
  THE
  DESERTER -  
  A MASONIC TALE
  
  BY A LONDON BROTHER
  
  FREEMASONS MONTHLY MAGAZINE - 1842
  
  
  IN one of the dungeons of Potsdam, were seated three
  persons: the first, a young soldier, scarce eighteen, whose
  jacket, stripped of its facings, told that the sentence of the
  court-martial had already passed - a sentence which for his
  of fence (that of desertion) Frederick the Great seldom
  inclined to mercy.
  
  Beside him was seated a female, her hands clasped in
  convulsive firmness; her lips quivering with suppressed
  emotion; the tears streaming  consciously from her eyes,
  which were riveted, with mournful tenderness, upon the
  prisoner, soon to be led forth to death. The third inmate of
  that dreary cell was the chaplain of the prison, whose
  self-possessed, yet mild demeanor, told that long familiarity
  with scenes of wretchedness, while it had enabled him to
  suppress all outward demonstration of sorrow, had not
  blunted his heart to the miseries of his fellow creatures.
  
  "Fritz!" exclaimed the heart-broken mother, "this is not the
  spirit in which a Christian should meet death: listen to the
  exhortation of God's minister."
  
  "Mother, I am innocent," replied the youth. "My captain gave
  me permission to absent myself two days, the very night
  before he fell, but my judges would not believe me."
  
  "I believe you," sobbed the heart-broken parent; "but is the
  injustice of man an excuse for neglect of Heaven.  Though
  guiltless of this one fault, how many thousands are unatoned
  - are unrepented of? and you would die in this hardened
  spirit? - the sense of human injury is stronger than the sense
  of human sinfulness.  Hear, Fritz," she continued, "bend thy
  stubborn knees.  When your poor father died, you were an
  infant, helpless and sickly - I forgot myself, hushed my own
  grief to remember you.  I commanded back my tears, stifled
  my sighs, divorced my grief from your father's grave, and
  lived through many a grievous hour, because thou didst live.
  'Twas a bitter grief; but, oh! 't was happiness to this. My boy,
  my thoughts grow frantic when I behold thee blotted from the
  book of life! Bend, bend thy stubborn knees and ask for
  mercy."
  
  "Mother!" exclaimed the young soldier, his frame writhing
  with emotion, "spare me."
  
  "Spare me, and save thyself," answered the unhappy
  woman; humble thy haughty spirit; nor deem, that because
  an unjust sentence has been pronounced against thee, thou
  mayest unprepared stand before the judgment seat of the
  Most High."
  
  Fritz, whose face was covered with his hands, wept bitterly -
  his sobs were audible.
  
  "Blest tears!" exclaimed the priest, "they are the harbingers
  of contrition - the penitential waters of the soul, which
  cleanse it from impurities:"
  
  The rest of the night was passed in prayer and religious
  exercises. The unhappy youth was brought to feel that
  earthly injustice was no expiation for his offences against
  Heaven, and that ere he could look for pardon from his
  offended Creator, he must endeavor to merit it by penitence
  and prayer.
  
  "Mother," said the youth, after his feelings had been soothed
  by the hope which so lately was a stranger to his breast, "I
  thank thee - thou hast given me life, nurtured me, expended
  on my early years all the rich treasures of a parent's love; as
  cares, as watchfulness, as tenderness: thou halt done more,
  thou halt taught me how to die-to quit the world in peace."
  
  "And to pardon it," interrupted the minister, "to extend
  Christian forgiveness to your enemies, if such thou hast."
  
  "What!" exclaimed the young man - the infirmity of human
  passion for a moment subduing the dictates of religion -
  "forgive my enemies! - forgive Hubert and Carle, whose lies
  condemned me! - never, father, never!"
  
  "How else wilt thou hope to be forgiven?" demanded the
  good old man. "Shall man dare ask forgiveness of his Maker,
  and yet refuse it to his fellow worm?"
  
  "But, Hubert and Carle, father"-
  
  "Have injured thee, my son," said his mother, calmly; "had
  they not, where would be the merit of forgiving them? Has
  thou forgot the first prayer I taught thee to pronounce:
  'Dimitte nobis debits nostra: sicut et nos dimittimus
  debitoribus nostris.' Forgive them, my child, as thou hopest
  to be forgiven."
  
  "Mother, the last feeling is rooted from by heart, I do forgive
  them."
  
