MASTER NEGATIVE NO. 91-80340 MICROFILMED 1991 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES/NEW YORK a as part of the Foundations of Western Civilization Preservation Project Funded by the NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITffiS Reproductions may not be made without permission from Columbia University Library COPYRIGHT STATEMENT The copyright law of the United States - Title 17, United States Code - concerns the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material... Columbia University Library reserves the right to refuse to accept a copy order if, in its judgement, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of the copyright law. A UTHOR : WHITMAN, SIDNEY TITLE: IMPERIAL GERMANY PLACE: LONDON DA TE : 1889 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT BIBLIOGRAPHIC MICROFORM TARHRT Master Negative # Original Material as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record '•»*»*«im<. 943.01 V,'59 Whitman, Sidney. Inipeiial CJeiiuauy; a critical study of fact and char- s'"' 'voil"^"'''' ^^'l"tn»a" - London, ^Y. Heinemann, .rotrl. 1389 • ^Q4-th i;^"". iXf i;lj, 308 p First edition, London, 1888. Dn43-01 p . „ , n -n T ., V'59 Cojy in Barnard Collogo Library. 1. Gcrniany-Dcscr. & trav. 2. National characteristics, German. • " ' • » ( \ 4-20810 --/ Library of Congress DD117.W61 Restrictions on Use: TECHNICAL MICROFORM DATA REDUCTION RATIO: FILM SIZE:_^6 Jf\l/ IMAGE PLACEMENT: lA ^il^ IB IIB DATE FILMED: 7/1^/% INITIALS ^^&^ FILMED BY: RESEARCtf PUBLICATIONS, INC WOODBRIDGE. CT c Association for information and Image {Management 1100 Wayne Avenue, Suite 1100 Silver Spring. Maryland 20910 301/587-8202 Centimeter 1 2 3 IllillllllllllllllUlllllllllll Inches TTT 4 5 1 6 7 8 9 10 11 iiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiili 12 13 14 15 mm I Mil MM|mjJmjln^^ 1.0 M 2.8 It u •uuu 1.4 2.5 22 I.I 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.25 MRNUFfiCTURED TO fillM STPNDfiRDS BY RPPLIED IMfiGE. INC. WW' -y u » -.. , > .- *»«,:; 1^1 .1 ^»"'\.%.-*^ ijiji-'Tr-r ^1 ^1 *- 1. N I IMPERIAL GERMANY •? X v. # % BAU.A: ^''NE, HANSON ANH CO. IMlURUH AND LONDON t3 ■ s> s CONTENTS. CD .5 I I ^ J c CHAP. I. THE GERMAN CHAEACTER IN POLITICS II. INTELLECTUAL LIFE . III. EDUCATIONAL .... IV. THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY V. PATERNAL GOVERNMENT VI. BISMARCK VII. THE ARMY . VIII. THE GERMAN ARISTOCRACY IX. GERMAN SOCIETY X. WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE XI, THE PHILISTINE XII. COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE XIII. THE GERMAN PRESS XIV. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION PACE I 22 53 65 S8 116 143 170 192 i 211 227 242 276 290 IMPERIAL GERMANY I '■ H Critical Stu&g OF FACT AND CHARACTER BY SIDNEY WHITMAN Greift nur hinein ins voile Menschenleben Eiu jeder lebt's, nicht vielen ists bekannt, Und wo Ihr's packt da ist's interessant.— Goethe. LONDON TRUBNER & CO., LUDGATE HILL 1889 [/4// rights reserved] 5n Btfcctionatc /Iftcmor^ OF P. A. W. ^ IIeidelbhrg. ijnr jAXi-ARY 1S77. ONE OF THE FEW GERMANS, AVIIO, PASSING HIS LIFE AWAY FROM HIS NATIVE LAND, WAS PROUD, EVEN DURING HIS COUNTRY'S POLITICAL MISERY, TO PROCLAIM HIS NATIONALITY. o EH o r~ 38005 W\' PREFACE. Germany is a giant in its cradle, whose growth and develop- ment will some day astonish the world. A. J. MUNDELLA, M.P., i860. Those whom circumstances have enabled to dean a o more than superficial knowledge of other countries than their own, are often struck by our general apathy towards, or at least want of touch with, nation- alities that have much in common with us, not to mention the close proximity of geographical position. Even more than this ; many of us must often have baen painfully surprised to note how such want of touch has contributed to warp the judgment of men far above the average in intellect and culture, let alone men in responsible political position. When I say want of touch, I mean it to apply vin PREFACE. PREFACE, IX more to intellectual than to material matters ; and when I say ignorance or apathy, I also mean it to apply more to the atlinities of race and character than to the mere utilitarian subjects of every-day life. I do not wish so much to draw attention to the material aspects of CJcrman life, except indirectly and in so far as the result of something deeper. This something I endeavour to present with its. advantages and its drawbacks — namely, tlie general character, ethical and ccsthetical, of the great people to whom we are allied by ties of blood as ^^'ell as by tradition. Thus, it has not been my aim to write an all-round work on Germany, such as Mr» Escott's comprehensive work on England, but rather to deal with a few of the leading characteristics of Germany, which I have observed closely in the country itself, and which I think likely to interest Englishmen generally ; and if I only succeed in inspiring a few of my readers with an increased interest in the great Teutonic nation whose power,. in our day, is one of the safest guarantees of European peace, T shall not have written in vain. Some of the conclusions I arrive at may seem, at lirst sight, somewhat contradictory, but they will be seen to depend upon the varying points of view they are regarded from. It has been my aim to speak the truth fearlessly. SIDNEY WHITMAN. London, November i, iSSS. IMPERIAL GERMANY. ERRATA. »» On page 120, line 16. from bottom, read " help"yor " keep. 165, line 9 from bottom, omit " in." 176, in foot-note, read "Bilder" /or "Bildern." 234, line 9 from bottom, read " lap "/or " hand." the Germans, as they cannot love us, at least retain their hatred of each other, so that, when liome begins to totter, she may at least find support in the discord of that race." On March 23, 1887, Bismarck said in the Prussian Herrenhaus (House of Lords), " The Ger- man lives by quarrelling with his countrymen." The opinion held by the Eoman historian, coin- * Ne'er was a people just towards the stranger as thou art. Be not too just ; they think not nobly enough to see How fair thy failing is. ERRATA. On page 120, line 16. from bottom, read " help "/or " keep." ,, 165, line 9 from bottom, omit " in." „ 176, in foot-note, read "Bilder "/or " Bildern." „ 234, line 9 from bottom, read " lap '^ far *' hand." IMPERIAL GERMANY, « I Ml CHAPTEE I. THE GERMAN CHARACTER IN POLITICS. Nie war gegen das Ausland Ein anderes Land gerecht wie Du ; Sei nicht allzii gerecht ! Sie denken nicht edel genug, Zu sehn, wie schon Dein Fehler ist.* Klopstock. I. Eighteen centuries ago Tacitus exclaimed, " May the Germans, as they cannot love us, at least retain their hatred of each other, so that, when Kome begins to totter, she may at least find support in the discord of that race." On March 23, 1887, Bismarck said in the Prussian Herrenhaus (House of Lords), "The Ger- man lives by quarrelling with his countrymen." The opinion held by the Eoman historian, coin- * Ne'er was a people just towards the stranger as thou art. Be not too just ; they think not nobly enough to see How fair thy failing is. B IMPERIAL GERMANY. I! ciding almost word for word with that of the greatest German politician of our time, might well illustrate the undying tenacity of popular characteristics, and banish optimistic expectations from the recent con- stellation of German greatness. Allied to this traditional incapacity for united action, history records a strange unreadiness for action of any decisive kind. Tlie French knew this by experience, and always associated the idea of unreadiness with the Germans — they were always waiting to be attacked. Napoleon aptly suggested this in a letter during one of his campaigns. " Send me biscuits and brandy for 50,000 men; it is easy enough to beat the Germans, but not without the biscuits," &c. Ludwig Borne tells us a German will wear his coat threadbare whilst making up his mind whether to have a new button sewn on it or not. Their sayings, " Nach und Nach "' (Little by little), " Eile mit Weile " (Haste with leisure), reflect this national idiosyncrasy. Thus Shakspeare is supposed to have portrayed the typical German in Hamlet — the philosophizing prince, who utters the wisest axioms without being able to bring himself to act upon them. If this portrayal be true, then an explanation is found for the fact that they could never help them- selves until men were found at the head of affairs who united tlie idealism of a Hamlet with the bold decision of an Anglo-Saxon Cromwell. More than this, the salvation of Germany had to come from a people that was not purely German by race. Bismarck himself has stated his conviction CHARACTER IN POLITICS, that the admixture of Slavonic blood in the old Prussian provinces has given them those blind dog- like tough qualities of devotion and obedience that enabled Frederick the Great to win his battles with them, and thus to lay the foundation of Prussia's hege- mony of to-day. The old provinces of Prussia are in unity of patriotism and power of recovery more like the French than any other part of Germany. This material, led by genius, has always done its work cleanly. It met the Austrians at Leuthen, in the slanting battle-line of Epaminondas, 36,000 against 85,000. It drove the French like hares at Possbach. The French never properly realized this, and only remembered elena, when this same material, defectively organized and led by hopeless imbecility, went down before the greatest captain of the age. The French only remembered the Germans as a disunited herd, that always waited to be attacked and never took the offensive. They forget those days are gone for ever since Prussia, that always took the initiative, leads the van. The defensive is an Austrian speciality; it is typical of that brave, but unready, indolent nation that in '66, true to its old instincts, gloated over its cleverness in enticing the Prussians into Bohemia in order to eat them when once there. Formerly, this Austrian characteristic distinguished all Germany ; to-day, Prussia is striving hard to eradicate it. Yet even now, wherever Prussia is not directly administrative, traces of that delightful little German quality, procrastination or unreadiness, shows its cloven foot, not to mention the still older B 2 1^ IMPERIAL GERMANY, CHARACTER IN POLITICS. Ill i idiosyncrasy of discord and doctrinarism. This makes us believe that if the Prussians had not brought them salvation they would never have got it, and without their guidance they would to-morrow forfeit it again and their country once more become the battle-field of Europe. Yet these procrastinating, unready Austrians were always popular with the masses in the same proportion as the Prussians were disliked, even in provinces like those of the Ehine that but recently came under Prussian sway. Only the intellectual few long recognized the superb qualities of honesty, economy, order, and devotion to duty that every- where distinguished the Prussian administration. Thus the recognition has been a slow process based on respect, the safest of foundations, and those who pinned their sympathies to Austria have had time to discover that, in this instance, the head offered no justification for the leanings of the heart. It would seem that national characteristics, which, like all other characteristics, according to Darwin, must be the result of infinitely long-standing in- fluences, die hard. Happily, a national character is not composed of one or even two unfortunate traits, but of many qualities, some of which go to annul and obliterate the working of others. Thus, the Germans, whom only yesterday we witnessed red- dening their fields with blood in fratricidal strife, we behold to-day thronging round a young Emperor in a genuine outburst of patriotic ideality, ready to call out, "Ave Csesar Imperator, morituri te salutant !" All well-wishers of Germany must hope that this genuine feeling of patriotism will long form a rally- ing-point round which all shall gather who are prepared to do and die for their country, II. It is a peculiar fact, and one that speaks highly for the intellectual capacities of the race, that, whereas all times and many countries have produced severe critics of the German character, their bitterest censors have been found among their most eminent countrymen. The nation of thinkers and critics has indeed produced severe critics of themselves — anatomists who have studied the anatomy of character from their own corpus vile. It is scarcely necessary to do more than mention the names of Frederick the Great, Lessing, Goethe, Schopenhauer, and, to-day, Bismarck himself. They have accused the nation of its dilatory failings, its doctrinarism, and its tendency to discord. And this very people has always had a word of admiration for the qualities of other races. Yet it is only fair to ask. May not this incapacity in the past of rallying round one central personage, this doctrinarism, be the unfortunate offshoots of that anxious and hopeless pondering over and striving for an impossible ideal that has enabled the Germans to achieve such wonders in the fields of science and philosophy ? Has not this politically unfortunate characteristic been intensified by his- torical circumstance of exceptional unfavourableness ? And may we not assume that the fact of the old Iliill IMPERIAL GERMANY, CHARACTER IN POLITICS, German Empire having been an elective kingdom in the past largely fostered national discord ? There is only one other analogous example of an elective kingdom in history to draw a parallel with, and in the very mention of its name the moral is self-evident — Poland ! The incapacity of the exalted few in whose hands the national destinies were collectively placed, to subordinate their pretensions to rule to the claim of any one family in the interests of all, has had in both instances similar, though fortunately not equal, results. Surely there is something interesting and instruc- tive in the above, for there is no denying the long- standing popular longing for national unity. Does not the legend of the Emperor Barbarossa bear witness to it ? Does not a gleam of romance break throudi the Middle-A^es and show us the ideal figure of the Hohenstaufen Emperor Frederick II. (a.d. 1250)? And has not popular sentiment woven a wreath of undying poetry round the person of this cultured and unfortunate champion of national greatness against Papal supremacy ? Since that time the Germans have ever been fighting for union, and often in the agony of strife have they forgotten what they were striving for, and thought only of feud and battle. III. After the death of the Emperor Frederick the power of the petty princes and of the aristocracy increased so immeasurably that there failed to rise to \ the surface any one predominant influence for long. The German King and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, elected from among themselves, was always powerless to further the consolidation of national unity. Yet the national longing still survived and embodied itself in the myth of the Kyffbauser, where Barbarossa sat in somnolent state, guarded by ravens, biding the time of the re-awakening of national unity and splendour. We require an effort of the imagination even to recall that there was a time when the German Emperor ruled a country on which the sun ne'er set, when Germany was the home of merchant princes who helped their monarch from their private means,* when German architecture was the most splendid, when German life was the most luxurious, and German manufactures the most renowned. It was the time of Charles V. of Hapsburg, when France's King was Germany's prisoner, when Spain, with its newly discovered American possessions, when from the Netherlands to the frontier of Iceland to the east and unto the Alps to the south, the whole centre of Europe bowed to German sway. That was the moment for a great political figure to appear, and, rallying the nation around it, to con- solidate a strong hereditary empire in the centre of Europe. The dawn of a new era to turn to for hope had begun, for Luther had appeared on the scene, and, smgle-handed, stood his ground against * The rich Fuggers of Augsburg, who assisted Charles V. with their wealth. 8 IMPERIAL GERMANY, CHARACTER IN POLITICS. IMlh' the powers of Eome. " Yes, I will go to Worms, even if the house-tops are crowded with devils," said this mighty German. A spiritual Bismarck was there to point to a new God, but the Hapsburg Emperor was no King William to draw the sword in his name. Thus the Eeformation, instead of uniting Ger- many, led to its deepest political degradation — the " Thirty Years' AYar " — out of which it emerged with its population reduced from sixteen millions to less than five, and with a loss of national wealth from which it has even now only partially recovered. For centuries the Kaiser was more or less a foreign potentate. The national feeling longed for a German Kaiser, not for a Spaniard or even an Austrian. Thus for centuries the Germans were like the fragments in a kaleidoscope, without cohe- sion, yet presenting brilliant, unexpected pictures, rarely coloured, but repeated at the will of a stranger. Bismarck has said, " The Germans are capable of everything if once anger or necessity should unite them." This we have seen to be true, but it wanted the uniting central personalities, and only when these came could the best capacities of the race find ex- pression. That an indomitable spirit worthy of a great nation was never wanting is proved by his- tory. The fighting capacities and fidelity of even German mercenaries at all times and in all parts of the world — Eome, the Italian Eepublics, and in America — are attested by many writers. Even in recent times, when Napoleon I. was deserted by his followers, those with German names were most true to him. This German militant fidelity (Dmtsche Treue) is no vain boast, though through the lack of unity it had little to hold to or encourage it. In the " Thirty Years' War " they fought the battle of others. TJie " Seven Years' War," which first gave Protestant Germany a chance, yet failed to afibrd a rallying-point to all. Strange, indeed, it is that the rich German lan- guage, although it has a word for " patriotism," has none for " patriot." It has even a word for being without a country, a unique word, " Yaterlandslos," thus pointing to the history of its past. lY. After Napoleon I. had made a clean sweep of the political chessboard, and he in his turn had vanished to eat out his ambitious heart in a desert island, the difficulty still remained — whom to invest with the national aspirations ? Had a Cavour arisen then to champion the nation's legitimate rights against the jealousy of the Allied Powers, Germany would have annexed Alsace in 1815, Lorraine might still be French, and the war of 1870 might never have been fought ! But the idea of unity, nurtured at all times at the universities, lived on among the true aristocrats of the nation ; among the best of every class, from the highest to the humblest ; it maintained itself most vigorously in the middle class. Thus the longing for unity had still to live on in 10 IMPERIAL GERMANY, CHARACTER IN POLITICS, II m ¥ the national heart, and, stronger than ever through the sad period of reaction from 1815 to 1848, it found popular vent in that noble song : " Was ist des Deutschen Yaterland ? " which answered the question in the refrain : Where'er the Gerraan tongue doth sound. There must the Fatherland be found. This national feeling came to a head in the revo- lution of 1848. The people asked not for a re- public ; they longed for unity. And its expression w^as not thrown away ; although fruitless at the time, the Frankfort Parliament prepared the way for Prussia. In the foreground stood Austria and Prussia, conscious of the national longing— jealously confront- ino' each other. But until the latter had shown, as if by magic, When Prussia's eagle swept fair Austria's lands in seven days, that she could beat the former, few could discern in her the realizer of popular dreams. The hopeless misery of the past had left the petty fear of becoming " Prussianized " to obscure the o-reater iioal : to rise through Prussia to a greater Germanv. Only when the late Emperor William had ful- filled the promise he held out in 1866, that he would hold the interests of Germany paramount and highest, has the gradual revolution of feeling become complete— the recognition by the majority that the national ideal has at last been in a great measure realized by Prussia. Such are the broad outlines of fact bearing on the realization of the national longing for unity. Yet it would be gross superficiality to think that the lucky rolling of the iron dice alone brought it about. When Xapoleon I. vanquished I'russia and humbled her to the dust in one day, the best qualities of a nation awoke from a long sleep. Prussia was not allowed to keep a standing army above 42,000 men. Stein, Scharnhorst, and von der Knesebeck (a weighty man, little known to popular readers) planned a secret system by which the greater part of the male population was speedily passed through the army between the years 1807 and 1813. This system was secretly and successfully carried out without it being betrayed to the French. A people that could act thus was worthy to form the nucleus of a new Empire. It remains one of the grandest traits of national character in history, this instance of not one single traitor being found among a whole people. This efiiicement of tlie individual before the interests of the community runs like a red thread through the history of civil as well as of military Prussia. It is in the grit of the Prussian character, and its gradual recognition by Germany as a whole, that we must seek the real key to what the thoughtless crowd would put down as the mere natural results of fortunate soldiering alone. The House of Hohenzollern has fostered the hardest quaHties of a strong hardy race, and forged a sword for it. The genius of its leaders has 12 IMPERIAL GERMANY. CHARACTER IN POLITICS. 13 lii guided the working out of its highest destiny in our time. V. German unity has been fought for and gained in spite of desperate opposition from within and from without ; it has still to encounter many more or less inimical influences from within. In addition to the difficulties arising from unfitness of character were differences of institutions both social and legal. The North, principally Protestant, is still in part intensely aristocratic, and, more lately, honeycombed with Socialism ; whereas the West and the South have felt the waves of the French Eevolution and are democratic, besides being largely Catholic. There are millions of Germans who place their allegi- ance to the Pope above that to their Sovereign. It is German doctrinarism that makes this possible — instinctive doctrinarism in those who do not even know the meaning of the word. For Catholics in other countries have rarely allowed their religion to nullify their patriotism. The Pope himself soon dropped his attempts to side with the English Government against the Irish peasants when the latter, through their Protestant re- presentatives, plainly intimated that they would have none of his interference. But Irish patriotism is doubtless a hardier plant than German " Vaterlands- liebe " has hitherto been. It is only in Germany that a man such as Dr. Windhorst, a sworn hater of united Germany under Prussia, could have the following he has. But sentiments that owed their origin to Catholic or Guelphic partisanship have often been taken up by those who had no other excuse for sharing them than blind party passion and envy. They have often been taken up by men who were neither separatist Alsacians nor Catholic Poles, but lonCt' fide self -asserting Germans. Because advocates of social reforms cannot have them carried out in their own way, jealousy bids them do their best to asperse tlie motives of others equally well intentioned as they themselves are (though this must be admitted to be also a parlia- mentary feature nearer home). It is even on record that a Heidelberg Professor of world-wide reputa- tion, wlio had preached the gospel of unity all his life, rushed away to Italy in tlie sulks when it came in a different form to that which he had pre- scribed for it ! Because the "Iron Chancellor" is diffident of the practicability of the ready-made theories of Manchester, which Liberal entliusiasts would have him accept as the crowning of the State eiifice, therefore every initiative of the State musi. be opposed, and that only too often in a petty and venomous spirit. It is not so much opposition itself as the spirit thereof that is to be deplored. The daily increasing hate and estrangement between the different political parties is already showing the incapacity of parliamentary government to har- monize the differences of feeling in the community; if anything, it only tends to accentuate them. Even if some of these elements do not direct i 14 IMPERIAL GERMANY. CHARACTER IN POLITICS, 15 their energies against unity itself, they have often been directed against the avowed policy of its im- mediate founders. Still, we are in fairness bound to ask ourselves : May not some of the opposition Bismarck has ever encountered in the execution of his far-seeing plans often have been an exaggerated manifestation of that independence of individual conscientious thouglit which will not yield itself captive even to the glamour of military prowess ? And, if it be so, can we quite help bestowing a mite of admiration, even where we feel bound to condemn its results ? Can we, again, refuse a tribute of respect when we meet such instances of personal unselfish devotion to a lost cause as from time immemorial every turn of the political wheel of fortune has called forth in Germany? We may deplore the attachment to a lost cause that obscures the vision for a broader and nobler one that has grown into a splendid reality, but we cannot condemn the instinct that blinds those ^>o the future whose heart unselfishly clings to a past, be it never so poor in the eyes of the looker on. But, besides opposition of the kind hinted at above, there remains much that cannot be put down either to noble or unselfish motives. The petty but honest feeling of narrow State loyalty has been Germany's political curse, for it obscured the horizon of a broader national firma- ment ; but the idea of unity has had other enemies to deal with. These, if not so powerful in the aggre- gate, have yet caused Germany's leaders many a pang of sorrow and disappointment. We mean that spirit of Philistinism, of envy and distrust, alterna- ting with indifference, which only the stirring hours of a death-grapple cast temporarily in the back- ground. It comes to the front again \\\ all its ugHness