her husband, which is at last earned into effect.
She arrived at Aschaffenburg, and went on board a yacht
in order to repair to Frankfort. Francis, coming
from Heidelberg, thinks to meet his wife, but arrives
too late: she has already departed. Unknown,
he jumps into a little boat, hastens alter her, reaches
her ship; and the loving pair is delighted at this
surprising meeting. The story spreads immediately;
and all the world sympathizes with this tender pair,
so richly blessed with children, who have been so inseparable
since their union, that once, on a journey from Vienna
to Florence, they are forced to keep quarantine together
on the Venetian border. Maria Theresa is welcomed
in the city with rejoicings: she enters the Roman
Emperor Inn, while the great tent for the reception
of her husband is erected on the Bornheim heath.
There, of the spiritual electors, only Mentz is found;
and, of the ambassadors of the temporal electors, only
Saxony, Bohemia, and Hanover. The entrance begins,
and what it may lack of completeness and splendor
is richly compensated by the presence of a beautiful
lady. She stands upon the balcony of the well-situated
house, and greets her husband with cries of “Vivat!”
and clapping of hands: the people joined, excited
to the highest enthusiasm. As the great are,
after all, men, the citizen deems them big equals when
he wishes to love them; and that he can best do when
he can picture them to himself as loving husbands,
tender parents, devoted brothers, and true friends.
At that time all happiness had been wished and prophesied;
and to-day it was seen fulfilled in the first-born
son, to whom everybody was well inclined on account
of his handsome, youthful form, and upon whom the
world set the greatest hopes, on account of the great
qualities that he showed.
We had become quite absorbed in the past and future,
when some friends who came in recalled us to the present.
They were of that class of people who know the value
of novelty, and therefore hasten to announce it first.
They were even able to tell of a fine humane trait
in those exalted personages whom we had seen go by
with the greatest pomp. It had been concerted,
that on the way, between Heusenstamm and the great
tent, the emperor and king should find the Landgrave
of Darmstadt in the forest. This old prince,
now approaching the grave, wished to see once more
the master to whom he had been devoted in former times.
Both might remember the day when the landgrave brought
over to Heidelberg the decree of the electors, choosing
Francis as emperor, and replied to the valuable presents
he received with protestations of unalterable devotion.
These eminent persons stood in a grove of firs; and
the landgrave, weak with old age, supported himself
against a pine, to continue the conversation, which
was not without emotion on both sides. The place
was afterwards marked in an innocent way, and we young
people sometimes wandered to it.
Thus several hours had passed in remembrance of the
old and consideration of the new, when the procession,
though curtailed and more compact, again passed before
our eyes; and we were enabled to observe and mark
the detail more closely, and imprint it on our minds
for the future.