Psychology Today Article: "Frederick the Happy: The Old Fritz was an Epicurean."
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Great catch, Hiram - thank you.
Lots of good information in that article, but here is where I think he goes wrong, as I think Thomas Jefferson and Cassius Longinus, and in my view Epicurus himself would agree (with me):
I moved this thread into the Frederick the Great subforum. I see the article actually labels him an Epicurean. I might at some point move Frederick into the "Epicurean" forum category, but before I did that I would want to see evidence that Frederick ever referred to himself explicitly as an Epicurean.
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Cassius
August 25, 2019 at 11:22 AM Moved the thread from forum General Discussion to forum Frederick the Great. -
Martin - Have we found the 200 line poem on pleasure that is referenced here? Do you have a link we can post here?
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I moved this thread into the Frederick the Great subforum. I see the article actually labels him an Epicurean. I might at some point move Frederick into the "Epicurean" forum category, but before I did that I would want to see evidence that Frederick ever referred to himself explicitly as an Epicurean.
This is the most inequivocal quote
QuoteFrederick left no doubt about his Epicureanism. In 1749, at the age of 37, he published a 200-line poem called On Pleasure. Blanning (p. 156) reports that in it, Frederick “begins with a dismissal of the intense but short-lived and dangerous carnal delights offered by prostitutes” (much like Epicurus did) but that he seeks to “combine a hundred different pleasures to create just one.”
“He declared that he would,” reports Blanning, “always follow the Epicurean gospel.” Epicurus’s term for this one pleasure is ataraxia, a pleasant, untroubled state of mind. An Epicurean is not obliged to maintain this state at all times but is encouraged to follow its guiding light. Frederick did, and this may be, in no small measure, what made him great.
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That does sound firm. I hope we can locate the poem and confirm it! Working now....
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I'm somewhat disappointed there's no audiobook for Blanning's biography, I was hoping to have a listen!
Frederick the Great figured prominently in some of the European History courses I took, but I had no idea of this side of him.
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After our initial discussions of Frederick the Great six months ago I did some looking around on Archive.org to see what I could find, and I came across this 1935 German movie (English subtitles) "The Old King and the Young King" which tells the story of Frederick's early life up until the time he became king. Wow what an upbringing he had. if this movie is correct, his father had Frederick's "best friend" executed for trying to help him escape to France. I don't recall that there is a lot of philosophy discussed in the movie, but it has a lot of detail about some of Frederick's formative experiences in Prussia.
I would dearly love to get the text of that poem and look further into all of this.
https://archive.org/details/DerAlteUndDerJungeKoenig1935I am particularly interested to find out whether Fritz had any interest in physics and epistemology. Not every lover of "pleasure" is an Epicurean, by far, but it definitely seems that Fritz combined a respect for pleasure with an antipathy toward religion, or at least some versions of Christianity. I can't recall the names of the other movies I found, but it appears that there were several about the life of Frederick, and throughout them they had Frederick making antagonizing references toward religion. He might at least deserve the title Cyreniac, but I'd like to get more triangulation on him saying something about Epicurus before I get too enthusiastic.
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"his father had Frederick's "best friend" executed for trying to help him escape" actually happened. They both deserted together, and the friend got sentenced in compliance with the penal code to death by a court (not the King) and executed but Frederick was not because the judges declared themselves unfit to judge over the crown prince. So, his father forced him to watch the execution of his friend as a penalty. The father was such a dick that one historian who started to write his biography gave up in disgust.
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Frederick's father was portrayed very nastily in that movie, Martin, at least in the way that he treated his son. If you have seen it or ever get a chance to I would be very interested in your commentary.
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Cassius
August 26, 2019 at 11:38 AM Changed the title of the thread from “Frederick the Happy: The Old Fritz was an Epicurean.” to “Article: "Frederick the Happy: The Old Fritz was an Epicurean."”. -
I see Frederick's poem can be found in part here: https://www.historytoday.com/frederick-greats-erotic-poem and perhaps in full (in German) here: https://www.zeit.de/2011/38/Schossgebet
If this is indeed a basically a very direct poem / love letter targeted at a particular lover, that would also lead me away from, rather than toward, considering Frederick a full and complete Epicurean philosopher.
Argh! I just noticed that the lines in this version rhyme, which indicates to me that the writer has not translated it literally, and that causes me to wonder whether this is accurate to the meaning:
QuoteFrom Königsberg to Monsieur Algarotti, Swan of PaduaDisplay More
This night, vigorous desire in full measure,
Algarotti wallowed in a sea of pleasure.
A body not even a Praxitiles fashions
Redoubled his senses and imbued his passions
Everything that speaks to eyes and touches hearts,
Was found in the fond object that enflamed his parts.
Transported by love and trembling with excitement
In Cloris’ arms he yields himself to contentment
The love that unites them heated their embraces
And tied bodies and arms as tightly as laces.
Divine sensual pleasure! To the world a king!
Mother of their delights, an unstaunchable spring,
Speak through my verses, lend me your voice and tenses
Tell of their fire, acts, the ecstasy of their senses!
Our fortunate lovers, transported high above
Know only themselves in the fury of love:
Kissing, enjoying, feeling, sighing and dying
Reviving, kissing, then back to pleasure flying.
And in Knidos’ grove, breathless and worn out
Was these lovers’ happy destiny, without doubt.
But all joy is finite; in the morning ends the bout.
Fortunate the man whose mind was never the prey
To luxury, or grand airs, one who knows how to say
A moment of climax for a fortunate lover
Is worth so many aeons of star-spangled honour.