with the return of peace and security. Such are some of the dangerous elements Ger- many will have to grapple with still when those mighty men have all passed away to whom the Fatherland is so immensely indebted. VI. Misfortune has taught the Germans many a lesson, and doubtless benefited them ; still, they have not passed through the fire of the past without the de- velopment of peculiarities of character, which are more or less distinctly traceable to the sufferings they have endured. It is difficult to believe that some of the petty failings of to-day were existent in the olden times of national splendour. In those days German life could not show that amount of littleness, of hyper- sensitiveness, of personal spite and petty malice and envy, that have been often noticed and deplored in later times. Such qualities could not flourish amidst the pomp and panoply of national prosperity. They could but be the ugly offshoot born of oppression, poverty, and misery. And now that there seems a great future in store for Germany, her friends can only hope that qualities which owed their existence to mis- i6 IMPERIAL GERMANY, fortune — as disease owes its presence to dirt — shall gradually disappear at the re-awakening of the best instincts of this mighty race. This is the more to be wished as such qualities are largely answerable for the perpetuation of the oldest German national failinc, discord. That since 1870 a broader national feeling has steadily increased is admitted on all hands" Yet these are not the only effects of victory ; it has put many off their guard as to the dangers to be provided against in the future. The history of a thousand years is not nullified by the victories of one generation, even though such victories be the result of a long-sustained system of discipline and a universal acceptation of heroic duty. The defects of the national character which bade Teutons themselves desert their national hero, Ar- niinius, which enabled a Eichelieu to sway the conduct of the "Thirty Years' War," defects which have made Germans slavishly bow down to titles of rulers gained in return for the slaughter of their own countrymen* — such may be scotched, but they were not killed at Sadowa or Sedan. Nor were they choked by the proclamation of the German Empire at Versailles. The political pauperism of the past, the petty and half-dormant, if not torpid social life of cen- turies have generated idiosyncrasies that will only be gradually obliterated by sustained moral effort. * The present titles of the i iilers of Saxony, Bavaria, Wiir- temberg, Baden, and Hesse-Darmstadt were the creations of Napoleon I. In each case they signify a step in advance on the previous one held by their possessors. CHARACTER IN POLITICS, 17 The constant danger arising from these is intensified when we bear in mind what has just been noted the social and political differences in the population of iSTorth and South. The Germans are a sensitive people, and yet, with this and all their peculiarities, they possess an im- partiality of judgment in some things that is in many ways remarkable. The Germans often use the word " Objectivitat '' (objectiveness), and they have some reason for doing so. Bismarck has accused them of being ashamed of their nationality abroad and of adopting the bad qualities of the people amongst whom they live. With regard to tlie first accusation, a foundation for it in the past cannot be denied. But there was also something to explain it; the national tendency to objectiveness explains it. Germans abroad have generally come from a class that has more acute perceptions for material than for ideal advantages. Tlius, in coming abroad, seeing larger practical and material conditions of life, they looked back with contempt on the petty parochial character of life in their native land ; those that leave their country do not, as a rule, possess ideality enough to cherish their country for that, though there were at all times exceptions. The German abroad becomes more practical, but loses in a spiritual sense ; he assimilates the utilitarian features of the country he lives in, only too often to lose touch with the ideality of his native land, which should make him prouder of his country than of her recent victories. Tliis bewildering outward aspect of practical life in England and America also explains why travel- m m ,8 IMPERIAL GERMANY. liner En'^lislimen are so often unable to appreciate what is'the strong side of German life— its culture. They only see the outside, and, as that was hitherto more striking in our country, their opinion of the country has ever been such a shallow one. This objectiveness is shown in the judgment of their enemies. The English and French either hate their enemies and slander them, or when they have beaten them have a contempt for them. Napoleon I. always felt a stron^r contempt for his enemies. Not so the Germans. They invariably speak with respect of their enemies, even be they those they have beaten —such as the Danes, the Austrians,and the French— or the Eussians. It is perhaps one of their soundest national traits, from a military point of view, that they invariably over-estimate their enemies, for this characteristic has certainly not made them afraid to meet them. Even the inimitable Boulanger they at first took cm s4riemi, and only spoke of him with contempt when he showed characteristics that would have ruined him in twenty-four hours had he been a German. Bearing the character of the military successes ot Germany In mind, we have always been struck by the " comparative " absence of national self-assertion. The Prussians, who used to be considered indi- vidually and collectively arrogant and overbearing, even by the Germans themselves, have largely lost the reputation for such attributes now that their worth has been more generally recognized, for in the lack of honest recognition such qualities often have their origin AVe shall deal with the Philistine by himself, CHARACTER IJV POLITICS. 19 but the more intelligent the individual we meet, the more moderate the views invariably held ; and even among the comparatively uncultured that senseless bounce we often deplore in otiier nations is mostly absent. VII. Up to the present, whatever may be said to the contrary, chauvinism is not a national German fail- ing. Some affect to deplore the marked military— not to say nationally assertive — tendencies of the present Emperor, and look back with regret to the Liberal and liumanitarian temi:)erament of his father. But one thing seems certain : as long as in certain quarters humanitarianism and Liberalism imply a possibility of yielding one inch of what has been gained by such sacrifices of blood and treasure, so long Germany cannot afford to indulge too readily in those excellent qualities. It is a sad truth, but it is an important one. That arch-wiseacre. General Ignatieff, tells us that immediately after '70 he ironically congratulated the Germans on having annexed " an open wound " in Alsace and Lorraine ! As if the French did not harbour revenge against England during nearly half-a-century after Waterloo, although England did not despoil them of an inch of territory ! When will reasonable beings be able to see that French vanity would have been as irre- vocably v/ounded by the loss of one battle as by the loss of half-a-dozen provinces, and — the most important point — she would have remained more powerful to resent it ! C 2 :^ , ^ ,8 IMPERIAL GERMANY. lin- En-lislimen are so often unable to appreciate what is the strong side of German life— its culture. They only see the outside, and, as that was hitherto more striking in our country, their opinion ot the country has ever been such a shallow one. This objectiveness is shown in the jud-ment of their enemies. The English and French either hate their enemies and slander them, or when they have beaten them have a contempt for them. Napoleon I. always felt a strontr contempt for his enemies. Not so the ( lemians. They invariably speak with respect of their enemies, even be they those they have beaten —such as the Danes, the Austrians,and the French— or the Russians. It is perhaps one of their soundest national traits, from a military point of view, that they invariably over-estimate their enemies, for this characteristic has certainly not made them afraid to meet them. Even the inimitable Boulanger they at iirst took cm sirum\ and only spoke of him with contempt when he showed characteristics that would have ruined him in twenty-four hours had he been a German. Beariniz the character of the military successes ot Germany in mind, we have always been struck by the " comparative " absence of national self-assertion. The l»russians, who used to be considered indi- vidually and collectively arrogant and overbearing, even by the Germans themselves, have largely lost the reputation for such attributes now that their worth has been more generally recognized, for in the lack of honest recognition such qualities often have their CHARACTER IN POLITICS, 19 origin. AVe shall deal with the Philistine by himself, but the more intelligent the individual we meet, the more moderate the views invariably held ; and even among the comparatively uncultured that senseless bounce we often deplore in otlier nations is mostly absent. VII. Up to tlie present, whatever may be said to the contrary, chauvinism is not a national (Jerman fail- ing. Some afiect to deplore the marked military— not to say nationally assertive — tendencies of the present Emperor, and look back witli regret to the Liberal and humanitarian temperament of his father. But one thing seems certain : as long as in certain quarters humanitarianism and Liberalism imply a possibility of yielding one inch of what has been gained by such sacrifices of blood and treasure, so long Germany cannot afibrd to indulge too readily in those excellent qualities. It is a sad truth, but it is an important one. That arch-wiseacre, General Ignatieff, tells us that immediately after '70 he ironically congratulated the Germans on having annexed " an open wound " in Alsace and Lorraine ! As if the French did not harbour revenge against England during nearly half-a-century after Waterloo, although England did not despoil them of an inch of territory ! When will reasonable beings be able to see that French vanity would have been as irre- vocably v/ounded by the loss of one battle as by the loss of half-a-dozen provinces, and — the most important point— she would have remained more powerful to resent it ! C 2 20 IMPERIAL GERMANY, CHARACTER IN POLITICS, 21 Immediately after the war of '70, a brilliant Paris journalist of German birth, Albert Wolff, wrote a book, gingerly putting the French in the wrong, but winding up with the declaration that he was ashamed of his native land that it had not used its victory to be generous and forborne to wrest territory from France ! It is indeed a sad inheritance from the past that such ideas should find serious acceptance. People never think of suggesting or expecting that we, or the French, or the Ptussians are going to forego the fruits of victory or to yield up the price of their blood. The Germans have a right to be taken ecpially an sirimx, and their well-wishers will not easily quarrel with the means they use to attain that legitimate end. Let the Emperor taboo the French language, let Bismarck refuse to be addressed in that tongue. The time may come when it will be considered as incon- siderate to address Germans on equal conditions in any other language than their own as it is now the case with Frenchmen, Americans, or Englishmen. When that comes to pass, then the nonsense of treat- ing political Germany as the poor boy of the nursery book will cease, and until then it will be quite time to speak of German chauvinism. Amidst much mist and darkness there is a brio-ht star in the national character that has not shown itself of late, for it requires defeat and national humiliation in order to witness its bril- liancy. It is German valour and fidelity under defeat. It is one of the fairest attributes of the national character ; it is ideal. History is full of it, and well may the nation be proud of its record. Even that rabid chauvinist historian, Thiers,* has gone out of his way to bear testimony to the fighting endurance of defeated Germany, and to its fidelity to its unhappy leaders. * " Histoire du Consulat et de rEmpire." ( 22 ) CHAFTEE II. iijiil INTELLECTUAL LIFE. We classify a range of mountains according to the altitude of its highest peaks. — Axon. I. If we follow the history of intellectual development in England, and its bearing on the material achieve- ments of the English people, we perceive that one of the reasons why the latter liave achieved so mucli is that they have rarely striven but for what they could gxasp. Like Bismarck in this, they have ever taken one thing practically in hand at a time. There is comparatively little dreamy ideality in our race ; and, in the higher Grecian sense of the word, of the ceaseless striving after the ideally true and beautiful, next to none. But, instead of that, we have ever possessed the great secret of attaining practical success in what we soberly undertook ; the wisdom of common-sense, thoroughly consistent wdth genius, has ever been ours in a pre-eminent degree. Darwin — perhaps the most typical EngUshman of the century— of all others, might have been INTELLECTUAL LIFE, 23 justified in conjuring up imaginary pictures of the past and evolving ideals for the future ; yet he remains satisfied with the positive — not to say nega- tive — results of his researches, and leaves ideal speculation to others. It has been reserved for the Germans, and notably for Prof. Haeckel, of Jena, to speculate where Darwin had been content to lilean facts. Thus, German idealism — in this instance reveal- ing itself in materialistic speculation — tells us what we " might " attain, whilst our want of idealism is perhaps the cause of what we " liave " achieved. But idealism does far more than this. It in- stinctively bids us feel that knovvledge of every kind is power to be used for a high purpose. It em- bodies the highest aspirations of genius, and is the key to the full understanding of its loftiest flights. It is, strange to say, almost a monopoly of the German race ; in fact, the people who are most near to them, such as the Dutch, notably lack it. It is true, idealism has often spelt failure and reminded us of Ikaros with the waxen wings. And yet the restless striving after an — often unattainable — ideal is at the root of some of the greatest thoughts of the Teutonic muse, of German science, as well as of some of the best manifestations of German character. In science, the idealizing principle is perhaps more active than anywhere else. It supplies initiative impulse, the interest of new colours and of know- ledge touched with wonder. The spectrum analysis is only one of many illustrations. The most amazing i > w ■\ pi ' 1^ \ 24 IMPERIAL GERMANY, invention of the century — the spectroscope— ^is the work of two Germans, Bunsen and Kirchhoff. German idealism places science on so high a pedestal that money-making by its votaries is looked upon as almost degrading.* In practical England, the more money a man of science can make the more we think of him. We are more apt to worship outward success in a thing than the thing itself. Hence, we are more liable to accept charlatans than the Germans, and science lacks with us the true spiritual dignity it possesses in Germany. Faraday — in this a rare exception — held up a tradition which, alas ! has had no fol- lowers. The simple, even humble, life that eminent men of science often lead in Germany would seem astonishing to us, who are accustomed to see men of science made social lions of. * Those organs of public opinion both here and abroad which have taken part in a recent controversy, and in so doing have spoken disparagingly of German men of science, have hardly shown a deep insight into their leading characteristics. They are a sensitive body of men, not devoid of pedantry, and one individual is no sufficient measure to judge them by ; but when the consensus of their action is taken, it may safely be said to be above suspicion of motive. For, generally speaking, though doubtless exceptions will be found here as elsewhere, Germany's leading scientific men are of a stamp that would not jeopardize the sincerity of their conviction for any worldly advantage whatsoever. INTELLECTUAL LIFE, 25 11. Though many are of opinion that the Fine Ai'ts and Belles-lettres in Germany are to-day, with few exceptions, represented merely by a number of talented epigones, there can be no doubt of the array of great names in the domains of science.* Here we are met by capacities of the very hrst rank, and that in almost every branch. To pick out a few names at random : We have already re- ferred to Bunsen and Kirchhoff, who conclusively proved the existence of terrestrial matter in the sun. To Prof. Helmholz Germany owes the discovery of the laryngoscope, as also the ophthalmoscope, which latter has revolutionized ophthalmic medicine, be- sides his wonderful discoveries relatinor to the natural o laws that govern acoustics,, not to forget his philo- so]3hical works. The discoveries of salicylic acid, cocaine, and, latest of all, saccharine, must be credited to German science of to-day. In Prof. Virchow Germany has not only one of i \ * The following is from the pen of an American authority on the state of science in Germany in the present day : — ** Three countries divide the scientific world between them — Germany, England, and France. The writings of each bear the stamp of their special character and qualities. Germany to-day is at the head of the scientific world. At the beginning of the century it was France, but German influence is now greater than ever that of France was. The students that used to go to Paris now go to Germany. They come back imbued with German doctrines, and with but one aim, that of propagating and following these doctrines out. Thus they have spread all over the world, and have become accepted by nearly every European country," &c. &c. 26 IMPERIAL GERMANY, ■ «l the most eminent anthropologists of our time, but a physiologist of unique standing. In surgery the names of Langenheck (Berlin), Billroth (Vienna), ISTussbaum (Munich), Scanzoni (Wurzburg), Esmarch (Kiel), speak for themselves. In political science the names of Prof. Wind- scheidt (Leipsic), Prof. Gneist (Berlin), Dr. von Holtzendorf (Munich), are of cosmopolitan renown, as may also be said of the two eminent statisticians, Dr. Ernst Engel and Laspeyres. In history Mommsen is still living to carry on those earnest researches connected with the name of his late compeer and master, Leopold von Ranke. In geology the names of Prof. Zirkel (Leipsic) and Prof. Eosenbusch (Heidelberg) are as highly esteemed as that of G. von Richthofen (Berlin) is in geography. In speculative science and metaphysics men such as Eduard von Hartmann (of the pessimistic school, and a follower of Schopenhauer), iVIoritz Carriere (the champion of the so-called realistic ideal school), are eminently representative, and their infhience is largely felt throughout the length and breadth of the Fatherland. Although it is beyond our purpose to do more than mention a few of the representative men of Germany to-day, there is one reflection we cannot suppress, and that is that almost all the above-men- tioned eminent men are serving the State in some public capacity or other — hardly one of Germany's great scientific names that is not drawn away from the drudgery of mere money -making and installed INTELLECTUAL LIFE. 27 in some position most fitted to enable him to spread and propagate the fruits of his genius. I i IIL In literature the greatest w^orks of Lessing, Herder, Goethe, and Schiller show signs of a rest- less craving to find a higher and nobler channel for expressing their ideas. Literature was to these men a medium of conveying philosopliy under plea- sant and even playful forms. All had one end in view — to strike a chord of broad common conscious- ness. Herder was one of the most egotistically ideal of men in native constitution, yet we see him for years sacrificing his original powers of production to col- lecting the " Volkslieder " of his own and other nations, because his egotism was subdued by an intellectual German sense of the common interests in life, which should be reflected in song and story. Lessing, indeed, always jirotested that he was no poet, and that they made a mistake in calling him one ; that he was merely a poor philosophical critic, seeking the best channel to communicate his ideas, which he found in the drama. Thus, his " Xathan the Wise " is still the most eloquent appeal in favour of tolerance. The correspondence between Goethe and Schiller proves how much tlieir individual bent in tliis re- spect was at one with the lessons of their greater works ; the discipline of a high ideal was to be found in its application in the commonest things. I ; I '^ 28 I ); /\ M " Ell IMPERIAL GERMANY, ** Wilhelm Meister," in its first aspect, seems the most ideal of books, and yet in its second part it passes into a glorification of ordinary domestic life and duty. Still more so, and still more surprising, is the fact that Faust, after all his dreams and aspirations, has to become a reclaimer of land and a roadmaker, and in this to find the way of his sal- vation — contentment and peace. N^o men of equal eminence were ever so little pleased with their efforts as Goethe and Schiller, for the picture of something still higher was con- stantly before them to make them dissatisfied with their attempts to reach it and urge them on to greater efforts. This peculiarity of the German mind strikes us the more when w^e recall Shak- speare, whose stupendous genius apparently seems to have thrown off its innnortal products almost unconsciously. According to Friedrich Bodenstedt, the eminent German poet and translator of Shakspeare, the dramatic poetry of his country cannot compare in originality with that of our own. But German literature can boast of a specially which, though far from original, is yet unique and of far-reaching importance as a means of culture. We mean the splendid array of literary men, who have devoted their whole life's work to the trans- lation of the masterpieces of foreign literature into German. Their name is legion, and men among them, such as Tieck, the two Schlegels, Voss, and Bodenstedt himself, can be said to have contributed more to the culture of the people by their trans- INTELLECTUAL LIFE, 29 lations than many well-known names by their original productions. Even a monarch ranks among their number ; the late King John of Saxony trans- lated Dante. No country can compare with Ger- many in its array of literary talent, which, led by true idealism to open up new channels of literary wealth to the nation, devoted its labour in unselfish earnestness to the comparatively thankless task of reproduction. IV. In the present time other elements and a more cosmopolitan run of public taste have put their stamp on the literary productions of the day. Thus, in Berlin, a man such as Paul Lindau, attracts our attention beyond all comparison to the literary value of his work, for his popularity is a distinct sign of the times. Figuratively speaking. Teuton stomachs were satiated and German brains were weary of the long- winded discursive novel of the first half of the century, dragging its tape-worm existence through eight or ten volumes, and had long sought refuge in excellent translations of Walter Scott, Bulwer Lytton, Dickens, and other English writers. Other branches of literature, too, suffered from heaviness of style when, about the time of the new order of things, Paul Lindau came to the front in I5erlin and offered the public a taste of the bright, concise, and yet liglit style of narra- tive and essay which France and England have long been familiar with. And the good Berliners, who f ; I \ so IMPERIAL GERMANY, !? It had long chafed under the bit of cumbersome philo- sophizing a la Scheiling and Hegel, gladly welcomed the sparkling wit of the young barrister. In this direction there can be no doubt that Lindau has not only done good work, but has almost founded a style of literature in which Germany had hitherto been lamentably deficient. It is in part his doing if we can no longer with justice smile at the unvarying " ponderosity " of German letters. Of course, such masters of sparkling German prose as Heine, Schopenhauer, Borne, David Strauss, and Johannes Scherr had preceded and influenced the public far more, even by the mere form of their pro- ductions. Still, the fact remains that, of living German writers, Paul Lindau has perhaps most largely con- tributed to give a more airy and crisp tone to the literature of the day. The same favourable verdict cannot be given if we examine his dramatic works, which, inspired by French or Spanisli models, are neither French nor German in sentiment, and have only had ephemeral, if not questionable, success. Again, in his predilection for the more realistic school of French novel-writers, Lindau can hardly be said to have exercised a favourable influence. In Gustav Freytag we name the most gifted and sterling of all German writers of fiction of the present day. He is the portrayer of German life ;par excellence, not only in the present, but in the past, and that with an unrivalled power and truth of interpretation. Freytag's is the genius of the true born romancist allied to the conscientious thoroucrh- INTELLECTUAL LIFE. 31 ness of the German Professor without his pedantry. He has never lent his pen to pander to the sen- timent of the hour, and is looked up to and ad- mired by high and humble alike. Quite recently the late Emperor William conferred on him the highest distinction — the order " pour le merite," the same order Thomas Carlyle was proud to accept although he refused the Grand Cross of the Bath. Paul Heyse as a poet, a novel-writer, and dramatist occupies a very prominent position in the literary world. A born poet, he strongly inclines towards the sentimental — not to say hyper-sentimental. Starting as a novelist at an early age, he at once became the favourite of German womankind. His descriptive power is Southern in its luxurious richness and dreaminess ; but, unfortunately, most of his tales — for he is a story-teller more than a novel-writer (Germans, in their thoroughness, making a great distinction between the two) — show a want of manly ruggedness in conception and execution. That is doubtless the reason his dramatic works liave hitherto only had a succes cVestime. Some of his lyric poems are remarkable for their beauty of sentiment and diction. Prof. Ebers