswick, whom he obediently married, but in whom he showed little interest – their meetings growing rarer and rarer, till at last, they became merely formal. Later, and after his accession, he spent most of his leisure time when away from the cares of war and political reorganization, at his retreat at Sans-Souci, afar from feminine society (a fact which provoked Voltaire’s sarcasms), and in the society of his philosophic and military friends, to whom many of whom he was much attached. Kupffer has unearthed from his poems printed at Sans-Souci in 1750 the following, addressed to Count von Kaiserlinck, a favorite companion, on whom he bestowed the by-name of Cesarion:
“Cesarion, let us keep unspoiled
Our faith, and be true friends,
And pair our lives like noble Greeks,
And to like nobler ends!
That friend from friend may never hide
A fault through weakness or through pride,
Or sentiment that cloys.
Thus gold in fire the brighter glows,
Refined from all alloys.”
There is also in the same collection a long and beautiful ode “To the shades of Cesarion,” of which the following are a few lines:
“O God! how hard the word of Fate!
Cesarion dead! His happy days
Death to the grave has consecrate.
His charm I mourn and gentle grace.
He’s dead – my tender, faithful mate!
A thousand daggers pierce my heart;
It trembles, torn with grief and pain.
He’s gone! the dawn comes not again!
Thy grave’s the goal of my heart’s strife;
Holy shall thy remembrance be;
To thee I poured out love in life;
And love in death I vow to thee.”
—Edward Carpenter,[ii]
circa 1925
¤ ¤ ¤ ¤ ¤
[i] “And as to the loves of Hercules” Plutarch; this quote forms the epigraph to Carpenter’s 1902 anthology of same-sex love throughout history and around the world. I note with dismay, reprints of this compendium almost invariably omit the epigraph. Why? Because with it in place, the collection obviously becomes instantly about love between men, and therefore refutes the plausible deniability having the word “Friendship” affords in the book’s title.
[ii] “Friedrich the Great” Edward Carpenter Ioläus: An Anthology of Friendship (New York 1935), ps. 149-158. All translations are presumably Carpenter’s, who was fluent in German, even having peer-reviewed papers published in scholarly journals in that country (although the King's poems would have been translated from the French originals). The anthology's first edition came out in 1902, but this section on the Prussian king was added in a later iteration, which I am unable to pin an exact date to.
_
- 2
- 2
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.