  "Thanks! thanks!" exclaimed the now happy parent; "the
  bitterness of losing thee is past; our separation will be short,
  Fritz, I am already bowed more by sorrow than by years. The
  grave now orating to receive thee will not be long without a
  second tenant."
  
  "The hour will soon arrive, mother, when we must part; but
  let me fulfil my last earthly duty." The captive reached from
  the shelf above his rude hard couch, a military knapsack,
  and began arranging its contents. "Here, dear mother, is my
  bible; keep it for my sake; it was my father's; and you will not
  prize it less that it has been your unhappy son's. Would," he
  added, turning to the priest, "I had aught worthy of your
  acceptance, but the captive's prayer must be your only
  guerdon; unless," he continued, "this trinket, which seems
  marked in curious characters and Hebrew letters, be worthy
  of your attention." He placed in the old man's hands a small
  medallion of silver gilt, as he spoke.
  
  "Where got you this?" demanded the priest, eyeing it with
  surprise and curiosity.
  
  "It was my father's - it has his name upon it"
  
  "Fritz Kineberg," said the inquirer, reading the legend
  engraved on the rim - the speaker paused for a moment and
  then resumed - "my son, I have a duty to attend to; another
  wretched prisoner awaits my ministry; but at the hour of the
  last trial of your firmness, I will be with you."
  
  "Leave us not, holy priest," exclaimed the mother, "Heaven
  knows we have need of consolation and support."
  
  " 'Tis the sacrifice of duty, daughter," answered the old man,
  "and mast be made."
  
  The inmates of the prison bowed in resignation, and again
  were deep in prayer, as the good priest left the cell.
  
  Morn at length broke, and all was prepared for the execution
  of Fritz-still the priest returned not - his arms were pinioned,
  and the guard about to conduct him from his cell, when the
  door was gently opened, and the chaplain entered.
  
  "You are late," said the young man, "but duty, doubtless
  detained you. Un-loose my mother's arms from about my
  neck, father, and give me your blessing comfort her when I
  am gone."
  
  "Fritz," said the old man, solemnly, "you stand upon the
  verge of eternity. Is thy mind subjected to the will of God ?"
  
  "I am contented to die. God's will be done."
  
  The sobs of the wretched mother, whose fortitude had quite
  forsaken her, were irrepressible.
  
  "Unsearchable are His ways, my child; inscrutable are His
  decrees. Lost and wretched as you stand, were it well, He
  still could save you.'
  
  "I am hopeless, father, of all earthly mercy," replied the
  young man.
  
  "Hope," answered the priest, with a tone approaching to
  cheerfulness, "should never leave us. Should it please
  Providence to spare thy life"-
  
  "Priest!" exclaimed the mother, who had been listening to his
  words, "Is there hope? Thou art a holy man, and would'st not
  trifle with a soul upon the verge of time. Shall I not be left a
  childless mother ? Has Heaven in mercy to my prayer,
  spared me my age's prop - my boy - my only one ?"
  
  "It has," replied the priest, producing the pardon; " he is free:'
  
  In an instant, mother and son were folded in each other's
  arms, while the messenger of mercy bestowed on them his
  benediction.
  
  The father of Fritz and Frederick of Prussia were
  Freemasons. The story is told as related to the writer by one
  of the young soldier's descendants, who is himself a member
  of the Fraternity, and attached to a Lodge in Suabia.*
  
  * Frederick was initiated on the 15th of August, 1738, in a
  Lodge held at Brunswick, England, under the Scot's
  constitution - he being at that time Prince Royal. On his
  accession to the throne, his favorable opinion of the
  Institution induced him to cause a Grand Lodge to be formed
  at Berlin; for which purpose a charter was obtained from
  Edinburgh, Scotland. He took a great personal interest in its
  affairs, and established several important regulations.
  Among them were the following; - (1.) That no person should
  be made a Mason, unless his character was unimpeachable
  and his manner of living and profession respectable. (2.)
  That every member should pay twenty-five dollars for the
  first degree; fifty for the second, and one hundred on his
  being made a Master Mason. (3.) That he should remain at
  least three months in each degree; and that every sum
  received should he divided by the Grand Treasurer into three
  parts; one to defray the expenses of the Lodge: another to
  be applied to the relief of distressed Brethren; and the third
  to be distributed among the poor in general. - [ED.
  MAGAZINE.]
  