is another typical figure in litera- ture, and his success has been largely due to his appeal to that instinct which loves to idealize the history of the far removed past which is so strong in the German character. Prof. Ebers is an eminent scientific Egyptologist, and his novels, weaving historical matter into the form of narrative romance, have not only found countless readers ij; ^ I 32 IMPERIAL GERMANY. in Germany, but they have been widely read in English and other translations. Writers such as Felix Dahn and Spiel hagen have great names, but call less for notice on the score of representativeness of character. Of female novelists the number, as with us, is legion, and great are the differences of opinion as to the literary value of their productions. For our pur- pose it may suffice to point to one of the youngest, if not the most promising, who writes under the pseudonym of Ossip Scliubin. She describes the life of the aristocracy and the more cultured classes with an analysis of character almost Thackeray an. She is evidently a woman who lives much in society, and the characters she describes are said to be so true to life as to be easily recognizable by those who are acquainted with the circles she moves in. Ossip Schubin's novels are also remarkable for their bold- ness of conception and for their ingenious plots. Friedrich Bodenstedt is not only a dramatic poet of signal culture and power, but is best known by a somewhat exceptional feat in the history of litera- ture. He lived for many years in the East, and besides a fascinating account of life in Asia Minor, entitled *' A Thousand and One Days in the East," he published a collection of exquisite lyric poems under the title of '' The Songs of Mirza Schaffy." It would lead us too far to dwell on the excellence of this unique volume ; suffice it to say that it was published under circumstances which left the impres- sion that the poems were nothing more than transla- tions of original Oriental poetry, such as the " Songs INTELLECTUAL LIFE. ZZ of Hafiz " and others. This impression was the more likely to gain ground from the fact of Bodenstedt's recognized position as a translator of Shakspeare. However, such was not the case ; the work is entirely ■original. " The Songs of Mirza Schafiy " have run through more than one hundred editions, and are destined to remain a lastino; monument of Boden- stedt's genius. V. In dramatic literature, although its critics con- tinually rail against the shallow taste of the day (as they have done at all times), CJermany possesses a long list of names, which, if hardly in one instance equal to the best dramatic writers of France, are yet far above any single one we could put forward among our own living authors. Ernst von Wildenbruch is a dramatic author of great depth and power. In him the German ideal romantic tendency is very strong, but, unfortunately (as is so often the case with German writers), his characters lose themselves completely in philosophic concentration at the expense of the action of the play. Arthur Fitger is another writer of great dramatic force and originality ; his tragedy " Die Hexe " (The Witch) is a play of classic dimensions, and deals with the religious intolerance of past ages. Eichard Voss, Oscar Blumenthal, L'Arronge, Franz von Schonthan, and Hugo Lubbliner, although scarcely typical enough to call for special note, are jet original and fertile writers of a high order of 1> I 34 IMPERIAL GERMANY. INTELLECTUAL LIFE 35 merit, and many of their plays have been honoured by translation and adaptation. Giistav von Moser is typically representative of a light and airy dramatic style, unembarrassed by heavy ethical aims, and yet far removed from pruriency, the former cjualities being at all times- rarx axes in German liLerature. He is entirely original both in his workmanship and in the char- acters he has drawn. The latter are taken from life, and include almost every type to be met with, from the Prussian martinet general down to the boots at a country inn. Xot only do his plays enjoy an unprecedented popularity in Germany, but some of them have been even more successful in other countries, and made large fortunes for English and American theatre proprietors. Last, but not least, Anzengruber, although an Austrian, must be classed among eminent German writers, the more so as his works are tyi)ically German in character. Not only in his stories, but in dramatic works of great originality and power, he has faithfully described humble and peasant life. More than that, many of his narrative works possess a special interest from their dealing with the social questions of the day in a broad and heartfelt spirit. YI. In philosophy we find again the ideal in- fluence present, notably in the works of Schelling and He^el, whose endeavour to solve the dread secrets that surround us was so strongly mingled with the desire to find a solution which accorded most with their ideal of the beautiful. But as the human mind seems doomed to failure before tliese master-problems, so also the philosophy of Heoel and Schelling has but remained as a monument of liow unavailable idealism alone is to solve them. Since Immanuel Kant spoke his last word^ and wedded ideality with the stern duty of ethics, no one has been able to add to it. His dictum of the I " categorical imperative," the call of duty on us all to 1 regulate our race towards the unattainable, remains to-day the key-note of German intellectual and ( ethical life. In fact, it is impossible to study the ethical and intellectual life of Germany without being impressed by the vast influence which the teaching of tlie Konigsberg philosopher still exer- cises over its best minds, and through them has gradually sifted into the masses, almost unconsciously to them. Even the sublime thoughts of Goethe, and in our day the speculations which the Germans draw from the researches of Darwin, seem only to have intensified the influence of Kant. It seems as if, in a sea of conflicting speculation, the intellect of the nation were forced to turn back to that strono- courageous brain, who said in effect : — " We are unable to pierce the past, the future is hidden from us, but the categorical imperative call of duty to be performed stares us in the face — the obligation of one and all of us to do our share, and to live up to the highest ethical and a3sthetical standard we can formulate, without regard to re- ward or punishment, and before the worship of every other ideal." D 2 36 IMPERIAL GERMANY, VII. Thus we find the sense of duty meeting us every- where in Germany in a strength hardly realized by other countries. The narrow-minded selfishness of the individual, the jealousy, the envy of the unit, shrinks aside before the supreme spirit of altruistic virtue embodied in this acceptation of the supremacy of duty. Prof. Billroth — perhaps the greatest living sur- geon — in his recent illness was given up, and, call- ing his younger colleagues around him, said : " We doctors mustn't deceive ourselves with regard to an illness. We are familiar with death ; I more than you, for I am nearer to it. I asked you to come here in order to say good-bye to you. Who knows whether to-morrow I shall be able to do so ? I thank you all for your labours ; remain faithful to science ; devote yourself to it as hitherto." This reference to duty — this key-note struck in the supreme moment, with an entire forgetf ulness of meaner self — is one that finds an echo right through the length and breadth of the Fatherland in the hearts of the large majority of its best and noblest sons. It even conveys a lesson to us all in these latter days when many are groping their way to find an ethical standard to live by ; for, according to a recent writer, " such knowledge of God as He has vouchsafed to us is revealed to us by our perception of causation and our idea of duty."* * Article entitled " Sins of Belief and Sins of Unbelief," by St. George Mivart, in the Nineteenth Century y October 1888. INTELLECTUAL LIFE. 37 ' Yet men like Billroth — and he is a representative ^yP^ — ^^'6 i^ot melancholy psalm-singers, who walk througli life crushed with the oppressive weight of a dread ordeal ever staring them in the face. Far from it. Billroth in private life is an accomplished musician and painter. And this recalls another striking feature of German intellectual life : its affinity to the spirit of ancient Greece, the people of whicli were so gifted in beautifying the life they led. YIII. In politics — that one science people everywhere take to without a question as to knowledge or fit- ness — German idealism has counted its saddest failures. Notably was this so when, in the hope- less attempt to evolve a system that would help the Fatherland, it was driven to seek models abroad, and, above all, to fall in love with our method of par- liamentary government ! Luckily, the man of the hour put an end to that when he told his country- men, " No, gentlemen ; only with blood and iron shall we get what we are all striving for — a great united Fatherland." In the Emperor William and in Bismarck we find, for the first time in Germany, the national tendency to idealize allied to the rugged common-sense of action, and the result has been the fulfilment of a national dream that wanted this rare union of qualities to find its realization. It was the ideality of a great aim, nurtured in youth, that nerved the late Emperor William in those weary 38 IMPERIAL GERMANY, years of struggle, and enabled him to organize his army and strike in at last with the popular longing for unity. It was this trait in his character that enabled him to feel its echo in the hearts of the nation, and to build up the national edifice. But, whilst dwelling on the results achieved in the present day, it is but just to refer to that high- mindedness, even among German politicians of the past, that did so much to make what has come to pass possible. In connection with this we can- not resist the temptation of translating a letter of General Gneisenau to his King, Frederick William III., in the year 1 8 1 1 : — " In my saying this, your Majesty will again hold me guilty of poetry, and I will gladly own the impeachment. For religion, prayer, the love for our Sovereign, for our country, are nothing but poetry; no elevation of the heart without the sentiment of poetry. " He who acts according to cool calculation must become a confirmed egotist. " The safety of the throne is based on poetry. How many of us who look up wuth sadness to the tottering throne might find a happy and peaceful position in modest retirement, some even a life of luxury and ease, if, instead of feeling, he only washed to calculate. Any master would suit him equally well, but the ties of birth, of devotion, of gratitude, hatred against the foreign invaders, attacii him to his old master ; for his sake he will live or die, for his sake he resigns his family happiness, for his sake he w^ill sacrifice life and property unto the uncer- tainty of hope. INTELLECTUAL LIFE, 39 "This is poetry; yes, even of the truest kind. Under its inliuence I will endeavour to buoy myself lip as long as I live, and I will look upon it as an honour to belong to that enthusiastic band ready to surrender everything in order to regain all for your Majesty. For truly such a resolve must be born of ^n enthusiasm that scorns every selfish consideration. Many are there who think thus, and, conscious as I am of my incompetence in comparison, I will en- deavour to act in their spirit." Such is an instance of German poetic idealism.. To it we owe some of the most sympathetic traits of ■character in modern German annals. It is notably present in some of the well-known friendships of Gfreat men : in the communion of minds ever so free from envy of Luther and ]\Ielanchthon, of Scliarn- horst and Stein, of Lliicher and Gneisenau. In letters, in Goetlie and Schiller, the two Schlegels, the two Grimms ; and in science, the two Humboldts. In our time, most glorious instance of all, in the Emperor William with his great paladins, Bismarck, Yon Eoon, and Moltke. It is this ideal Germany that gained the ad- miration, the enthusiasm, of Carlyle — tlie dreami- ness of high-souled poetry allied to the moral and nervous strenG:th for action. "i IX. If it be permissible to think that the English, by their love of sport, of outdoor exercise and games, .by their cultivation of body generally, carry on the 40 IMPERIAL GERMANY. 11 physical traditions of ancient Greece, so we may sa^ the Germans in some measure represent the Greek element in an intellectual as well as in an ethical sense. An influence, if not directly derived from, yet distinctly akin to that of Greece, is traceable, not only in German thought, in literature, in the cultiva- tion of the fine arts, but also in the general spiritual acceptation of life. It is embodied in the ethical and aesthetic feeling of the people. Even their language has many affinities with that of the Greeks,, as is proved by their happy renderings of Horner^ the Greek dramatists, &c. But if they offer us these affinities to the countrymen of Plato, the practical lesson of their literature and philosophy — self-re- nunciation in the delights of the ideal in the one, and Kant's " categorical imperative " in the other — will save them from the fate of the Greeks. The educated classes are singularly free from religious bigotry, and, in fact, even outward forms of church worship are much less practised than irk England. The Germans say, indeed, that in our Hebraism we are the chosen people — the direct suc- cessors of the ancient Jews. On the other hand, a. greater amount of devotion or veneration is reserved for application to secular life. It shows itself in. veneration for the fine arts, particularly for music and the drama, which are regarded in a far more earnest spirit than that of mere amusement ; par- ticularly the drama is felt to be a means of culture. On entering one of the many Court theatres we are strujck by ©\4dence of influences at work un~ INTELLECTUAL LIFE, 41 known elsewhere in our time. In fact, the Court theatres are beacon tow^ers of cTSthetic light in the present day. For even if the frivolous and worthless show their heads, the aim of these institutions is aii elevating, and not a mercenary one. Whereas with us the care of the theatres is left to speculators, who are controlled by a fossilized official, in Germany the office of Administrator of the Eoyal Theatres is almost akin to a subordinate Minister of Public Education. One of the reigning German Dukes (Saxe- Meiningen) has devoted himself heart and soul to the stage, and even married an accomplished actress. Not that he has taken to the stage as a passing craze. Far from it. He has devoted himself to it in the true spirit of German ideality. He is his own manager, and even at times travels with his troupe, doughty man of war as he proved himself in I 870, and looking as he does every inch a soldier. The Duke has set his face against the " star " system, which was fast ruining unity of purpose in the drama, and the performances of the Meiuingen troupe to-day are models of what the complete en- semhle of a play should be. Not only that ; he has. devoted earnest historical research to the subject of costumes and "properties." Thus the pieces are not only mounted on a scale of luxury and magni- ficence, but above all with greatest possible fidelity in their historical aspects. In this way the influence of the Duke of Meiningen as a sta^je reformer has been already felt far and wide, and it is not too much to say that if an educated Englishman wishes I 42 IMPERIAL GERMANY. to see tlie masterpieces of Sliakspeare adequately rendered, lie had better leave his native shores and take a railway ticket to the pretty little Thuringian town of Meininismarck's partiality for the universities is only natural; when, on the occasion of his seventieth birthday, deputations from nineteen universities I 54 IMPERIAL GERMANY. I greeted him witli enthusiasm, he replied, " I will gladly die, now that I see this flower of youth before me. The realization of the German Empire has given an extraordinary impulse to university life, and to-day it can be said with more truth than ever that Germany is the classic land of universities. Elsewhere may be found special schools and acade- mies that present exceptional features of excellence, but nowhere can universities be found similar to hers. There are twenty-two universities in the German Empire, of which eleven fall to Prussia proper. These twenty-two universities are so many active centres of knowledge, and include a staff of two thousand professors and of over twenty -eight thousand students. The following remarks on the spirit that pervades the German universities of to-day, by a French Catholic priest who studied at Leipsic in 1882, seem to carry more weight than anything we could say, as they are those of a witness not likely to be biased in their favour :* — "In order to become acquainted with the soul \Vdme — dcr Geist] of Germany it is necessary to see that community in its daily life— that is, attracted to the university — from every class of the nation. Here they meet in absolute fraternal equality. The common devotion to knowledge, without destroying * "Les Allemands." Par Le Pere Didon. Paris: Calmann Levy. 1884. EDUCATIONAL. 5S the distinction of birth and fortune, yet creates above iem a higher unity, where the most^mtelhgent and laborious take the first place ^'rislniy 'p'^sible to understand the high civiliz- i... power of tie universities in Germany when we L;! gained a full picture of the curriculum of m- ^truction followed out there. ^'™ The course of instruction embraces the uurve. sality of science ; it extends to the limits of human a owleVe. .... Theology and philosophy, meta- rS and the positive sciences, their systems and £r facts, doctrfne and history, literature and Ian- lua'es everything is included in its essentially ScPd'pLhi domain. More than t^t, certaui a. ts the exercise of ^vhich presuppose talent o^^^^^^^ order such as painting, sculpture, architecture mu i", the science'of agriculture, the art of war are all comprised in this limitless domaan o superior instruction. In truth, this world - itseK con tains everything that is necessary to cultivate ^'^rristt" frankly admitted that, among n. people in the world, even among the most intel- \Zt and best educated, is the universality of knowledge cultivated as \^''''^^'^^- .:,r £^, where do universities so thoroughly justify the r tradition of centuries, their great name of Aln.a Mater ... In examining the intellectual life ot Gemany the twenty-two diversities of the Empire appear as the culminating-points of its scientific organization. These twenty-two summits form, m •I 56 IMPERIAL GERMANY, the region of intellect, the high chain of mountains which govern the plain from afar, and from whose heights the supply of modern thought and know- ledge runs like limpid crystal through endless channels to within the reach of all." II. But every result has to be paid for, and the same as we see the culture of music leading to its excess, so the price Germany pays for its extended univer- sity system may bo said to consist in an annually increasing contingent of intellectual proletariat to be found in the country. Tliis increase is even attracting the notice of German public opinion. Lawyers without practice, doctors without patients, men of science without pupils — all these elements find no scope in practical life, and go to swell the army of poverty and blighted hopes. ^ What she owes to her splendid system of school education is so well known that it may seem super- fluous to recapitulate it here. On the other hand, it may be useful to point to a few of its pecuhari- ties, if only to warn us from accepting it blindly as a model, which we seem at times only too much inclined to do. Amidst all the nebulous theories of speculative philosophy that raise the smile of foreigners, it re- mains a fact that the German people have carried more philosophy into every-day life than any other nation. Unconsciously, the categorical imperative \ h EDUCATIONAL. 57 of Kant, " Duty," forms the basis of Germany's intellectual character and action. For if we at most produce individuals above the vulgar race for wealth, the Germans produce whole classes whose aims are entirely distinct from money-making, and the most prominent class is that of the German schoolmaster. It is true that before 1 866 the English type of the speculative schoolmaster had sprung up in Germany, but the rigid Prussian educational test requirements for milita'ry service soon put an end to amateur educationalism as a means of making a fortune. Whereas our schoolmasters are nothing if not specu- lative money-makers, the German pedagogue is as poor as a church mouse, but devoted to his work heart and soul. It is impossible to find his equal elsewhere in the world. But the opinion is gradually gaining ground that he is grinding the youth of the country to powder, and that it is time to put the break on. The very high school qualifications required to pass the • examination for the one-year service in the army are drilled into the boys at such an early age as almost to put too great a strain on their physical system. These tests have become more severe of late, as well as the complicated examinations that have to be passed in order to obtain any civil or military appointment later on. But we are chiefly concerned with the enormous strain put on boys during their younger years, and of that it may be said it is so excessive as, in many i /a 58 IMPERIAL GERMANY. EDUCATIONAL, 59 im; instances, to affect them physically and stunt their growth intellectually. A German paper says : — " The over-burdening of our youth with school- work is again the subject of wide discussion with our pedagogues, as well as with those other philan- thropists who are anxious for the welfare of our youth. We have collected a few opinions of autho- rities on the subject, which we append : — " Our monopolized gymnasium,* with its devotion to the dead languages and their grammar, has brought us to such a pass that we — the so-called best educated classes — are strangers in our own century, unable to free ourselves from a dead and abstract world amidst wliich we have passed our youth in order to obtain certain examinatory quali- fications. It is questionable whether we are ever able to free ourselves from the consequences, let alone the bodily and ethical damage done to us by this enforced torture. " Haetwig.I " DiJssELDORF, 31ay 1886. " We seem to have forgotten too readily that the word gymnasium originally means a place set apart for athletic exercise. " LOTIJAR BUCHER.{ " Berlin, 3Iay 1886. * The German term for schools in which the usual classical curriculum is followed. t A well-known German philologist. t Privy-Councillor Lothar Bucher, up till lately Bismarck's right-hand man in the Foreign Office. « Schools ought to be fitted to the requirements of humanity. " Oppolzer. "Vienna, June 1886. "The gymnasium with its two dead languages cannot las't ; the only alternative is to drop either Greek or Latin. " Eduaed v. Hartmann. "Gr. Lichterfelde, May 1886. « I accuse our schools of unfair competition, for they only bring out two-legged encyclopaedias. " Hermann J. Meyer.! ''July 13, 1886. « True culture does not consist of dead knowledge and hollow tests of memory, but in the true develop- ment of the heart and of the reasoning faculties ot the brain. ^^ ^ . '' Ernst Haeckel.; '* Jena, June 1886. " An excess of heterogeneous knowledge weakens our senses and lames our will. " William Jordan.§ •' Frankfort-on-the-Main, July 1886. * The best known of living German philosophers, t Compiler of best known German Encyclopaedia X Professor of Natural Sciences at Jena; well-known Dar- winian. § Philologist and poet of reputation. HI !^'l 60 IMPERIAL GERMANY, i ; " Those who look after the condition of h'ght and fresh air in our schools, when they see that the number of diseased eyes and lungs does not decline, forget that in inimberless cases the bad air and bad light at home in the evenings undo all the good of light airy schoolrooms. Therefore, reduce the amount of work to be done at home in the evening. There it is. Teach in school, but give youth its freedom at home. "J. IiEULEAUX.* "Berlin, May 2^, 1886." It is, however, only fair to add that a number of Professors of the University of Heidelberg have recently signed a declaration to the effect that they do not believe in the evil consequences of the present system of school education. Yet there can be no doubt that one of its outcomes is a large amount of so-called HamUduncj (half- education), which carries imperfectly digested theories into the community and tends to swell the ranks of the Social Democrats. Besides, a large amount of this burdensome school knowledge is utterly lost and thrown away in after- life by those who have been forced to attain it in order to pass the one-year-service examination for the army, and the ambition to do so is found down to the humblest walks of life. Then, again, the leaning towards intellectual knowledge too often dies away in the practical battle of life, and thus * Privy CounciUor and member of the Prussian Chamber of Commerce. EDUCATIONAL. 61 we find a great amount of stunted intellect m the country— those who have not been able to realize the promise of their school-days. One definite omission we are convinced they ought to supply, and this is a greater study of political economy and of political science. These are the things that, percolating the masses through the younger generations, will do more to form the judgment of the people, and produce a well-balanced poplilar opinion, than the newspapers. III. There are other points that call for remark. In the strain of over-study the cultivation of character is neglected. , The masters are so engrossed with the intellectual procuress of their pupils that they have little attention left°to bestow on the development of their character, a point far more seen to even in our " good-tor- nothing-else " schools. The German masters are excellent instructors {Lchrcv\ but rarely educators iErdciia\ One of the causes of this is that tlie German boys do not pass so much of their free time —of which they have very little— in the company of the master as in England. If English boys spend too much of their time in play, the German boys spend too little.* And this is to be deplored for * This is undergoing a change for the better of late ; not only in schools, but among the population at large, outdoor recreative exercise is on the increase. 62 IMPERIAL GERMANY. EDUCATIONAL. 