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Cassius
August 26, 2019 at 11:44 AM Changed the title of the thread from “Article: "Frederick the Happy: The Old Fritz was an Epicurean."” to “Psychology Today Article: "Frederick the Happy: The Old Fritz was an Epicurean."”. -
I checked the 41 poems from Frederick which are published at
https://gutenberg.spiegel.de/buch/gedichte-5321
but none of them matches the description. Some of them do touch on Epicurean topics.
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La Jouissance does not match the description by Blanning. The assigned year is different, too.
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From the third Rheinsberg (October 30, 1737)
(all my pastes here will be google translate):
O you who are my only deity,
you God of joy, reward my faithfulness!
Give me what is the summit of all pleasures,
O give, that in the midst of enjoyment
a blessed forgetfulness and rapture
delight me to ever new desires! -
An explicit reference to Epicurus!
https://gutenberg.spiegel.de/buch/gedichte-5321/9
The Man Caesarions(August 1745)
What do I hear? God, what a terrible word:
Caesarion is no more! Caesarion is gone!
You have lost the most faithful, best friend!
As if daggers pierce me a thousand times,
my heart twitches
in savage pain.
You are not anymore! that's how it will sound to me forever;
Your love will come to you after nothing.
As I honored you in life, honored,
so you are worth my heartfelt love.
How firmly did you look into the eye of death,
before which every man's heart dreads!
Supported by manly courage, guided,
your pure soul remained untouched
From that illusion of a hell
And a dark future of our soul.
In your happy hours of life you have
found the support of Master Epicurus;
How proud you have risen in death:
Since you outbid Zenos mental power!
Alas, this heart which struck so sublime,
What became of him? Who tells me? Who?
The Spirit
Who Carried Noble Thoughts, Is He Still Lived? Oh, is not he?
God, what a chasm! Everything is destroyed,
His spirit and His goodness! If he lived,
certainly, his shadow, his thought sought
night and death to me, yes, he hovered around
my woeful head: he would have set me up!
Sorrowfully remember, bitter chalice of sorrow!
And imagine, stupid Stoa,
you could be human souls in the long run
against the blows of fate?
How grief-stricken I think,
How strong - how unwavering -
And now, what must I experience now?
Defenseless, I am abandoned to the pain,
Destroyed, almost annihilated in
death by your death. -
Still, quiet! What is the mind still worth,
when it turns against feeling
and increases my grief with bitterness?
He tells me my everything is gone.
So far the world, so empty! And I, I am
orphaned, alone! I loved you so much -
How shadowy did the days blow,
because we, what pleases us, what saddens us,
how brothers divided; because in the same stroke
your heart and mine struck. My luck was yours.
How were we in each and every one, on a
large and a small scale; unclouded and clear,
the friendship sky remained forever.
The cheerfulness has always accompanied you,
your mind, well guided by beautiful books,
has like tamed, chivalrous and tender,
the cheerfulness, which often barks wildly.
It made you worthy of your noble custom
to join the illustrious spirits.
Brilliantly illuminating Hellas and Paris,
Oh, and your heart: to place you among those
whose friendship the songs announce to us, the
little band of high-minded heroes, honored
for their faithfulness.
If I knew how to strike the lyre of Horace,
Truly, the echo of the Parnassus should
lament to me this heart's longing
which remains with you without ceasing;
More than Achates you were, I would say,
More than a Pylades, Pirithous;
So in love fieriest outpouring
Singing should be immortal,
What adorns you throughout your life.
I can see the sun and you no longer!
So it is true, only too true, that he,
the inexorable, without difference, pulls the
most beautiful into nothingness.
Whether value, whether worthless! Honor or shame!
Who asks after that on the Cocytusstrande:
What has Achilles, what Hector Thersites
advance? I, too, are walking at a rapid pace toward
the home, the dark; Days, hours
are how they came, escaped me in flight.
Half way through is the life path,
and close and closer to the target approaches.
Patience! Not much longer lasts, so I greet you
in the dark shadow kingdom, to be heartfelt
With you in gloomy peace-freedom There
the friendship to erneun
And on and on
you to be close to loving.
But as long as
fate holds me captive in this world ,
your image will never be forgotten.
So long there's no luck, which ever
relieves Me my burning pain.
Let
my head lower me under your grave-cypresses ; unmeasured
Let my painful desires be!
There I want hot tears of heart
And sigh of you from never
longed sinews And deep-felted songs christmas,
With myrtles then and flowers - look, it still shine
my tears on it - Your grave wreath.
And yet, I blissfully
expose him , The serene forehead with the nobility of the soul
Death may face death,
A knight without fear and reproach.
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In the knowledge of barriers Bresche hit on the experience:
Lucretius and Locke brought us deep revelation:
They succeeded to cover the road to the goal.
Come, let them follow us, in the paths that have been paved, to show
man his own nature,
and finite destiny: let him see how he became,
and grew and matured in us, the spirit, where his whereabouts,
when once fell into dust this earthly body ,
With us he is born, strengthened, unfolds
with our sensory life and transforms himself,
Just as that transforms: tender in childhood,
just like our body, now fiery, cheeky kind,
Daredevil as long as adolescence lifts us;
Zag, flaccid in suffering, and again strongly enlivened,
As soon as it is at ease: plagues him frailty,
When he is reduced, falls into feebleness,
And so he goes with us. Thus
his fate always remains inseparable from our corporeality. -
This is really good stuff, guys! Thank you.
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My computer crashed when I was on 15 so I will have to come back to 15-41 later, but there are definite echos of Epicurean themes on no life after death and questioning of supernatural gods.
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