63 two reasons : the first is that outdoor games are so necessary for the bodily health and development of youth; the second, that it is principally by the companionship and joining in the games of their pupils that English schoolmasters are able to exer- cise a healthy influence on the character of their charges. The German pedagogues prematurely develop the brain at the expense of the physique, and without enough attention to tlie cliaracter ; the English peda- gogues develop the character and the physique to the neglect of the brain. A comparison of the outward appearance of a class of English and German school-boys, say be- tween the ages of twelve and fifteen, will at once strike an observer, and would prove the best answer to the recent declaration of the Heidelberg Pro- fessors. ^ The English boys look far healthier and more active, and their manners are much more easy and engaging, than tliose of the latter. Further, we have no hesitation in saying that, admitting that the schoolroom knowledge of a German youth of twenty is, on an average, far above that of the English lad of the same age, 'it is by no means certain that the same holds good when they are both forty or fifty. On the contrary, from our observation we should say that as they grow older the intellectual attain- ments of the two tend to equalize, and, when they come to the prime of life, the Englishman, whose life is generally more active and practical, is quite on a par in intellectual power with the better % educated German. And from fifty upwards we are even Inclined to think the German goes stale sooner than the Englishman. And if such he the case, it nust be owing to the English on an average leading a morehealthj- lite, for where the Germans do lead a tolthy outdoor life we see the plienomenal vitality of their military commanders. German education forces too much at too early a u a.e not often to affect the elasticity of the hrain later of in life, unless it is made up for by the healthiness of later life, as in the army. Besdes hose already noted, there are other dis- tinct contrasts between English and German school svstems The Enghsh master devotes all his attei - tfonT. the most gifted and diligent boys, neglec - Srthe less inteUigent ones, for it is --f^^^^ him to get known through the success his pupils a ^xamtaations in order to secure further patron- te German masters devote themselves equally to Ae instruction of all without money interest' ^^^ also without holding forth prizes as - — - Prizes and scholarships are almost unknown German schools as well as in umversity life. A German boys hardly play any outdoor games, compared with English boys, so also those fr.ndships among themselves, which in England so often last through after-life, are ^^^^^^^^ZJ^Tt above the system does not tend lo unno haliter, b^t, on the contrary, rather to -Hue an^ suppress the natural effervescence of youth. On the oZ hand, one cause vitiating character in EugWul tU one English school vice, is unknown in Germany rf 64 IMPERIAL GERMANY. --viz., toadyism, inculcated by parents themselves in sending boys to school merely to pick up connec- tions to help them on in after-life. In conclusion, it is interesting to note that prizes and scholarships as incentives are unknown both at German schools and universities. The astonishing results of German education are gained without even appealing to the instincts of rivalry or compe- tition : a most instructive fact ! ( 65 ) CHAPTEE IV. THE PKUSSIAK M0:N'AECHY. The Sovereign is the Sovereign of all. The proper leader of the people is the individual who sits on the throne. — Lori> Beaconsfield. I. We who have gained our liberties by centuries] [of struggle against the pretensions of the Crown are loth to admit the advantages of a strong monarchy, even if we are not instinctively suspicious of it. Yet who can say, supposing that, instead of the Stuarts, we had been ruled by a royal house of the stamp of the Hohenzollerns — who can say that the monarchy might not be as powerful in England to-day as we find it in Prussia ? If the elective monarchy of old made possible the Thirty Years' War, that brought down Germany from its position of the first Power of Europe to a waste desert inhabited by hardly five millions of half-starving human beings, the stability of tlie House of Hohenzollern has proved the salvation of Germany in our time. What we should deem a curse for ourselves has turned out a blessing for Germany, and what we should have thought likely to benefit the Germans — namely, our own parlia- F 66 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. 67 raentary institutions — would in all probability have proved powerless to help them. From the first Burggrave of Nlirnberg, who bought the margravate of Brandenburg from the impecu- nious Holy Eoman Emperor Sigismund, down to the Prussian rulers of our day, the family of Hohenzollern supplies us with an extraordinary instance of the descent of certain qualities from father to son. Of Suabian origin — and Suabia is the traditional home of canniness and thrift — the Hohenzollerns have almost all been distinguished by the possession of these useful qualities, allied to strong common- sense, which prevented them from turning to dis- eased niggardliness. On the contrary, the charac- teristics of the Suabian family only seem to have hardened in a Northern soil until they burst forth in the full effulgence of genius in Frederick the Great. By a strange freak of fortune, even the one Hohenzollern of a long line of rulers who formed an exception to the family characteristic of closeness in money matters benefited his country by his ex- travagant vanity. For he it was— Frederick I. — who, again profiting by the impecuniousness of the Emperor Frederick III., bought the title of King of Prussia, if he did not even do a little bribery in the affair, and thus gained that recognition for his country which his successors so well took advantage of. Yet even in this particular the Hohenzollerns show to advantage compared with other German Sovereigns, who almost all owe their present titles to having sided with the French against their own countrymen. i Thus we have in this extraordinary family hardly a sinf^le ruler who did not in one way or other add his mite to the foundation of Prussian power. II. To understand the position of the Hohenzollerns of to-day it is useful to look at the past, and, before referring to their doings, just cast a passing glance at the negative merit of what they refrained from doing. Allowing for the times they lived in, it will be found that, man for man, from the days of the Great Elector down to our own time, they have been individually far superior to their confreres on the German thrones. Whilst the ruler of the one German State that could have made itself the head of Protestant Ger- many — Saxony — was squandering the treasure of his country in every form of extravagant debauchery. King Frederick William I. was quietly drilling his soldiers, filling the national coffers, and organizing a model administration in every department of the State. The amiable Guelphs just called to rule over the English were indulging their favourite tastes, cursing the English, making themselves hated, and thus consolidating the power of the English aristo- cracy. At that very time the Duke of Wiirtemberg was ruining the country by his extravagant imitation of French Court life and immorality. Later on, when Frederick the Great was consolidating the fruits of his victories, the Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel was amassing a private fortune of forty million F 2 68 IMPERIAL GERMANY. dollars by selling his subjects to England to be employed in coercing the American colonists. But the pig-headed rascalities of the Guelphs in Hanover, the licentious blackguardism of the Courts of Wurtemberg, Bavaria, Hesse, and Saxony, are only interesting as they enable us to see how the Hohenzollerns managed to wade through the rotten- ness of the times and remain, on the whole, un- soiled. For their record, side by side with such, is a comparatively clean one. But freedom from rascality is only an indication of a superiority the Hohenzollerns invariably pos- sessed and showed by their actions. They have proved true to the motto of the greatest of them all, that the King is the first servant of the State. They have ever set their ambition to work out the development and welfare of the entire nation instead of that of a class. The humblest have felt it to be so, as is proved by the celebrated answer of the miller to Frederick the Great, who, when the King threatened to expropriate him unjustly, replied, " There are still judges in Berlin, your Majesty ! " Can we imagine a French miller threatening Louis XY. with a judge ? To be a monarchy of the poor is even to-day the boast of the Hohenzollerns. Against the pretensions of the aristocracy they have always sided with the rising citizen class, however much personal ties may have'^bound them to the nobility. Whenever the vital interests of the people have been at stake the Prussian monarchs have seen that justice was done. And it is perhaps indirectly owing to this distinc- THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY, 69 tion that the Prussians and their rulers have ever been most cordially hated by certain elements in politics. Particularly, those of doubtful moral stand- ing nave ever been fiercest in their dislike to Prussia. In our time the Prussians have known no greater enemies than those morganatic ladies who infest the little Courts of Germany, and have wielded con- siderable political influence from time to time. In the beginning of the last century the Hohen- zollerns introduced obligatory education amidst the derision of foreigners, and gradually abolished medi- aeval serfdom. So also in our day we see them breaking entirely new and hitherto untrodden uround, introducing economic measures for the wel- fare of the masses. It has ever been their supreme merit to recognize that a nation does not consist of a small minority of privileged persons, but rather that the meanest and the luimblest have an equal call on the care and solicitude of the Sovereign. In this traditional and truly royal acceptation of the duties of a monarch lies the secret of the Sove- reign's power in Prussia. This it is that has enabled Prussia from time to time to bear the strain put upon the very existence of the State, and to face a world in arms ! The Hohenzollerns from the first have been the nurturers and educators of their people. It is they who have impressed their administration with that stamp of incorruptible rectitude, that iron sense of duty and care for the welfare of all classes of the community, so that one and all are ready to recognize I ) i 70 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY, 71 now that military success lias drawn the attention of the world to its causes. But long ago there were observers who needed not military success to quicken their perceptions, and one of them was the late Lord Lytton, who in 1840 declared that Prussia was the best governed country in the world. III. About the same time that our Charles II. was in receipt of a yearly bribe from Louis XIV. througli the hands of a French courtesan, the Great Elector of Brandenburg, the victor of Fehr- bellin, was offering shelter to the French Protest- ants whom the revocation of the Edict of Nantes had driven from their homes. He it was who, finding his country swarming with titled do-nothings, put a firm if despotic stop to gambling and profligacy, and gathered the scions of the poor nobility to the standards of his victorious army. Such despotism has now and then done good service in history, and in this instance it laid the foundation of that devotion of the poor Prussian aristocracy to the throne and the army that has borne such splendid fruit in our time. Frederick William 1. found his kingdom not only impoverished by the extravagance of his prede- cessor, but still showing the traces of the devasta- tion of a previous century of warfare. Whole districts were still untilled waste, and even as late as the eighteenth century the pest had fearfully devastated East Prussia. It was the King himself 1 who by proclamations and patents attracted foreigners from Saxony and Wiirtemberg, from the Palatinate, from Switzerland, and Bohemia, and, together with the Protestants that were driven from Austria, turned them into industrious and contented citizens. He cut canals, laid out high roads, caused heather land to be furrowed by the plough. He extended the postal system. Model farms and cattle-breeding establishments were fostered and encouraged, and the celebrated stud of Trakehnen, which was destined to improve the breed of horses all over the country, owed its existence to the solicitude of the King. Frederick AVilliam was far more of a king of the poor than a " soldier king," which latter one-sided historians long declared him; the hardness and harshness for which he has been blamed were often necessary in his reforming work. The landed aristocracy rebelled when he sought to abolish the serfdom of the peasantry, and he only succeeded in diminishing the unjust exactions of the landowners. When the petty nobility refused to pay a land-tax, and demanded that their grievance should be put before the Provincial IJiet, he wrote the memorable words : " I shall gain my point, and plant the sovereignty of the Crown as firm as a rock of bronze, and let these gentry indulge in their windy talk in the Diet. We can afford to let people talk when we gain our point." Compulsory education, the ofticial system, and universal military service, which he introduced, have since become part of the flesh and blood of the nation. \ 72 IMPERIAL GERMANY. IV. / It was Frederick the Great who, in the midst of ^the dogmatic and philosophic contentions of the time, quietly put it : " In my country everybody can secure his salvation in his own fashion." To him it was that one of his great territorial nobles. Count Schaffgotsch, wrote apologizing for having changed his religion. He explained how the acquisition of the estate of Schlackenwerth was bound up with the condition of his becoming a Catholic. Frederick, in his reply, dryly put it : "I have taken cognizance of your lordship's action, to which I have no objec- tion. Many roads lead to heaven; your lordship has struck out on the road by Schlackenwerth. Bon voyage!" In every department of political and social reform Frederick the Great took the initiative. He con- tinued his father's work of creating a free and in- dependent peasant class, particularly through his edict of 1764, which led the way to the total aboli- tion of peasant serfdom. He advanced capital to the peasant soil-cultivator, saw that whole districts were drained, laid the foundations of new villages, and gained arid tracts of land for the plough. The rei^n of Frederick William III. was one of deep national misfortune and degradation. Still, the personal qualities of the King command our highest respect. At a time when tlie pretensions of the aristocracy, and particularly of the army, were an unbearable nuisance, the King promulgated the following Cabinet I 1 I THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. 73 order : — " I have noticed with great displeasure that young officers in particular endeavour to take pre- cedence of civilians. I shall see that the army is duly esteemed and recognized in its proper place at the seat of war, where it is called upon to risk life and limb in the defence of the country. Otherwise, no soldier, whatever his rank, is to dare to ill-treat even the humblest of my citizens, for it is they, and not I, who keep the army. In their service are the soldiers the command of whom is con- fided to me, and arrest, dismissal, and even the penalty of death await those who act in contraven- tion to my orders." The above is in the true Hohenzollern spirit of protecting the weak from the strong, and explains the attachment of the people to the King notwith- standing the trials Prussia underwent during his reign. In his reign, too, domestic virtue, so sadly outraged by society at the time, gained a shining example in his own family. The divine figure of Queen Louisa stands out for all time as a model of a royal wife and mother. Has not the late Emperor William borne eloquent testimony to the inlluence of that mother, who at all times was his guiding star ? When at last the turn of the tide came, and the wave of French invasion was hurled back to exhaust itself on a barren Atlantic island, then that rare gift of the Hohenzollern, the capacity of choosing the best advisers, shone out anew, and Stein and Scharnhorst helped to rebuild the shattered national edifice. 74 I IMPERIAL GERMANY, V. THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. 75 To admit that, after 1815, a period of reaction set in that bade many patriots grow anxious for the prospects of their country is only to say that there are periods of dull apathy in the life of nations as well as in that of individuals. But even during the reign of Frederick William lY., dimmed as it was by Prussia's abject political roli we can still trace that endeavour of the Crown to raise the culture and increase the happiness of the people. Whilst an iron tyranny marked the adminis- tration of Austria, as well as of the minor German States, there was at least an earnest good- will on the part of Frederick William. The impetus he gave to science and philosophy, though perhaps not visibly productive at the time, has yet done its share in preparing the public mind for the great events that were to come hereafter. His romantic idealism, which in its aberration unselfishly and modestly looked up to an old intriguer like Metternich as an authority in the art of making a people happy — even this weakness prepared the ground for his suc- cessors ; it proved a source of strength to them, for it enabled them to see that only a struggle of life and death could unite Germany. This and more we have witnessed in our time, and here again we find a Hohenzollern King at hand, the first to recognize the signs of the times, with almost supernatural instinct in the detection of merit, taking the foremost place in the onward march of events, and realizing the German dream of cen- turies of national unity and independence. For although without a Bismarck the Germany of to-day might have been, without the late Emperor William it could not be. In him truly Germany produced a great charac- ter, a force often far more decisive in the shaping of destiny tlian all the arts of Machiavelli. And in his case the words of Goethe, that only men of eminence are capable of recognizing the truly great, find their fit application in the relationship of the Emperor to his paladins. Brought up in the feudal ideas of a monarchy existing by the grace of God, he lived to discern the sterling character and strength of that people he had once contemptuously treated as populace. And that people in its turn learned to understand, to appreciate, and lastly to idolize the grand old warrior who amidst every additional lustre of his reign re- mained the same in God-fearing modesty and in his attachment to what he conceived to be his mission and his duty.* This enthusiasm of the people increased as the old hero exceeded the age usually allotted to man ; and wlien his ninetieth birthday came round it seemed as if the religious element had mingled with the loyalty of a nation * History will not omit to note what was perhaps one of the noblest traits of his character, when in '70 the old King preferred to accept a diplomatic defeat— almost a personal humiliation— rather than inflict the misery of war on his people. We know now how difficult it was to bring him to subscribe to the words " Mobil— Krieg."— FiVZe Emperor Frederick's Diary. 76 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY, 77 I I before an historical figure the record of which cast fiction in the shade. On that day well might the German students, 2000 strong, bear torches in his honour, and halting before his palace windows cheer to the address of their leader : " His Majesty, our most gracious Kaiser, the victorious leader in numerous battles, the Unifier of Germany's princes and people, the father of his country, the custodian of the peace of Europe, the creator of a new ideal world — long may he live ! " The incidents of his death which followed so soon afterwards are still familiar to us all. We remember how, after calling in vain for his suffering son, " Fritz, lieber Fritz," almost the last words of the old warrior were a key-note to his entire life : " I have no time to be tired." But let us give place to one with rare powers of judgment as well as opportunities of exercising them, and whose verdict, if that of a staunch patriot, is at least not that of a time-server — of a Saxon, and not of a Prussian * : " The Emperor William I. reached the highest pinnacle of worldly fame gradually in one continnal rising progress, showing himself equal to every new task as it came before him. The man who united Germany, and gave her for the first time for cen- turies the unsullied joy of victory, has only sunk to rest to unite a whole people in sorrow round his grave. * "Zwei Kaiser." By Heinrich von Treitschke. Vol. Ixii. of Freussische Jahrhilcher (Prussian Yearly Records). " In the years during which the character of man is supposed to shape itself, his highest ambition could scarcely have exceeded the hope of com- manding the troops of his father or of his brother. In these years he lived in retirement, sharing the views of Prussia's best intellect, that the Constitution of federal Germany was as unsatisfactory as the state of her west frontier, and that only a last de- cisive struggle could give the German nation inde- pendence. He hehl on to this iiope, and saw clearly that only a strong l^russia would be able to break the pressure of powerful surrounding States, and fulfil the national destiny. " Thus he became a soldier heart and soul, loved for his personal amiability, and feared for his se- verity in matters of discipline, which showed even the humblest subaltern that an exacting and stern eye was upon him. Others slightingly mistook for useless play-soldiering what was in reality a deep political game. " Public opinion indulged in liadical dreams ; it went into ecstasies in brotherly enthusiasm for Poles and Frenchmen, and hoped for a millennium of peace. In its conceit it could not understand the rough military ardour and sense of duty of this Prus- sian prince in its bearing on the future of the country. " In his opposition to organic changes in the Con- stitution he encountered all the hatred of party ; he warned his brother that Parliament would abuse its power of granting taxation by weakening the army. His warnings were not heeded, and as he had before ^ II ■ f t i 78 IMPERIAL GERMANY. given up the love of his youth to the call of duty to the State, so now also he ceased all opposition when once the decision of the King his brother \vas taken. And like a knight of old he, as the first subject, took on his own shoulder all the unpopularity that threatened to discharge itself upon the Crown. " The revolution broke out. A rabid hate, a storm of misconception, poured over his head and drove him into exile ; only the army that knew him never wavered in its devotion, and at the bivouac fires in Schleswig-Holstein the soldiers sang : '• *Prinz von Preussen, ritterlich und bieder, Kehr zu Deinen Truppen wieder, Heiss geliebter General. ' * And when he returned from the exile which he had accepted for his brother's sake, he honestly and un- reservedly co-operated in the spirit of the new order of things. "Years afterwards, the illness of Frederick William IV. put him at the head of affairs. Two years later the death of the King placed the crown on his head. After short days of popular joy and un- certain expectation, he had to feel the fitful character of popular favour and to begin that battle which, as heir to the throne, he had foreseen — the battle for his own work, the re-organization of the army. The hatred of party grew to such intensity as was only possible among the descendants of the sufferers by * Prince of Prussia, brave and true, Return and cheer thy troops anew, Much beloved general. THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. 79 the Thirty Years' War ; the German comic papers even represented this manly, true-hearted soldier's face as that of a tiger. Tiie struggle reached such a height that only the decisive power of military success could cut the knot, and prove the rights of the monarch. " And tliese successes came in those memorable seven years which summed up the results of two centuries of Prussian history. Blow after blow all these questions found their solution, to the attain- ment of which the diplomacy of Prussia had worked for generations. " The last of German boundaries in the Xorth was torn from Scandinavian grasp ; the battle of Sadowa secured what had been missed at Kolin,* the liberation of Germany from the hegemony of the House of Austria. Then at last, by a se^pience of unrivalled victories, the coronation at Versailles set the seal on and exceeded what in days gone by the men of i 8 l 3 had fondly hoped for. " Gratefully the Prussians recognized that their institutions w^ere now more safeguarded than ever under a powerful Sovereign ; for, immediately after the '66 war, the King, who had shown himself to be so thoroughly in the right, voluntarily offered atonement for the technical breach of the Constitution, and not a word of bitterness ever came to his lips to call up the differences of the * Kolin, the severest defeat Frederick the Great sustained during the Seven Years' War at the hands of the Austrian com- mander, Field-Marshal Dann. %' . — •I ■li i 80 IMPERIAL GERMANY, past. The whole German people had for the first time gained the feeling of national pride and, in the joy of their new condition, forgotten the dis- cord of centuries. "Through all these wondrous events — events that might have intoxicated even the brain of the most sober— King William comes before us un- changed in kindliness, firmness, and modesty. He himself believed that only a short span would be granted him to see the first beginning of the new order of things. But it was ordained otherwise, and far more beneficially. ISTot only did he live to com- plete the legal groundwork of the new Empire, but to add to the stability of the edifice by the power of his individuality. At first the allied German princes only saw a diminution of their own power in the new order of things. But soon tliey learnt to regard it as an extra guarantee of their own rights; for one of their own number it was who wore the crown, and his fidelity was a bond of safety for all. Thus through the Emperor's doing, and even against the opinion expressed by Bismarck, it came to pass that the Bundesrath, which at first had been looked upon as the seed-bed of dissension, in a few short years became the most reliable guarantee of unity, whilst the Reichstag drifted into a helpless plaything of parties. " The Emperor never possessed a confidant who advised him on every subject. With rare know- ledge of mankind, he discovered the best men to advise and assist him. With the freedom from envy only belonging to a great heart, he left full THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. 8( •scope to those he had tried, but each one, even Bismarck, only in his own department. He always remained Emperor, by whose hands alone were held all the threads of power. " The highest happiness of his life came to him when, after having escaped assassination as if by miracle, he met the enemies of society with that 'generous imperial Message* which aimed at striking at the root of the fundamental evils of society in -our time. Only since then the nation thoroughly realized what it possessed in its Emperor. A current of popular affection hereafter carried him along. Europe came to look upon the old warrior as the guardian of the peace of the world. At home the strong monarchical character of his government was confirmed year by year. The personal will of the Sovereign wielded its good right side by side with that of Parliament, and now with the warm ap- proval of better informed public opinion. The Germans knew that their Emperor always did what was right and necessary, and in his simple unadorned language always 'said what was to be said,' as Goethe has it. Even in fields of effort for which die had originally no natural bent, his innate dis • cernment soon found its bearincjs. How much the ideal work of the nation owes to him ! Yet among artists and men of science he never distinguished an unworthy one." * The Message of February 1881 to the working classes. G If \ • 1^»' S2 IMPERIAL GERMANY. VI. THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. ^^ We all remember how more than the hopes of one nation watched the sick bed of his dying son, as. we all know how they were doomed to disappoint- ment. The grave closed over the purest embodi- ment of what is noble in the German character, for Frederick retained the idealism of youth even in middle age. Had he lived, the world would have seen how far such a nature would have been able to reconcile the diflerences and antagonisms still latent in the Fatherland. He was the hope of the advanced Liberals, not only in Germany, but beyond its borders. On the other hand, there are some, and by no means the least high-minded, who inclined to the belief that his goodness might have been abused, his trust mis- placed, and that he did not possess the hardness necessary to guide the national helm in troublous, times. There are some who hold that a noble nature is not identical with a good and great ruler. It is no guarantee against one of the greatest dangers of Sovereigns— misplacing their confidence. A trivial matter in a private citizen, in a ruler it :s often one of supreme national importance. Some critics point to the late Emperor William — in this respect — as almost of superhuman discernment, and compare him with the Emi^eror Frederick, who many are of opinion not only misplaced his con- fidence in a physician, but, of greater moment, misplaced his confidence in one, at least, to whom he ccnfided his diary. Some, again, aver that the f influence of the Emjiress his wife — so well inten- tioned— was not happy in this respect. Many think Germany is hardly ripe for that cosmopolitan breadth and generosity of view and sympathy that distinguished Frederick III. Through his rare simplicity and affability of manner he gained the popular Iieart as none had done before him; but whether that kindliness of disposition, that earnest, almost feverish, desire for the welfare of all, would have enabled him to carry out his benevolent plans, none can tell. Some think that a man of his romantic bent would have strongly resented a misjudgment of his aims. That he was capable of strong, almost passionate, decision, the sudden dismissal of Herr von Puttkammer the one noticeable act of his short reign — seems to prove. His was essentially the generous temperament of the romantic idealist; whether he would have shown the same unimpassioned front to opposition and misjudgment, the same greatness of character in forgiving it, as his great father, the world can never know. Had he lived, we believe his rule would have proved a bitter disappointment to some of those who foolishly tried to claim him as a par- tisan. In many things the late Emperor reminds us of that noble and romantic Hohenstaufen, the Emperor Frederick II. Full of the most ideal and romantic yearnings, and himself of the highest cultivation of tlie mind, he lived to see his plans thwarted, and then to die of a broken heart. Public opinion, which showed itself so ready to G 2 n S4 ^ IMPERIAL GERMANY. credit the late Emperor Frederick with every possible virtue, showed its usual hasty ooe-sidedness in nieet- incr the advent of the present young Emperor with alf sorts of doubts and fears. His education has fitted him for his position, and the examples of his grandfather and father are ever before his eyes. Everything reliable concerning him tends to prove that his is'a character that may be trusted to benefit by such advantages. Germany cannot yet afford to be cosmopolitan in sentiment. She wants a strong rallying-point, at all hazards, that will unite the nation and enable it to rise above meaner interests in moments of supreme peril. If the Germany of to-day is m want ot a thoroughly honest, high-minded man, with strong national sympathies, with a romantic love for the history of the people he is called to rule over, then surely the present Emperor will be found to exceed the expectations of his friends and to disappoint the fears of his critics. Although the opinions of those entrusted with a IDrince's education are naturally not impartial, we yet think the following excerpt from the lately published essay on the character of the present young Emperor by his tutor. Dr. G. Hinzpeter, bears° sufficient evidence of honesty to deserve notice: — "One feeling only rules all his thought and action, nerves his efforts, and would bid him stake all. it is the feehng of duty, always the strongest and most effectual instinct of every member of his THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY, 85 race. This it is tliat will always bid him, as the first servant of the State, place the weal of all above that of every individual, particularly above every personal interest, and at all times sacrifice his own comfort, his own advantage, even his own life, un- hesitatingly to the welfare of his beloved country." It is certainly touching and interesting to learn that the young Emperor has publicly thanked his tutor for this estimate of his character, as well as HeiT von Treitsclike for the article quoted on p. 76. Even a superficial glance at what the Hohenzollerns have been to their country bids us understand that the backbone of the IVussian nation is loth to pin its faith to foreign models of parliamentarism. It prefers its own monarchy, in which the Sovereign is not only the first servant of the State, but its°tnie beacon-tower in victory as well as in adversity. Whilst Itcpublicans consistently prefer to do without heaven-born authority, there may be some people who would prefer to live in a country where the fountain of grace is a high-minded monarch rather than the temporary chief of a parliamentary party. The loyal Prussians have more than an excuse for preferring the co-operation of Parliament to its autocratic supremacy, as we have it. They are justified in so doing. With them loyalty is not a middle-class myth, but a reality — notwith- standing Social Democracy — pulsating in the heart of the peasant, the educated classes, as well as in that of the noble next to the throne. And no wonder it is so, for during generations, whilst some H 86. IMPERIAL GERMANY. royal families have clone everything to extirpate such a feeling in their own countries, the Hohenzol- lerns have uniformly fostered and strengthened it. From Frederick William I.— the creator ot Prussia's official organization— down to the present day, this is ever strongly marked. Whilst the German aristocracy still chugs to its traditions of birth-privilege, the Hohenzollerns have bridged the old lines of demarcation, and striven to attvlct intellect and merit of every class within their circle. Authors, painters, and men of science— invariably the best of each class-are not patronized, but distinguished in a manner reminding us of the times of the Medici, and of Pope Julius II., who followed the sulking Michael Angelo to Bologna : " In the stead of your coming to us, you seem to have expected that we should attend upon you. Even here we find an analogy in the visit of tlie late Emperor William to Bayreuth, although that ungrate- ful egotistical genius, lUchard Wagner, showed him- self anything but an appreciator of imperial favour. >fot only is every Prussian prince bound to learn a handicraft, as if to bring his sympatliies within scope of the humblest, but the very poorest subjects have ever been able to petition the Sovereign direct. Thus loyally is not a sentiment of vague attachment to an unknown, unseen lay-figure, but is distinctively personal. It shows itself, not in the gratification ot vulvar curiosity— the hunting after a show ; it is sunk deep in the lieart as an impetus to strengthen patriotism and duty. The action of the Hohenzollerns has strength- THE PRUSSIAN MONARCHY. 87 •ened the monarcliical principle far beyond the borders of tlie Fatlierland. We ourselves even are perliap.s aden, the son-in-law of the late Emperor AVilliam. In him Germany pos- sesses a truly high-minded prince. In the most Democratic State of Germany he is the most popular ^Sovereign. And fully he deserves to be so. He it was who, in '71, helped more than any one in the •creation of the German Empire,* and gave the late half-crazy King of Ikvaria the option of proposing the measure, determined to do so himself in case of refusal. And but yesterday, again, at the accession of the present Emperor, it was he who, hastening to Berlin, gave the example that induced every ruling Sovereign of Germany to bo present at the ceremony. * This assertion has since been amply proved by the publica- tion of the late Emperor Frederick's diary. H ; I 5 ( 88 ) PATERNAL GOVERNMENT, CHAPTEK V. PATEBNAL GOYERKMENT. For forms of government let fools contest ; Whate'er is best administered is best. Pope. 89 The other school leans on the past, on the lessons of the great epoch-making figures in history, those who were not so much children of their time as themselves part-creators of the events they directed. It pins its faith to a strong and high-minded mon- archy, assisted by capable advisers, and working out its ruling mission by harmonizing a strong traditional State power with the just pretension of the present time. This school holds that parliamentary party government is unsuited to direct the destinies of a great nation ; that the opinions of a majority otler no guarantee of its soundness. 1 Mi Among students of history, as well as of politicall sdence, two schools of thought stand at daggers drawn. The one would have us believe that every ripple of the tide in the affairs of man is the result- of infinite, remote, collective, and at last overpower- in- influence ; something like the crackmg of the earth's crust when the gases in its bowels seek and find an outlet. Therefore, it is agamst all undue and premature initiative and interference of the State in the affairs of the community. This is the thouaht underlying our national poli- tical organization of the present day, and, if human temperament may be brought into analogy with an intellectual conviction, it may safely be put down as a manifestation of the phlegmatic, unimaginative, neaative disposition. It may be an unattractive cre'ed to some, but our insular position has allowed us to become the nation we are whilst practismg it. So far as we are concerned, well and good. II. It has been said that we are never so thoroughly in the right that our opponents are wholly in the wrong. May it not be so with two opposing schools of political thought ? May not both be right in much, whilst each bears distinct evidence of its peculiar shortcomings ? An aristocratic monarchy run to seed was the cause of the battle of Jena and the temporary effacement of Prussia from the map of Europe as a Great Power. The history of the decay of republics is equally suggestive. The form of government which succeeds best in developing the central idea of the State, backed up by the best instincts and unselfi^i devotion of its subjects, is the best ; and every form of government, except, perhaps, an elective monarchy, has from time to time succeeded in solving the problem, and high- ill ^o . IMPERIAL GERMANY, minded men have always been the means of its solution. The first condition of every government is the purity of the fountain-head. Every plan for the happiness of man suffers shipwreck when mean natures are allowed to influence its workn\^. The United States does not owe its greatness merely to the chance of its being dubbed a republic. America is studded with rotten republics, but the United States owes its stability to the fact of its founders having been great characters sprung from one of the iinest°races of manhood in the world. Turified by a baptism of blood, they framed a great Constitution, which tended to bring out what was good in the people and to render impotent what was vile. This €onstitntion was suited to the Anglo-Saxon race. ^ But are not, after all, the natural conditions of a nation's existence the deciding factors in the choice of the means of its salvation ? In other words, is not the race, the climate of a country, its geogra- phical position, a greater factor than a chance Con- ;stitution ? Is the continuity of England's national independence and progress not owing more to the above conditions than to any set political creed ? Our nolitical system may have suited our require- ments, but the silver streak that separates us from the Continent fixed their character. One of the reasons why some nations have an in- stinctive antipathy to a powerful executive is that they have never known any that was not at the same time thoroughly rotten and corrupt. Supposing the choice should'' lie between a vicious paternal government and a corrupt Parliament, it is natural to hesitate. PATERNAL GOVERNMENT. 91 Thus, in our country we are brought up to look askance at State interference and, above all, at '' granchnotherly legislation." Up to the present, cir- cumstances liave enabled us to feel that we were justified in doing so, and Manchester theories may be all very well when there are no frontiers to guard, no external enemies to threaten. If, however, such be not the fortunate condition of a nation, and its whole destiny and policy are to be evolved from the free expression of public opinion, then the success of Louis XIV. dragonading the Palatinate, and the €ase with which the left bank of the Inline subse- quently became French in sympathies, show us what to expect ! High aims dwell only in the few high- strung natures, whatever their birth. I III. One consideration we cannot shut our eyes to —namely, that no country can possibly formulate its laws and policy by the gradual irresistible ex- pression of public opinion, unless the following sim- qud-non conditions are existent, and allow a strong liealthy public opinion to come into being : — 1. National independence. 2. Strong, healthy, national self-consciousness. 3. Pinal subordination of class interest to the welfai-e of the State. Till lately Germany possessed neither of tliese three indispensable qualifications, and without them it was useless to talk of a nation's public opinion. The want of them not only caused the dismember- 'H 92 IMPERIAL GERMANY^ nient of the old German Empire and made Germany the battle-field of Europe for two centuries, but pre- • eluded the possibility of a public opinion coming into existence that could have materially helped to produce them. They had to be created against the machinations of old and powerful enemies at home and abroad. If France had understood her true policy, German unity never would have been ac complished. Thus, the three necessary qualities of national life had to be conquered, and genius alone could hold aloft the banner round which those could con V. To judge the atmospherical conditions of a room full of people, you must come in from the open air, and you will soon notice in how far they differ from natural ones. A nation's civilization is like artificial temperature : you must gauge it from out- side ; you nmst compare it. Is Germany's greatness a plant of recent and tender growth that requires constant care in order to enable it to develop in the future and stand on its own merits, a bulwark of civilization in Europe ? We think it is. Are those who are responsible for its destinies conscious of the difficulties of the task before them, and honestly intent on meeting them and doing their best in the best available manner in that dire'ction T AVe feel convinced tliat they are, and we will en^ deavour to point out in how far we can show reason for believing this. One of the reasons the French so easily gained popularity on the left bank of the llhine at the be- ginning of the century was, that they represented a young, healthy, popular principle and the Germans an old, antiquated, feudal system. The principal reason why the Alsacians so soon lost the old ties with the German Empire (for Strass- burg was treacherously seized upon by Louis XIV. in the midst of peace) and still partially cling to France was, that they grew into the traditions of the powerful State they joined, and left none of a sterlini^ nature behind to deplore the loss of. The old German o6 IMPERIAL GERMANY. Empire was effete, if not rotten to the core, and when L^French Eevolution came it found the A^^^^^^^^^^^ belonging to a nation that proclaimed the Eights o Ma^n;' and, easting medi.val lumber to the flames declared every channel open to the ambition of the tmblest. sLll wonder the good Alsacian peasan s Ind burohers were proud of their new country, and f oTgot the violent manner in which their new pater- nity was foisted on them 1 . -. • i .^ kw all this has changed, and the Alsacians have only to rub their eyes in order to see that m coming back to their original ^f-^-^/^^^-JfT^nrre back to the victorious mother-country with far more totmptthem than the country that treated hem so stepmotherly whilst they belonged to it. If the SsacLs were practical Englishmen they ^^^^^^^^^ th^ position of affairs in a trice, and, after the last fa^'s and.up fight, make the best of it and be friends with the new order of things. But the poor Alsa- dans are sentimental Germans ; they feel the sorrows of their late fellow-countrymen, and, m their sym- T3athy are still blind to their own interests and to tCr'e'al facts of the case. Time will enligliten them and a strong, healthy, paternal government-not one Tia Metternich, but conducted in harmony with the spirit of the age-will assist in doing so. VI. German Liberals chafe under the restraints of their paternal government, and doubtless the stem system that holds them together has its drawbacks. PATERNAL GOVERNMENT. 97 They would prefer public opinion, expressed through their party, to rule the nation and supply its needs. A look at their past efforts in this direction and at their latest action does not lead an on-looker to feel that Germany is ripe for that humanitarian demo- cracy which substitutes the tyranny of the many for the honest and conscientious effort of a concentrated executive. If it be granted that a strong military govern- ment is a sine ciud non of the nation's existence and that cannot be denied, though it may be de- plored — then the dissatisfaction at its unavoidable drawbacks must be taken for what it is worth. Without underrating the great value of a strong and healthy public opinion, it is yet permissible to hold that its expression is not tlie only source of salvation of a country, the less so as it is likely to wield as much power when diseased as when it is sound. We ourselves have been saved by miracle from the consequences of some of its diseased mani- festations. The cry of misery and despair of mil- lions has forced pubHc opinion to remedy some of our imperious wants, but much remains undone that paternal government in Germany has accomplished, as a few illustrations later on may enable us to jud^e. An EngHsh M.P. writes to the Times deploring that a public meeting cannot be held in Berlin without the presence of a police agent, who can close it at a moment's notice. This is a sad truth ; but the freedom of talk has not yet led to a mil- lennium in other countries. Par from it. The un- limited free expression of public opinion is all ir ! I 1 1 gs IMPERIAL GERMANY. very well where there are no enemies at the gates ; but it is a dangerous pastime for a nation that may be called upon to-morrow to fight for its existence, which may be jeopardized by talk. Germany is not stable enough to allow itself such a luxury. If the happiness of the greatest number be— once national independence secured— the end and aim of all croveinment, it is but fair to take a glance and coiupare, as far as possible, in how far paternal crovemment endeavours to secure that end. _ ° In the first place, the ascendancy of Trussia, which led to German unity, was gained against the almost universal expression of public opinion. Public ophiion has since recanted in this instance, and thus the book is closed ; but history is nevertheless bound to take note of the fact. Unity accomplished, Germany expected to see capable" conscientious men at the head of every department of the State. We know how uniformly these expectations have hitherto been realized. This has all been done without the assistance of public opinion to guide the choice of the directing minds. But neither was it necessary. Without the action of public opinion, the shaft of duty is sunk deep in the heart and mind of the people and its rulers ; it has done far more than any religious dogma m our day to combat and nullify the meaner instincts of human nature. With us public opinion is invariably surprised and extravagantly grateful when it finds anybody equal to the emergencies of a position of respou- \sibility. And, unfortunately, ignominious faUure, PATERNAL GOVERNMENT. 99 / even involving disaster and national humiliation, still allows a man to pose in public as the expresser of the sentiments of the nation. Tlie uniform success of German foreign policy in its broad outhnes is well known and admitted on every hand, even down to the Bulgarian Battenberg incident, which public opinion w\as only too willing to fan into a European conflagration, until stopped by a jet of cold water from l^erlin. Not so well known may be the success of Prussia in conciliating the countries annexed in '64 and '66. Schleswig-Holstein, that certain Powers wished to protect against itself, is thoroughly German to-day. The Electorate of Hesse-Cassel is tho- roughly Prussianized, and as for Hanover, the great centre of Guelphic memories and partisanship, the freely elected last Parliament (Landtag) of Hanover only showed three Guelphic adherents, against tw^enty- eight belonging to the Bismarckian National Liberal party. Alsace, it is true, is a long way off such a satisfactory state of things ; but it will come — gradu- ally, but surely. Even the conciliation of a single town has not been beneath the earnest attention of paternal government. The town of Erankfort, after being terribly frightened and feeling the grip of the conqueror round its neck, has since been petted and pampered in every conceivable way. Showy cavalry regiments were quartered in the town to see what effect bright colours and the savoir fairc of the elite of officers could have on the female heart; the Emperor came repeatedly in person ; even the treaty H 2 loo IMPERIAL GERMANY. of 71 ^vas signed in l>ankfort-on-tlie-Main. Thus, the commerce-gorged citizen of that ilk, after ravmg at the wickedness of Prussia, and acceptnig Swiss naturalization in order to avoid military service has loner since come back to the Prussian sheepfold, humble and full of contrition. And to-day the bleary eye of the regulation type of Irankfort patrician lights up when he is privileged to pour nis sincr-son- dialect into the ear of the youngest long- suffering Prussian subaltern. Thus the Prussians, after meeting a world in arms, have shown that^they understand the more subtle art of stroking the backs of their newly annexed subjects ; and to-day no more loyal subjects exist than the good burghers of the town of Prankfort-on-the-Main. YII. The victory was won ; but it only urged paternal government to criticize and amend a system the success of which had dazzled the world. All Europe was anxious to copy what had produced such results ; it impressed everybody but its authors. They set to work to improve it, and the result is that the army of to-day is no longer the army of 1870. The military authorities have devoted eighteen-years' unremitting work to its improvemem. What this means will be brought home to the reader when we recall the histori- cal fa'^ct that the organization andarmament of our army on the outbreak of the Crimean War differed very little from that of the time of the battle of Waterloo. What paternal government has done for the PATERNAL GOVERNMENT. loi defences of the country is patent to the world. Put its silent, hidden action is even more instructive than its outward achievements. Whilst public opinion in France is deliglited witli the perforating effects of the new Lebel rifle on pauper corpses, whilst we wake up to find the millions spent on our rifles, our ships, and our guns squandered, paternal govern- ment in Germany has quietly seen to the efficiency of the last button of the l*om3ranian's uniform ! Public opinion breathes not a word — no news- paper propaganda — but eyes that never close watch the frontiers of the Fatherland ! In the west the fortresses of ]\Ietz and Strasburg look so radiantly innocent on a bright summer's day, you would hardly fancy that, unheeded by public opinion, they have been so strengthened and enlarged that those wiio were familiar with them now hardly recognize them. But strategists know that a sea of a quarter of a million of men might well pause for fear of breaking its waves against their buttresses in vain ! While we, after converting the Enfield rifle into the Snider, discarded it and spent millions on the Martini only again to find it obsolete to-day, paternal government immediately after '70 introduced the Mauser rifle,* which even now, after seventeen years, can still be safely looked upon as equal to any emergency. And here we are struck by a markea contrast. Whilst we in England make the best articles, our Government generally secures the worst at the dearest price. In Germany, the home of the * This statement is not invalidated by the recent introduction of the repeating rifle. ,T= 1 02 IMPERIAL GERMANY, PATERNAL GOVERNMENT. 103 cheap and nasty, the Goveinment always secures the best article at a low price. Nothing, however trivial, is too small for the attention ""of paternal government. Ever since 71 a ceaseless, but severely systematic, series of trials has been going on to improve every article of equip- ment of the coimuon soldier. Companies are sent on forced marches to test the value of new knap- sacks, new gaiters ; even new drinking flasks are tried ' and the common soldier interrogated by the Emperor as to how he is satisfied with them. With us according to the latest newspaper disclosures, our soldiers are defectively fed in time of peace Only lately, in Germany, a new kind of bread has been tested to replace the old mihtary Com- onishrocl It is not submitted to the apathetic eye of some mighty othcial, backed by the recommenda- tion of those who have an interest in getting the contract to supply the army with bread. Paternal (government does not work like that. The advan- ta<^es possessed by the new bread are set forth, and, after their conscientious scrutiny, the Ministry of War give orders that it shall be tried temporarily for a period of three montlis in a number of large o-arrisons, and the reports collected and compared. Only if favourable will the new bread be immediately introduced into the whole army. If such attention is bestowed on details, the reader can imagine what the work of paternal government has been with YQcrenxl to more important matters. A friend of oifrs the hcavAcUal of a Prussian officer, who had passed through the war of '70 as a lieutenant, had lately gone through the six weeks' training necessary to qualify him for the rank of captain. He told us : " It is shiiply unbelievable wdiat they ask of us now. I only wonder I was able to live through it all." Such are the tests of efficiency required nowadays in the Prussian army ! If such be the severity with regard to petty officers, nobody will be surprised to learn that the w^eeding out that has been going on in the higher branches of the service is of a stern and radical kind. As pointed out elsewhere, neither past services, nor influence, nor family connections, are allowed to sway the dispositions of paternal government. Since the accession of the present young Emperor already a number of beneficial changes have taken place that the old Emperor William, from personal ties, could not bring him- self to make ! What paternal government has done for the education of the country, primary, classical, and technical, has been referred to elsewhere, and is besides too well known to require further mention. Having provided the nation with food for the mind, the best of its class, paternal government proceeds to see that the food of the body is not adulterated— no slight task among a people which, in commerce, lays its hands upon everything and counterfeits everything it can lay its hands on ! Whilst, in new-born Italy,* constitutional Austria, * The chemical examination of a so-called Italian " Magliani " cigar, made by the Government in Piacenza, will give an idea to what extent adulteration is practised in the sunny South. The cigar in question contained— (i) A piece of lime ; (2) powdered I04 IMPERIAL GERMANY. PATERXAL GOVERNMENT. 105 parliamentary England, republican France, and de- mocratic America * adulteration of every article of food is rampant, the paternal laws of Germany are of a nature to stop the most hardened offender. For the law provides that those who sell an adulterated article — even if proved ignorant of the offence — are liable to fine and imprisonment. And how that law is administered ! ! ! In England, the spirit of the middle classes tells us, through John Bright, that adulteration is only a form of competition ! Whilst public opinion in England allows not only the legitimation of quack medicines, but the realiza- gypsum ; (3) a quantity of humus ; (4) a piece of wood ; (5) a piece of string. As a Koman newspaper sarcastically put it, a mason with his trowel was only wanting in conjunction with a dozen such cigars in order to build a six-storied palace ; the necessary materials were all there. * In reference to adulteration in the United States, it is a sad fact that there is not a single article of food which can be adul- terated with profit that is not adulterated. Sugar is adulterated to such an extent that the diseases of the kidneys so frequent in the States can be partly traced to the acids used in refining sugar. Powdered soapstone is added to sugar in order to increase its weight. Such a thing as unadulterated sugar is hardly known. Such a thing as unadulterated treacle (molasses) is hardly known. Honey is produced artificially with hardly more of the real article in it than is necessary to give it a taste. Tea and coffee are adul- terated as a matter of course. Adulterated lard and butter are staple market commodities. The adulteration of cheese has reached such a pitch that the export of this article, which was 14 million pounds in 1881, has receded to 6\ million pounds to- dav. Beer is adulterated with rice, glucose, and several noxious drugs. Lastly, suet is adulterated with cotton oil. The above facts are vouched for by the Commercial Gazette, which is the Price Current of Cincinnati; the Cleveland Anzeiger, and other American papers. tion also oi £1 50,000 a year to the revenue by their taxation, the Prussian Government either forbids their sale if poisonous, or analyses them and causes their w^orthlessness to be made officially public, as in the following instance : — '' Warning against Patent Medicines. — An official scientific analysis of a medicine advertised under the name of ' Schlagwasser,' manufactured by Eoman Weissmann in Vilshofen, has shown the following: : It consists of nothing else save a little tincture of ratanhia, or kino, mixed with tincture of arnica, the value of which is between 2ld. and '^hL, whereas it is sold at 85. a bottle. It is self-evident that this decoction does not possess the virtues attributed to it.^' Hardly a favourable advertisement, the above ! or one likely to increase the sale of patent medi- cines ! In England, such beneficial announcements are left to the initiative of the Press, which (except in rare cases, such as lately the Saturday Hevicw) does not publish them, as many papers draw a large income from advertising 23atent medicines. VIII. After safe-sfuardinGf the national existence and its bodily health, paternal government energetically pursues its care for the well-being and happiness of the greatest number in all the branches of this diffi- cult task. Subordinate to the Imperial Eeichstag, but inde- it I i id io6 IMPERIAL GERMANY. pendent in its own sphere of action, each German State possesses its own Parliament. And mstead of contributing to foment petty rivalries, as of old, these Parliaments now attend to the legitnnate satisfaction of local wants— the most perfect form of local government. ^ The Bimdesrath (Federal Council), in which every smaller State is represented and can exercise a fair share of influence, has proved itself an excellent guardian of the national interests. When Germany was re-organized after '70, a perfect Babel of conflicting law-codes were found m force. For instance, Bavaria alone possessed seventy- eioht difterent civil codes ; such towns as Bamberg Nuremberg, and Augsburg each having a special law-code of its own. A commission has been work- in^ for eight years at the new uniform civil code for the Empire. It is now submitted to the criti- cism of practical lawyers previous to its universal in- troduction, which will take place gradually, perhaps in three years, without any parliamentary debates. The new commercial and criminal laws (Bcichsgesctz) are already in force ; the highest tribunal is situated outside of Prussia proper, in Leipsic. It is indeed, according to universal testimony, a marvellous monu- ment of erudition and honest efl'ort to reconcile con- flicting interpretations of law, and to meet the legal wants'^of the nation in the spirit of the time. Not only is law cheap in Germany— perhaps m some ways too cheap-but it is in stern reality the same for the rich and the poor. The system of admitting to bail, one that tends to favour the rich, PATERNAL GOVERNMENT, 107 and one that is so often abused, is very limited. No offence punishable by more than a year's im- prisonment is bailable at all. This may be a hard- ship in a few cases, but it is a strong point nevertheless. Whether it be an Ambassador or a Professor — for the higher the position and capacity of doing harm, the greater the ddlit — who is accused of a serious crime, he stands on no better footing than the humblest transgressor of the laws. The transfer of land, with us one of the costliest and most doubtful parts of our conveyancing system, is prompt, sure, and cheap in (Germany. Benefiting by the dreadful experience of specu- lation and commercial ruin in the years '73-'74, the laws affecting commercial companies, fraudulent l)ankruptcy, and embezzlement have been entirely recast, whereas wo are still unable to get two judges to a^ree to one definition of the law on embezzle- ment. Thus it is not surprising that, since the great "crash" (Krach) of 'y;^, there has been com- paratively little share-company swindling in Ger- many, although, in the meantime, P>eiiin is fast outstripping Paris as a money market. During the same period we have witnessed the failure of the Glasgow J5ank, of the Cardiff Savings' Bank, of Greenways' IJank, not to mention the many millions the public has lost through other limited liability companies, bringing ruin and misery to thousands. Again, whilst the administration of maoy of our petty savings'-banks, of our hospitals, and other charities has been impeached in public and shown io8 IMPERIAL GERMANY, PA TERNAL GO VERNMENT. 109 to be wasteful, if not worse, the same classes of insti- tution in Germany are more or less controlled by the State, and show a wonderfully clean record. The social laws re divorce, illegitimacy, have not the draconic character of our own; they are more humane, and yet we liave to learn that there is less domestic happiness or more innnorality in Germany than with us. The guardianship of lunatics is under the direct control of the State, and such scandals as we have witnessed in connection with our private lunatic asylums are unknown in Germany. Spendthrifts are, and habitual drunkards soon will be, deprived of the unlimited control of their fortunes, and although we are suspicious of such laws, fearing they might be abused, as they inevit- ably would be with us, there is no fear of that in Germany. In fact, the one failing of this stern paternal crovernment is its humanitarianism : its criminal code is far more merciful than our own, and, up till lately, there was a strong probability of the total abolition of the death penalty. The murderous attempts of the Socialists came in time to furnish a suitable occasion to reinstate it. Ihit the attempts on the late Emperor's life, far from blinding the Government to the misery of the poor and the legitimate aspirations of the working classes, only seemed to direct attention to tli^m ; not in craven cowardice, but in a genuine concern for the welfare of the people. The Imperial Message of February 1 8 8 1 to the Keichstag brought forward the earnest wish of the Emperor himself to initiate legislation to improve the lot of the working-man. Since then the laws for the benefit of the working-classes have come into existence. It is as yet impossible to gauge their benefit ; but the Imperial recognition of the right of the humblest to the consideration of the State must remain a grand monument to the honour of paternal government. IX. Passinfi" from a consideration of the laws of the .0 country again to the activity of the State as an administrator, we find a model bureaucracy doing in civil life the part of the army as a defender against outward aggression. The German postal service has become the pattern for all other countries. Nothing is too trivial for its attention, and nothing too remote to escape its eye. Whereas we have for many years put up with the disgraceful mail service between this country and the Continent via Belgium,* and paid a ridiculous price for its transit vicl Ostend, the Germans took the initiative by sending their mails via Flushing ; and now that we have joined their protests against the scandals of the Ostend line, the Belgians have been forced to put on new steamers. * Not to forget the scandalous passenger service through France and Belgium. Here German paternal government, by its co-operation with the Dutch Government, succeeded in starting the quick through service via Flushing to Berlin, and has thus rendered signal service to the travelling community. no IMPERIAL GERMANY. PATERNAL GOVERNMENT. Ill The parcel-post service, wliicli is cheaper than our own, and which we copied from Germany, shows a surplus, whereas ours shows a deficit. In the telegraph system the Germans were in so far ahead of us that they were the first to lay the wires underground on a large scale. With us pubhc opinion is still fighting a con- tinuous battle against the pretensions of private rail- way company monopolists. The price paid to the landowners for the privilege of running the lines over their property has saddled the public with the most expensive railway system in Europe. The cost of forcing the concessions through Parliament have in course" of time cost the companies millions. Thus we are not surprised to read that, although the five largest railway companies in England are virtual gold mines to the lucky shareholders, of 2 5 8 rail- ways in England and Wales, i 37. ^i' i^^o^^ ^^^^^ ^^^■ half of the whole, paid no dividends whatever in 1884. Yet the Times plaintively exclaims: "Our commerce is being throttled by the enormous cost of internal carriage ; goods often cost more for a short transit to the coast than they subsequently do for sea-carriage to the ends of the earth." Not only are our railways more expensive than the German lines, but, except where competition forces a keen rivalry, they cannot compare for clean- liness, comfort, or punctuality. The dirt and un- punctuality on some of our Southern lines would be sought for in vain all over Germany, and the power of the Press has hitherto i^roved unavailing to secure a remedy for these things. One of the greatest tasks of paternal government has been " die Verstaatlichung der Eisenbahnen," the taking over of the railways by the State. It is still incomplete,* but almost all lines in Prussia proper are now State property. Hence there is now one system and one tariff where formerly close upon a thousand existed. How this one system works we hear from the best of English authorities, " Bradshaw's Guide," which states that the German railways are uniformly excellent. That the carriages of each class are better tlian those in our country has long been admitted ; and lately the American saloon-carriages are being widely intro- duced, not for one class only, as with us, but for all classes alike. It would lead us too far to enter into every point of the German railway system ; we will only men- tion that the minutest details for the comfort of the public are not beneath the direct notice of the Minister of Public Works, Dr. v. Maybach, who is the supreme head of the Prussian railway system. Whereas one of our latest postal reforms consists in being allowed to post a letter in a postal train with an extra stamp, in Crermany not only has it long been permissible to do so without any extra stamp, but all trains carrying the mails accept telegrams also without extra charge. The railway refreshment bars — with us one of the crying scandals of our railway system, where the * In Bavaria the railways are still noted for their irregularity and inefficiency. 112 IMPERIAL GERMANY. favoured contractor is allowed to poison the public without let or hindrance— are regulated in Trussia with the utmost care and conscientiousness. Not only is every article which is sold tested, but the price charged is regulated by the authorities. Besides that, in every railway refreshment bar all through the country (and most stations have one) a book is kept to enter any complaints made. Only a short time ago a Liberal member of the Eeichstag accused Dr. v. Maybach of having dis- posed of ''a railway refreshment licence by favour to an unquaUfied person! Dr. v. Maybach proved that under his rule it was simply impossible that even the contract for a little refreshment room at a side station could be given away through influence of any kind. With us there are no refreshment bars unless the traffic is large enough to ensure ^ a rattling profit to the lessee, and then they are a dis- grace to our railway system. But the end and ahii of all our railway companies is to secure big dividends. Not only roads by land, but navigable rivers and canals, show signs of the unceasing care of the Government. The former are uniformly kept m an excellent state of repair, and, in reference to the latter, the fact of the Government piercing a canal from Kiel to Wilhelmshafen, at an expense of ^^7,800,000 speaks volumes for its initiative* This canal, when completed, will shorten the steam * Prussia contributes ;^2,5oo,oooonher own account, and the Empire generally the remainder, penurious Prussia thus paying twice over. PATERNAL GOVERNMENT, 113 voyage from Hamburg to Cronstadt by forty-four hours, from London by twenty-two, and from Hull by fifteen. It will infuse new life into the Baltic, and may do much to revive the prosperity of ancient cities like Dantzic on the Prussian coast, besides increasing the effectiveness of the German fleet. Even the cultivation of fish is not beneath the attention of the Government, and a State fish-breed- ing establishment at Huningen in Alsace is the nucleus from which the pisciculture of the country receives fresh impulse and development. X. The Protectionist policy pursued with regard to native industries has yet to justify itself by results; in the meantime there can be no doubt of the tempo- rary impulse it has given to trade. The Germans, like the Americans, sought in Protection a means, if only temporary, of building up their industries. To oppose this would seem to many like refusing brandy to a sick person because you are a teetotaller. Whether it will in every respect, and in the long run, yield all the results anticipated from it remains to be seen. Also a new dramatic copyright treaty with England has secured protection for German authors which they have long lacked. Bismarck has said that the fear of responsibility is one of the diseases of our time. This fear he certainly did not feel when he shared the responsi- bility with his Sovereign of introducing, one by one, the recent laws for the benefit of the working 114 IMPERIAL GERMANY, PATERNAL GOVERNMENT, "5 classes. He knew that the vested interests of the country, the Landowners, and the well-to-do middle classes would never take the initiative, so he deter- mined to do so hhnself . To many it is a dangerous doctrine to admit that social questions of the cha- racter in question can be solved by the State, and the attempt to do so will have to be judged by its results HI the future. Still, it is a bold attempt, made in a noble spirit. That the State cannot exercise the power it does in Germany without bringing disadvantages in its train is natural. Nor is it our aim to judge finally in how far the advantages outweigh the disadvantages ; that can only be shown by time alone. We only wish to show that honest paternal government has done a deal of really good work such as even a parlia- mentary majority might be proud of having accom- plished. Who, 1 20 years ago, seeing Frederick the Great return in triumph to his half-ruined and starving Berlin population after the Seven Years' War, would have ventured to prophesy the future greatness of Prussia, which, after all, owes so much Ldirectly to those years of struggle and popular misery ! So also to-day there is something anomalous m seeing the state of siege proclaimed in the capital and other"^ large towns; to know that the laws which govern the expression of political opinion are almost as severe as under a reactionary despotic govern- ment ; to know that Social Democracy is feared, and subterraneously spreading and powerful. It is but permitted to hope and believe that the disadvantages may be temporary, whilst the advantages may be permanent. If these facts be realized, the Germans can justly retort on the Manchester system. Has it prevented the land drifting, year by year, into fewer hands ? Has it not assisted to exterminate the small holders ? The innocent suffer with the guilty. Has it arrested the terrible depression of forty millions sterling in the annual value of English land ? To many it seems as if despotic laws were now and then as necessary in an over-civilized country as in a primitive one. It is as absurd to say that force is no remedy as that unlimited liberty must necessarily be an unalloyed boon. The opinion of the majority is, after all, the expression of force — the tyranny of the many. I 2 ( ii6 ) BISMARCK. 117 I I!!!! CHAPTEE YL BISMAKCK. A o-reat nation is a nation that produces great men , — L0B1> Beacoxsfield. I. About a hundred years ago there lived a German author who wrote: "Oh, that we only possessed national pride and unity, and we should have been one nation, the first, the most powerful, in Europe. One nation ! For that alone I wish I could come back again in a hundred years, to see my country- men as a nation, or to hear of a German William Pitt." * If poor old Weber could come to life again, he would see much to rejoice over in his fatherland ; nmch that his honest old patriot's heart never dared to hope for ; but, above all, he would see Otto v. P>ismarck-Schonhausen Prince Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor 1 Those who only admire this great man because the fates always turned the critical quarters-of-an hour of history in his favour do not understand or * " Democritos." can hardly appreciate him. For in P>ismarck's character, boldness, perspicacity, and dogged deter- mhiation are allied to astute caution in a degree hardly equalled in history. These in their union give rise to a moderation in success equally phe- nomenal. For years we follow him, from his modest ancestral home to his entry into politics : everywhere the rough and sturdy Prussian squire, ready to break an opponent's head or to save a man from drovm- ing ; everywhere strong, demonstratively aggressive in his unbridled animal spirits. Here and there short glimpses of family affection relieve the picture of its harshness. A descendant of a hardy Northern soldier-family, he seems born out of his time ; a paladin longing for the jousts of tournament, or for foray, or adventure by field or fiood. He steps into a position of responsibility, and ■gradually, very gradually, the strong wine passes throuirh fermentation, and the old nature is as if clarified into a new character. "May it please God," he wrote to his wife (July 3, i 851), "to fill this vessel with strong and clear wine, now that the champagne of youth has effervesced uselessly and left stale dregs behind." Those who had only known Bismarck during the years of Shiron-und-Drcmg hardly recognized the man later on at the head of afiairs. Called to the Frankfort Diet in 185 i, as the re- presentative of Prussia — humiliated, if not humbled, at Olmiitz — he was a square peg in a round hole for the condition of things as they then were. In a letter to the Prime Minister of Prussia ii8 IMPERIAL GERMANY. dated July 5, 1^51, Bismarck's predecessor m Frankfort, Herr von Eocliow, tells the following respecting Bismarck's appointment as liis successor, and the comments of the then Prince of Prussia on his visit to Frankfort:—" The latter said, ' And this lieutenant of the Landwehr is to be our Ambassador at the Diet ? ' ' Yes,' I replied, ' and I believe he is well chosen ; Herr von Bismarck is spontaneous, energetic, and I believe he will come up to every expectation of your Eoyal Highness.' " The Prince had nothing to say in return, but in general he was favourably impressed with this excellent champion of right and true Prussian senti- ments. I fancy his Eoyal Highness would have wished Herr von Bismarck might have been a little older, with grey hairs, but whether with these attributes it would be exactly possible to meet the expectations of his Eoyal Highness I hardly dare to say." As yet he is but feeling his way— the possi- bilities of Prussia as a governing influence had not revealed themselves to him. The aristocratic lean- ings of Austria were indeed sympathetic to his Junker* nature, even though this same Austria lorded it over his own country. At first we only see the militant nature — the fighting man, ready to resent hostility by retort or bfow from whatever point of the compass it coineth. The hauteur of the Austrian Ambassador, Count Thun, the President of the Diet, receives its quietus ♦ Term for Prussian squire. BISMARCK. 119 incidentally,* whilst our hero is feeling his way and learning still to appraise facts fully. Gradually he awakens to the emptiness that under- lies the Austrian pretensions. The man who since has hardly ever looked at an opponent without read- ing him through and through was not long in form- ing his opinion of the Austrian representative. To those who WTote to him warning him of the political astuteness of his opponent, he replies, " Kinder, das ist ja ein ganz duminer Kerl ! "t But he had yet to clarify and formulate his ideas, and to gain that statesman-like view of affairs which enabled him to subordinate everything to his pur- pose. He saw himself recognized only as the re- presentative of a second-rate Power, and his strong nature rebelled at the position ; but he bore the un- popularity of Prussia with a light heart, and even seemed to take pleasure in the feelings that he evoked. A Count Isenburg, irate at some remark of Bismarck's, was said to be coming to Frankfort to thrash him! But those who knew Bismarck chuckled at the idea. He himself, hearing of Isen- buro's murderous intentions, writes, " I cannot make out what I have done to the good man ; I always took him for a harmless person." J It need hardly * This refers to the well-known anecdote of Bismarck quietly taking; awav the breath of the Austrian Ambassador by asking him for a light for his cigar at a time when none of the German representatives dared smoke before the President of the Diet. I My good folks, why he is a thoroughly stupid fellow ! i "Preussen im Bundestag," p. 159. Leipzig. 1885. 120 IMPERIAL GERMANY, BISMARCK, 121 be said the irascible Count thought the matter twice over. The gossip of the period teems with illustra- tions of his bold action and boisterous language, the tenor of which openly revealed his political views and plans. Many of his franl-: blunt opinions on high personages in those days are deeply instructive even now as showing with how little wisdom the world is ruled. For they have invariably proved to be incisive and true. During these years of petty bickering and enforced idleness the idea took possession of him that Austria must be turned out of Germany, and lienceforth he became her deatli enemy. The Italian war of 1859 broke out and wit- nessed Austria's defeat. Public opinion in Germany strongly expressed itself in a wish to keep Austria ; but Bismarck, even before the war had begun, was already half inclined to take the opportunity to join hands with France in humbling her. As this wish, openly expressed, was in direct opposition to the views held in responsible quarters in Berlin, Bis- marck was no longer the right person to represent the latter in Frankfort, and was transferred to Peters- burg as Prussian Ambassador, where he arrived in March 1859. There the reputation of his opposition to, and even hatred of, Austria had preceded him, and made him highly popular in Ptussian Court circles, still smarting under the sense of tlie equivocal conduct of Austria during the Crimean War. In the meantime the Italian campaign had shown the hopeless divisions of the German federal States in a stronger light than ever. The victory of France over Austria was the consequence of this helpless- ness, and caused a popular clamour for union anew to break out in Germany, particularly in the Liberal party. On September 15, 1859, ^^'^ "National Union" was formed in Frankfort-on-the-]\Iaiu, which included in its programme the representation of the German people, and asked the central power in Germany to be conferred on l*russia. But time sped on, whilst King "William saw that the sword would need to be sharpened before any- thing could come of this. It was imperative to strengthen the army. Parliament refused to lend itself to a prolongation of the period of military service, as also to the granting of the increased military budget ; at least, unless the Government would declare that it was prepared to use the in- creased armaments to secure national unity. In view of the jealousy of Austria and France, that concession was impossible. The King saw that a Foreign Minister who would have to unfold all his plans to a critical, inquisitive representative assembly must needs give up, or at least must delay, their fulfilment. The King, at the risk of losing his crown, determined to carry out his plans for the re-organization of the army against the opposition of the majority in Parliament, and to obtain the necessary funds and spend them without its consent. Thus arose a con- flict between Crown and Parliament. In carrying out this determination to face the opposition of li 122 IMPERIAL GERMANY, the majority of his subjects, the King looked round for a Ministry to stand by him. One by one they fell in this bloodless battle aorainst numbers. King William stood alone. In this dilemma, Herr von Schleinitz advised the King to send for Herr von Bismarck, who had already gained the feputation of a bold and determined politician. Thus originated Bismarck's relationship to his Sovereign which lasted unbroken from 1862 till the death of the King. II. The years of struggle with Parliament from 1862 to '66 are matters of history, and they tell us that Bismarck showed the same courage and per- tinacity as his royal master. History tells us with what dexterity during this period he hoodwinked his opponents, charming them, as it were, into a false sleep of security only to wake up and find the irrecoverable moment of action past ! We learn how, during his short stay in Paris in '62, he confided his plans to the Emperor. " He is mad," the latter said ; and the Empress thought him a funny fellow. The French Ministers with one accord agreed that he was not by any means im hommc serieux ! a man to be taken seriously into account. The preliminary fight for the standard took place in 1864, when Austria was inveigled into sharing the Prussian campaign against Denmark, which ended in the cession to Germany of Schleswig- Holstein. BISMARCK. 123 It is again a matter of history how Bismarck and the King, still acting in opposition to the parlia- mentary majority of the country, twisted the division of the spoil into a rope that coiled itself round the throat of Austria on the field of Sadowa in I 866. We find Bismarck starting for Bohemia, on the outbreak of this war, the object of universal hatred, if not of execration. He has told us himself that had Prussia lost he would liave unfailingly committed suicide. So far we only see the bold political gambler playing for a great stake. Tlie victory won, he is suddenly revealed in a new character ; for he who had been mainly instrumental in bringing this war about, in the moment of victory turns round and boldly opposes his royal master and his military advisers in their wish to despoil Austria. He him- self has told us how, during the negotiations of Kickolsburg, he had to encounter such opposition that his nervous system was thoroughly unstrung. The man of iron threw himself on his bed and sobbed like a child. We have seen the political leader in the making ; we will now take a glance at the man. First and foremost among his characteristics we note the rare power of rising at every crisis above his narrower self, and making the interests of his country supreme. The man who opposed the spoliation of Austria after Sadowa might well call out with Lord Clive, " I stand appalled at my own moderation." For it was not the fear of France, as some erroneously 124 IMPERIAL GERMANY, BISMARCK. 125 I HUii suppose, that dictated such wise moderation, but tliat prophetic instinct of his — that instinct which often leads genius to be stoned by one generation in order to be adored by posterity — that enabled him to see that a day was near when it would be policy to be friends with the present foe. Austria has bitten the dust before — in fact, she must almost have become accustomed to it by force of habit ; but the Austrians had never before been humbled by a foe who, within a generation of laming their arms, succeeded in gaining their hearts. Yet such is the present state of things in parts of Austria — where the hatred of Prussia prior to '66 was most intense — that the Emperor William and Prince Bismarck compete in popularity with her rei<]rnin2r House. Such is the first result of the working out of this trait of sagacious magnanimity in a great object in Bismarck. Although he may not be able to say on his death-bed, with Itichelieu, that he had never had any personal enemies, his only enemies having been the enemies of the State, he can point to even rarer characteristics. The subordination of his own strong passions has often taken a far higher form. If we can picture him as Sylla, the Poman dictator, crushing his rivals ruthlessly, exterminating their ad- herents, we cannot quite credit him with that stoicism which enabled Sylla to bear in silence the opprobrious epithets of that young patrician who followed the ex-dictator, reviling him, through the streets of Eome. But our appreciation must increase in pro- portion the more we bear in mind his passionate temper, when we come to consider that no single instance is on record of Bismarck ever allowing his strongest personal leanings, antipathies, or passions to influence seriously his action when the welfare of the State was in question. III. The war of '66 concluded, Bismarck returns to Berlin with the King, and takes share in the ova- tions of tlie people. He first seeks, side by side with his Sovereign, the condonation of past breaches of the letter of the Constitution, and the Bill of In- demnity is passed with acclamation by a Parliament deliglited with national victory. Now begins the new phase in his activity — the work of consolidating what had been gained the strengthening of the North German Confederation, tlie conciliation of the popular assembly, and the smoothing of the way to a better understanding with the South. At the beginning of this period falls that master- stroke of Bismarck which was only revealed to the public and to France like a peal of thunder in 1867 — the secret treaty with the South. The result of this would have been that even had the Prench tardily provoked war in 1866, they would have found Prussia at the head of all Germany, a fact they were loth to believe even in 1870, notwith- standing the previous publication of the treaty. The years from 1866 to 1870, in their creative and consolidating fertility, belong to history; it 126 IMPERIAL GERMANY, suffices for our purpose that they were years of unre- mitting work and successful effort with Bismarck. Their cahn was only once disturbed by the Luxem- burg quarrel in 1867, which would have led to war then had it not been for Bismarck's moderation. This, again, must be regarded as a striking instance of that self-control and moderation in success so conspicuous in Bismarck's character ; doubly so, when we bear in mind that he already regarded war as inevitable. The leading facts of the war of 1870 and the after-results of these unprecedented campaigns are too well known to require that we should dwell on them. It suffices for our purpose to point out that, onerous as were the conditions imposed on the van- quished in the eyes of the placid onlooker, it was notoriously the work of Bismarck that they were not far more so. Here, as in 1866, Bismarck was opposed by Moltke, of whom a most impartial French writer says, " Had Moltke had his way, France would have been annihilated." And let there be no mistake : there was nobody to stop the way ; Austria was powerless, liussia passive, and the offers of England's interference had been coldly de- clined. The calm, dispassionate moderation of Bismarck in success, although, perhaps, hardly per- ceptible to our eyes, has yet been recognized as one of his striking characteristics even by individual Frenchmen. It is beside our purpose to enter chronologically here into the details of his latter-day internal ad- ministration ; we only wish to summarize. BISMARCK. 127 The supreme position he gained for himself and helped to gain for his country has, since 1870, been utilized in the interests of peace, so that it has been well said that never before lias such immense political power been used with such moderation. This is, perhaps, the brightest jewel in Bismarck's crown of glory, even if in justice we must admit that he only shares it with his late Imperial master. This moral position led to what was perhaps, in one sense, the greatest triumph of his life, when, after the late Turco-Eussian War, Europe seemed on the eve of a desperate struggle, and Eussia and England met at Berlin, and sought the adjustment of their differences at the hands of the '• honest broker." Side by side with the popular ovation that greeted Bismarck on the attainment of his seventieth birthday — April 1/85— we cannot resist the temp- tation of referring to the letter his Sovereign wrote to him in September 1884, on the occasion of con- ferring on him the military insignia of the order ' pour le merite.* For it seems the due recognition of services such as rarely have been rendered to a State by a subject, and is doubtless unique in his- tory as the tribute of a Sovereign, who thus honoured himself as much as him whom he distin- guished : — " Athough the significance of this order is in- tended to be essentially military, still you ought to have had it long ago. For, in truth, you have shown the highest courage of the soldier' in many hard times, and besides, in two wars you have shown at my side that, beside all other distinctions, you pw^S'i-'^ 128 IMPERIAL GERMANY, have the fullest claim to a high military one. Thus I make up for omissions ( Versditmtes) in sending you herewith the order ' pour le merite/ with oak leaves added, if only to express thereby that you ought to have had it before, and that you have deserved it again and again. I so fully appreciate in you the heart and mind of a soldier that I hope, in sending you this order, which many of your ancestors wore witli pride, to give you pleasure. In doing so it affords me satisfaction to feel that I am thereby crrantins: a deserved distinction as a soldier to the man wliom God's gracious providence has placed by my side, and who has done so much for his country." IV. Thus the people, who were so slow to recognize the man, have come to look upon everything that lias occurred, good or bad, as directly foreseen by or emanating from him. Of course this is as far from being the case as the estimate of public opinion is ever far from being the verdict of history. No human being foresees every turn of the wheel of time : in nine times out of ten it is the unforeseen that occurs even to the ken of genius. But great men meet the unexpected whilst mediocrity is over- taken and crushed by it. Nor are his great suc- cesses alone the most remarkable in the man. The way he lias repeatedly turned an awkward occur- rence to his advantage supplies us with subject for admiration. When German colonial annexations caused an outburst of patriotism in Spain to defend BISMARCK. , her riglits to the Caroline Islands, public opinion thought that at last Bismarck liad got into trouble But lo ! lie proposes the arbitration of the Pope and by that single move does more, without loss of dig- nity, to conciliate the Catholic world than a series of reactionary laws might have attained. Uniformly successful abroad, lie has failed but once— namely, in ]iis struggle with a foe of a thousand years, the power of Rome. And yet even here, although he failed to conquer, neither was it a defeat ; concessions have been made on both sides Here he failed because success was hardly possible' Yet just this failure supplies us with a forcible Illustration of a great trait in the man. After bein- identified for years with open antagonism to the 1 apal See, it must have cost his pride no triflinn- pang to step out lustily on the road to Canossa— lie, a staunch Protestant— smokin.a the pipe of peace witii the placidity of an lionest" purpose _ After leaning for years for support on the best intellect of (iermany, after being hailed as the torch- bearer of the modern spirit of enlightenment against the temporal pretensions of mediaeval Papacy it cannot have been with a light heart that he threw in his lot with many elements of superstition and class prejudice. But those elements meant support against the wild dream of anarchic Socialism, aaaiust the petty spirit of " particularismus," which is not dead even up to tlie present day.* K j 130 IMPERIAL GERMANY. If personal arabition — a word that reads so close to egregious vanity — had been his motive-power, is it to be supposed that a passionate, vindictive nature like Bismarck's would have taken such a step ? History is only too rich in instances to show how far easier it is for ambitious natures to be "con- sistent " in their self-willed aims than to turn back in the face of friend and foe, and boldly cry out, *' Peccavi ! I was wrong ; I underrated the power of the spirits I raised too readily. I must retrace my steps." Now, although Cicero long ago warned his com- patriots that no liberal man should impute a charge of unsteadiness to another for having changed his opinion,* that dreadful German pedantic fad, "Ueber- zeugungstreue " (fidelity to conviction), has laid hold of Bismarck on the score of his changed opinions, and reproached him with it. He has been accused of his former leanings towards Austria, of his con- version to Protection, besides his change of front towards the Vatican. Well did he retort to such charges, that he tliought he had therein the advan- tage over those who still remained where they were a generation ago. And this must seem well founded to all those who do not share the belief of the supernatural prescience of statesmen, but rather see their genius in the capacity of profiting by experience and of turning the unforeseen to their advantage. * Our own statesmen— Lord Beaconsfield, Mr. Gladstone and Lord Derby— supply striking instances of changing convictions. }') BISMARCK. Napoleon wlio wrote to his brother Joseph, Kin-, of Spam, "I know I shall find tl>e pillars of Hercule^ m Span,, but not the linnts of my power," would have come down to posterity a far greater man if bitter ex-penence had taught him to recant in time and that the hmits of his power were limited to omewhere about the Mine. Has history dealt knidly with hnn because the warnings Providence aent were lost on him ? Has histor^ notlenS nm the adjective of "Great," notwithstandi g h his reach, of rising above his ambitious self and Herein is to be found the main difference between «ie intellectual power as well as the ambition Ta Napoleon and that of a Bismarck-namely, in he difference of the meaning of the latter word tse^ To rnany, Bismarck is the very archetype of an ambitious nature ; and so he may be, only with the proviso which his enemies fofgetlnam tha there is such a thing as an almost divine amiiUon mat IS all earthly ambition compared to the ambt lous hope most of us confess to-of a more .lorfous future ? Bearing the latter ambition in mind Tow can we ride roughshod over the deMnition of '^^Z tion, and qualify it as a questionable Muality% To certainty of unhappiuess in this world may seem as worthy as the ambition that prompts us to be anxToits for our personal welfare hereafter If there is such a thing as a noble ambition to K 2 132 IMPERIAL GERMANY. i ) serve one's country, surely that quality in its highest acceptation is to be found in Bismarck. And, as far as we can judge, we may even qualify his desire to serve his country as one that has its origin in the rights of man ; the right to exist as an independent country, free to develop its institutions in peace. Tor the idea of serving his country by despoiling alien races, which has been the excuse of so many victorious conquerors, has never been one that found favour in his eyes. Without, perhaps, being one of those fanatical believers in the gospel of nationalities — for he is far too clear-sighted to be a blind believer in any set doctrine— it is well known that he re- gretted the military necessity of annexing purely French territory in 1870. All his previous con- quests have been limited to territory to which the Empire of Germany was legitimately entitled by ties of race and historical traditions. We have only to gauge the extent of the German military successes by historical comparisons in order to become con- vinced of the clear-headed, sagacious moderation of the man in the midst of world-striking success. It is interesting to note how Fortune favours those w4io have not exhausted her kindness, and how she totally forsakes those who have once abused her. This is strikingly illustrated by the careers of Napoleon I. and Bismarck. The peculiarity of the latter is that he has lived to prove that he deserved the smiles Fortune reserved for him. It seems but natural to turn to history for com- parisons, and few characters offer so tempting a subject for drawing parallels as that of Bismarck. '^'^'"^'-^^ *— •— "'^-niii^ BISMARCK. ^33 For everything about the man is definite and power- fully outlined, down to the exact number of his hirsutory adornments, the popularly accepted three hairs, no more nor less. And this is, in its way, symptomatic. Nothing is too trifling for his indi- vidual attention, and he brings the same amount of dogged determination to bear on his ef!brts to protect the obscure German trader in East Africa as if a great interest were at stake. To our mind the character in English history which personally offers most affinity to him is that of Lord Olive. The story of Olive's boyhood is such as we could fancy Bismarck's. And if the child be father to the man, Bismarck, again, in his schoolboy days, sitting among the branches of a tree and declaiming the '' Iliad " to his schoolfellows, reminds us of Olive. Bismarck's youthful predilection for Ajax Telamon among all Homeric heroes seems to strike a common key in the two men's characters --the hardy fighter, less intent on playing a lead- ing part than in giving play to the unbounded anmial spirits of strife for its own sake, but withal honest and trustworthy, if somewhat rough! In daring allied to cunning, again, they resemble each other, though it was only in their maturity that they were called upon to play the Homeric part of Ulysses. The history of Olive's manipulation of Surajah Dowlah and the doubtful treaty with Omichund offers some resemblance to Bismarck's hoodwinking of Napoleon III. and his diplomatic agents. Olive's marriage and the close ties of intellectual 134 IMPERIAL GERMANY, BISMARCK, 135 sympathy that bound hiiii to Lady Clive during his whole life again present many points of resemblance with what we know of Bismarck. And, lastly, the judgment of popular opinion, if not analogous in both cases, is at least curiously suggestive. The following description of Bismarck's personal appearance is interesting as being from the pen of a Frenchman : — "The outward aspect alone of the man denotes something out of the common ; the round face has something of the bull-dog : the broad bald forehead ; the deep-seated eyes beneath thick brows, with their impenetrable depth of expression ; the sardonic mouth, badly hidden beneath the moustache; enormous ears, as if to catch every sound ; the broad chin : everything gives the idea of power and brutality. He is colossal. I have seen him on horseback in the white uniform of the Maf>debur']f Cuirassiers ; I seemed to see one of the mythical sons of Haimon." V. Bismarck is a staunch believer in the monarchical principle, and is thoroughly German in his anxiety to guard the privileges of the Crown. In fact, his cliaracter as a whole, exceptional as it is, is in many respects distinctly typical of his country, even down to his bursts of irritability. His deference to the Crown is the result of honest conviction, for there is not an ounce of the courtier or self-seeking oppor- tunity hunter in his composition. The stubborn honesty of his nature excludes all possibility of such qualities. With the courage of one who knows not the meaning of fear, instead of blinding himself to the demands of the Social Democrats, whilst combat- ing them, he has yet tried to gain for himself the knowledge of what is practicable in their demands ; and out of it we see tlie system of insurance against sickness, in case of accident, and lastly, the project of pensions in old age, come one after the other for the benefit of the working classes. He has tried hard to stimulate the manufacturing classes of the country, and, riglitly or wrongly, has sought the assistance of Protection for that purpose. His aim is plain— to make his country independent of foreign manufacturers, and to force others to accept German products. His colonial policy, whether suc- cessful or not in the future, has at least already had the one result of giving an enormous moral impetus to the trade of the country. Whilst party government shows everywhere a craven anxiety to employ only its own partisans — as if rule were a reward of the nature of a bribe Bismarck has souglit co-operation among every shade of opinion down to that of formerly ostracized Ee- publicans. He himself has put it : "I welcome co- operation gratefully from every side, and ask not what party it comes from." This, however, from no mere accommodation to self-interest. Every action of his is intended to kindle the national spirit, and in this conciliation is but a means to an end. Thus, if he is slightly responsible for a certain boisterous self-assertion in the academical youth of late, the increase of students' pugnacity, &c., it must be taken in this light. Also ^.^ '4 136 IMPERIAL GERMANY. I ; li "1 ! i! Wx 11 his well-known refusal to receive a German book printed in Latin characters, though surprising to us in its pettiness, is doubtless part of a well-weighed system of n^-tional propaganda. As he has never disdained to avail himself of the smallest advantage in foreign politics, so also no means are too trifling to gain the end in view nearer home, for the end justifies them. But narrow natures — political faddists — who ride about on the broomsticks of ragged principles, would fain judge him, and show us their methods how to raise a people out of the political mud of the past. His opponents have not shown that they possess the magnanimity they pretend to find lacking in him. There has been too much wounded vanity turned to hate. Much of the opposition Bismarck has encountered in his home policy may be traced to the spirit of jealousy felt by advocates of social reform because they were not allowed to carry out their own mea- sures — a feature of parliamentary government in all countries. Many also have been too sensitively anxious to show that they were not led captive by the glamour of military success, and in some notable instances this feeling has been the result of ex- cessive vanity. The average Germans have acute perception, and yet they have never been appre- ciators of a great man. A sort of self-consciousness makes them loth to surrender their judgment to unqualified admiration for home genius. Goethe, Schiller, and other great Germans knew something of this ; and Bismarck himself has said some- BISMARCK. J 37 thing sarcastically on this subject, referred to else- where. Thus, although long all-powerful, he has been the subject of venomous hatred in his own country which. It must be admitted, he has given back in cur- rent com. It was but natural, in an age that loves to make itself believe everything can be done in kid-gloves, Bismarck's remark to Count Beust that when once we get our enemy in our power it is our duty to crush him, sliould cause surprise or horrify some. (This animus does not seem to nullify another saying of his, that we ought to be outwardly polite to our enemies even to the steps of the scaffold ') Ihe memorable conflict between Bismarck and Count Arnim is a case in point. He pursued the Count even to the jaws of death, and there can be no doubt that the punishment of Arnim was out of all pro- portion to whatever he may have been guilty of But we must remember behind Arnim stood the violent hatred of an entire clique, whom Bismarck struck at in their leader. This was well known at the time, for even the Emperor declared himself powerless to save Arnim from the hatred of the Chancellor. There are battles in political life in which the price of defeat in some countries must be annihilation. That Bismarck is a good hater- enough so to delight the heart of Dr. Johnson— he has abundantly proved ; and tliat his nervous irrita- bihty— his impatience of opposition— has largely in- creased of late years is generally understood.'' That he has allowed himself to be carried away by the opposition of his enemies, even to impugn their 138 IMPERIAL GERMANY. r '1' . I motives witliout sufficient cause, notably in the debate on the tobacco monopoly, will hardly be denied. Eor all that, we do not believe that a trifling wound to his personal vanity alone could lead Bismarck to proceed to such lengths. There are plenty of incidents known when he rose superior to it. Among them the following : — Count d'Herisson, an officer of the French general staff, tells us in his book, "Journal d'un Officier d'Ordonnance," how he was sent to Versailles to deliver to Prince Bismarck the document signed by the French Government embodying the capitulation of Paris. On the road thither he conceived the bold idea of endeavourino:, on his own account, to obtain the release from one onerous condition of the capitu- lation — namely, the surrender of the flags of the Paris garrison. He therefore told Bismarck that he had brought the document ready signed, but with instructions only to deliver it up if the Germans would relinquish their claim to the French flags. ^ At first Bismarck was very irritated and excited, but gave in at last; thus Count d'Herisson's rmc de fjucrrc was successful. When his book appeared, this passage was met with strong doubts by the public. But it turned out to be perfectly true, for Bismarck caused a letter to be written to Count d'Herisson telling him that he had read his book with great interest, and he complimented Count d'Herisson on the patriotic victory he had gained over him. In this as in many other instances Bismarck has shown a generosity of feeling towards foreign foes BISMARCK, 139 that he has rarely shown to opponents of his own nationality. VI. Even Iiis deficiencies are interesting and often sympathetic to us. At a time when many statesmen divide their energies between the task of rulin- and horse-racing, the collecting of old china, casuistic theology, and other pastimes, it is almost refreshing to find a man wlio honestly tells you that he under- stands nothing of the old masters, that he is too old to learn to appreciate " high art," that he does not know tlie inside of an opera-house or of a concert hall and that he prefers an Italian organ-grinder to a plienomenal tenor. Bismarck's dislike of the Press is well known but is not surprising when we bear in mind how it has followed him all through liis political career. How often public opinion expressed through the Press has announced his approaching decline, only to see iini rise through each succeeding crisis higher and higher m influence and power. But strong charac- ters, such as he, are not so likely to be appreciated by those of whom Spenser says ; Therefore the vulgar did about him flocke, And cluster thicke unto his Icasings vaine, (Like foolish Flies about an Honey crocke,)' In hope by him great benefite to gaine, And uncontrolled Freedome to obtaine. Also he has been denied the dangerous gift of oratory, of which its detractors say, with some reason, that It has done more harm than good in the world! 140 IMPERIAL GERMANY. Orators have rarely been statesmen. Curiously enough, too, history teaches us that most great orators have appeared coeval with a nation's decay : witness Demosthenes and Cicero. Also the thunderbolts that the late M. Gambetta hurled from his jaws only served to re-echo the cry of a defeated country 1 Neither Eichelieu nor Cromwell nor Washington were orators, yet history does not tell us that their states- manship suffered from the lack of this accomplish- ment. Bismarck's is not a nature we can imagine turn- ing out well-oiled periods or emitting polished Ciceronic shafts. But if his periods are nervously jagged and lack rotundity, they fly as straight as a dart, and, where they strike, they pierce the enemy through and through, and thence pursue their winged course right across the country, to be remembered as sledge-hammer blows of conviction and hard- striking reason. The question of Bismarck's reported dislike of Endand and the English has been too often mooted not to warrant a passing reference. If we may draw our conclusions from many references to England in his private correspondence, and also from the fact of both his sons receiving English baptismal names (Herbert and William*), we should say that, next to Germany, there is no country and no people Bismarck originally felt so much sympathy with as England and tlie English. On the other hand, there are some who aver that the continual upholding of BISMARCK. 141 English doctrines and methods he has had to encounter in Parliament, not to mention certain occult English influences constantly brought up in even higher places to counteract liis plans, have had their share in souring him against this country That Bismarck is only too happy if he comes in contact with a representative of England who is congenial to him is abundantly proved by his studied attention and courtesy to Lord Beacoiisfield* durin- the Berlin Congress. "^ In conclusion, to many it may come as a surprise when we say that Bismarck's nature is 'm its root essentidly religious. The categorical imperative of Kant is by him translated into a dominatino- in. fluence, and in the light of his own private "con- fession we must regard him as drawing his stren-th and foresight from the constant sense of dependence on a higher Will which has called him to his place at the head of the German people. For instance we find this frank and almost brusque statesman thus writing in tlie autumn of 1872, while the vie- tories of the war were vet fresh : " If I were not a Christian, I would not serve my Kmg another hour. If I did not obey my God and put my trust in Him, my respect for earthly rulers would be but small. I have enough to live upon and, as a private man, I should enjoy as much con- * For he is called Bill in the family circle. T }\^''^' interesting to English readers to remember that Lord Beaconsfield~at all times a great judge of character-was one of the few who were impressed with Bismarck's frank state- ment of his ambitious aims in 1862, and anticipated their fulfil- ment. 142 IMPERIAL GERMANY. sideration as I desire. Why, then, should I exhaust myself with unwearying labour in this world, why expose myself to difficulties, unpleasantness, and ill- treatment, if I had not the feeling that I must do my duty before God and for His sake ? If I did not believe in a Divine Government of the world which had predestined the German nation to some- thing great and good, I would abandon the trade of diplomacy at once, or, rather, I should never have undertaken it. I do not know whence my sense of duty should come except from God. Titles and decorations have no charm for me. The confident belief in life after death— that is it— that is why I am a Eoyalist ; without it, I should by nature be a Eepublican. All the steadfastness with which I have for ten years resisted every conceivable ab- surdity has been derived only from my resolute faith. Take this faith from me, and you take my country too How willingly would 1 leave it all ! I am fond of country life, of the fields and the woods. Take away from me my belief in my personal relation to God, and I am the man to pack up my things to-morrow, to escape to Varzin, and look after my crops 1 " To us these words bear the impress of deep sin- cerity. They are clear water welling down the old crrey rock, fresh, sweet, pure, and beautiful, round whose course as it flows fragrant flowers may grow, making the hard, harsh outline soft and radiant. ( 143 ) CHAPTEE VIL THE ARMY. Nullos mortalium armis aut fide ante Germanos esse—TAciTus. I. Victory has given the German army a unique posi- tion m the eyes of the world. Tliere is no deny- nig that its composition and cliaracteristics excite an mterest the extent of which can only be com- pared to its achievements. If a great standing army be a grim, unavoidable evil, at least it can be said of the German army that Its end justifies the means that called it into existence. It is an army of peace. It is a nation m arms to secure peace ! Its moral standimr is by far the highest of any army the world has yet seen. Armies, too patent sources of immorality and rowdy- ism in all otlier times and countries, this one is a decided agent of discipline and morality. TJie habits of punctuality, of obedience, of discipline, the inculca- tion of the instincts of honour in the humblest, the meeting of all classes in the nation on one common ground of feeling and duty, have physically and morally strengthened tlie whole German people 144 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE ARMY, M5 This fact is visible to the naked eye of any obser- vant traveller who crosses the German frontier at different points, and compares the populations of the different countries. We, who are proverbially slow to recognize or to acknowledge foreign prowess — and not without some excuse, for we have plenty of our own to look back ^xpon — we even have come to look upon the German army as something to be admired. " The sternest man-slaying system since the days of Sparta," one of our most able periodicals termed it. Even a Frenchman could not help saying that although the German soldiers would not, " of course," compare with the French, still there was no denying the merit of the German officers ! " I have seen them driving their men forward a coup (V^pdc," he said. But not alone Frenchmen ; it has often struck Englishmen that the victories of the Germans have failed to impress many others with the idea of their individual prowess. When we say individual prowess, we mean that glamour of individual valour and dash in the rank and file that has ever had a touch of romance to the eyes of the crowd. For who cannot remember the halo that surrounded our men on their return from the Crimea, and the French Zouaves after the storming of the Malakoft*, &c. &c. ! If failure to impress in this way be a fact, and one that was based on accurate observation, then indeed the qualities of supreme animal courage are not an- swerable for the superiority of the Germans in the field; qualities, that John Bright tells us, can be bought to any extent in the world's market at ;^2 a week ! I It IS well to dwell ou this fact, and to endeavour to draw from it the only legitimate inferences that present themselves— namely, that Germany owed her success in the field to far higher qualities than those which of old weiglied down the scales in the victors favour. Bismarck boasted, in his speech of February 6, '88 that the Germans fear nobody but God. If we mi^hi be pardoned differing from him in this particular instance, we would venture to say that the average German fears even a current of fresh air, which he calls a draught, more than anybody else in Europe. Unlike the French, who are intoxicated by martial g ory. If he does not fear fighting, at least it has no charms for him ; he dislikes it. I5ut the strength of the Germans lies in the fact that at the call of duty tiiey overcome their fears, and stand— a nation in arms-ready to meet those who have put them to tlie trouble of doing so. The German arm'y is not meant to produce pug- nacious hei^es ; it has a higher aim. for it succeeds m even traming the coward to overcome histimiditv and to do his duty. "^ II. With the vast improvements in our time in fire- arms generally, other instincts than of old must be caUed upon to face the shock of battle; not per- haps, opposite instincts, but certainly qualities of a iiigher order than hitherto required. The soldiers who of old would show the wild beast roused within them in the heat and excitement of a hard-fouc^ht 146 IMPERIAL GERMANY. hand-to-hand grapple might not be equally ready to stand at ease quietly for hours while the piti- less " ping " of bullets — tired at a range of 1 000 yards— desalt death and devastation in their sullen lines. Troops in days gone by were seldom called upon to make forced marches to the degree that is often called for in the present day; nor were human beings ever expected to lie down and sleep on the bare fields for weeks together, and that mostly in the pouring rain, as was the case in '70 from Weissenburg to Gravelotte and then on to Sedan. Animal courage alone, however liigh, can never hope to meet such requirements as are now asked of the rank and file of a great European army in the field. That readiness in get ting, killed is not the only quahty required is shown by the fact that thirty-six German cavalry regiments did not lose a single man during the whole campaign of '70 ! The Sixth- Army Corps hardly was under lire at all. We, who have not known a war in modern days with an equally armed foe, have never been called upon to realize facts bearing upon one, and yet they are most important if we wish to consider the suc- cess of the German arms with a view to learn some- thing from it. Besides perfect organization, it was the lofty spirit —the stern sense of duty— which alone, under leaders of consummate genius, made those victories possible! And these leaders, in their turn, were nothing else but the outcome and result of that supreme sense of conscientiousness and duty which is the one key-note of the whole organization of ^ THE ARMY, 147 Prussia, civil and military. This trait is striking from highest to humblest — from the King, who reported himself ready for duty, down to the humblest I'omeranian peasant who, at the trumpet call of war, quietly reported himself at the nearest place of enrolment and exchanged the hoe for the musket. If Danton truly characterized " audacity," again and again "audacity," as the watch wwd of suc- cessful revolution, we might with equal justice define " duty," " duty " again and again, as the key- note, the rallying-point, of Prussia's success in the field! This feeling is even unassisted by the tra- ditional " contempt " for an enemy which has ever been inculcated in the breast of the common soldier elsewhere. This undervaluing of the enemy has been supposed to increase the moral strength of an army, although history does not show that it ever pre- vented a defeat turning into a rout. The Prussians, both officers and men, are intuitively taught to overrate an enemy. Both in '66 and 'yo the prevailing opinions were of the superiority of the Austrian cavalry, of the French infantry, &c. The soldiers themselves used to make tlieir assertions dispassionately, but with a strongly expressed re- servation that, notwithstanding probable first defeats, they hoped to win in the end. History has shown that this diffidence did not prevent them being victorious from commencement to finish. The true value of this sobriety of spirit could only have been shown by temporary defeat — by the defensive— and we feel sure that the nation which, above all others :s L 2 148 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARMY, M9 , t I I T^Km in Europe, individually hates war and bloodshed would have shown that spirit under defeat which is more readily found in troops that respect their enemies than in those that despise them, and who, however brave, have to overcome the disenchantment of finding out their mistake too late ! III. The Bohemian campaign of 1866 brought one Prussian name prominently to the front — that of Creneral Steinmetz, the lion of Nachod. He was a splendid example of that type of stubborn soldier ready to sacrifice any number of his men in his dowered determination to rout the foe. This type of soldier has been common to all times and countries. The Prussian army had seen no active service worth mentioning for generations, and a man of General Steinmetz's mould was v/ell adapted to help it over the first squeamishness in tasting blood. Therefore it was but natural that this rugged soldier of the Bliicher scliool (if it be fair to com- pare him to so modest a character as old Marshal *•' Vorwiirts ") should have come out of the Bohemian campaign to find his name a household word at home. In any other country we should have had that frail female commonly called " public opinion " pointing to General Steinmetz as the man to lead supreme in future struggles. Not so in Prussia. A higher standard than that of public opinion directed and watched over the destinies of Germany. General Steinmetz's achievements were recognized I and rewarded as they deserved to be, but not beyond their deserts. When, in '70, a nation in arms crossed the Pihine to the strains of " Die Wacht am Pthein," it found General Steinmetz in command of the First Army. He was not a man to wait long for orders when an enemy was in sight. He stormed the heights of Spicheren and achieved a brilliant victory, though at the price of a terrible loss of life. But the workmanship that was good enough in '66 was no longer to be tolerated in '70. General Steinmetz had attacked without, if not against, orders, and, although victorious, had dis- concerted the plans of his superiors, which, if properly carried out, were intended to cut off the army he had beaten at such heavy cost. In any other country we are acquainted with that frail hussey "public opinion" would have lifted the victorious General into her lap, and he would have been on the high road to further honours and rewards. Not so in Prussia ; General Steinmetz was com- manded to appear before the Pied Prince and hear his fate. " Your Excellency, although an old soldier, has presumably forgotten what it is to obey 1 " words which, translated into their subsequent mean- ing, conveyed the order to go home at once, stripped of his command, in disgrace : " Cassio, I love thee ; but never more be officer of mine." At the battle of Le Bourget (before Paris), October 30, 1870, the storming column, consisting of the " Queen Elizabeth Pegiment," the first battalion of the regiment " Queen Augusta," and the second % \ ,'iAt ISO IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARMY. 151 "4 company of the pioneers of the Guard, was led by Colonel Count Kanitz. They were exposed to a murderous fire whilst the pioneers had to w^ork their way gradually through every obstacle in their path. The second battalion of the Elizabeth Eegi- ment advances with flying colours, when its standard- bearer falls ; another non-commissioned officer seizes the standard, but he, too, is struck down. At that moment General v. Budritzki dismounts, seizes the flag, and rushes on in advance of his grenadiers. Around him fall in quick succession Colonel v. Zaluskowski, the commander of the Elizabeth liegi- ment, and Count Waldersee, wlio had only rejoined the army a few days cured of the wound he had received at Gravelotte. The papers were full of this deed of valour of General v. Budritzki, but for all that he was not promoted to an independent command. Heroism is not enough in Prussia to be entrusted with tlie welfare of a Prussian army corps. It is even reported that, although General Her- warth von Bittenfeld commanded the vanguard column in 1866, Moltke refused to grant him a cor- responding command in '70, notwithstanding the repeatedly expressed wish of the King himself, with whom he was an especial favourite. A Prussian officer does not hold a responsible command because of his bravery, but because of his supposed talent for the disjjosition of troops (Bis- positio7istale nt). These incidents are instructive as showinoj how heroes, however exalted, who disobey orders, or who — even far less — are judged incompetent although appearance successful, are dealt with by the ^^ petent directing minds in the German army. com- IV. Neither the efficiency of the German army nor the choice of its leaders depends on the watchfulness of public opinion ; it is perfectly independent of it, and this is one of the chief causes of its excellence. Even Count Waldersee, the successor of Field- Marshal Moltke, is practically unknown to the public, as he has never yet held an independent command in action. The one supreme condition, the purity of the fountain-head, no public opinion can guarantee ; only the " spirit" that dwells in the immediate confidence of the ruler, and makes itself felt down to the common soldier, can do that. What public opinion is capable of doing with regard to an army we have seen only lately. In Erance, General Boulanger was installed at the War Office, his popularity daily on the increase. If, during that period, one of those frontier squabbles had led to war. General P^oulanger would have been called by public opinion perhaps to the chief com- mand of the army ! In this instance public opinion might have placed the fates of weal and woe of a nation of 38,000,000 in the hands of an intriguer of doubtful ability ! A recent instance of the line adoj^ted by public opinion in army matters in Austria is related farther on. If we are to judge by our own experience of 152 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARMY. 15 public opinion at home, we may fairly assume that, if we were engaged in a serious struggle, we should be " sloiiglied " with heroes. An enterprising Press would see that they should break out all over the national body like boils. Not so in the case of Prussia in the war of '70. The mightiest war of modern times hardly produced a dozen men round the brows of whom public opinion could weave its meretricious wreaths. It was not intended it should. It was looked upon as bad form in the army to be thought a hero; and a good sign it was so. Quiet duty was the watchword. Cheap heroism would often have been easier to gain than to fulfil quiet duty. Men who had been too anxious to distinguish themselves were looked at askance by their comrades. After tlie war a silent etiquette was promulgated that conversations relating to in- dividual prowess were to be avoided. Everybody was expected to do his duty, and nothing more. The result proved that it has been fairly done. The directing minds said that it was not done in vain. The campaigns of '64, of '66, of '70, came and passed. Their butcher's bills were quietly settled without swords and bayonets bending, cartridges jamming, and figliting men being poisoned by rotten provisions. Would tliat our historians could say the same of our recent brawls with savages ! It may be opined that the Iron Cross was after all a premium on personal distinction, and so it was in one sense, but not in a vulgar, sporting sense. The Iron Cross came as a reward for duty done more than for personal distinction acliieved, and in its application and distribution a " truly " demo- cratic spirit prevailed. The Iron Cross was in many instances on the breast of the sergeant and common soldier before it was affixed to the uniform of those in responsible conmiand. Leaving the ranks to carry wounded comrades to the rear— a common form of distinction in some countries — was hardly a passport to the Iron Cross in '70. Bismarck is said to have jokingly remarked to a German prince, who like himself wore the Iron Cross, that they had both received it as a compliment. V. But as everything has its two sides, so do the aspects of personal achievement. Nor do we mean to say that there was no element of individual prowess m '70. We only mean to imply that tlie cheap sort of meretricious heroism at the expense of duty, which has been and would again be ruin in serious battle, was not encouraged nor rewarded. To prove that every rule may have its exceptions, we cannot help mentioning one of the few facts that have come to our knowledge in which the limits of duty were almost exceeded in a quiet and unostentatious chivalrous manner. It was at the hard-fought battle of Gravelotte that a company of the Alexander Guard infantry regiment was standino- under a withering hail of bullets. The men were ordered to lie down under cover. The officers alone, as if by a superhuman instinct, remained upright,' 154 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARMY. 155 .jp- to show the men that, although they were not to be needlessly exposed, there was even more expected of those who were placed above them ! Of twenty officers eicfhteen were killed or wounded on that occasion. If their action was an excess of duty, it was not of a meretricious character. It was done quietly, unostentatiously, with no reporters in sight, and with no individual reward to follow. The true reward was, however, found in the devotion of the troops themselves. For a few days afterwards, on the road to Sedan, this very battalion marched twenty-three hours out of the twenty-four without leavinGj a simple man behind ! It is not so much success as the causes that lead to it that must interest tlie observer. Our monthly periodicals dwell from time to time on the efficiency of our army, and draw compari- sons between it and those of continental nations. Lately a writer in the Contemporary Revieio stated that "the German armies were defeated by the first Eepublic and by the Empire of France because they were living on the ' old traditions ' of Frederick, and had not adapted themselves to the new conditions. For precisely the same reasons the Austrians in 1866 and the French in 1870 went down before the Germans." The above is all very well as applying to certain problems of military science ; but the " new con- ditions " above mentioned are not identical, nor covered by any new systems of military tactics or strategy. For instance, in '66 the Austrian artil- lery was superior to the Prussian, and in '70 the French rifles were again far superior to the German needle-gun. The fact is the " new conditions " are as old as the days of Sparta ; besides all tactical innovations and strategical skill in the leadership, they mean the fighting condition of a liealthy strong community with a great cause, and full moral con- fidence in tliat cause at its back. The " old tradi- tions " are as old as Darius and the battle of Arbela, and mean the going down of an order of things that has outlived itself through age or unfitness or corruption before the onslaught of health and strength. The " old traditions " are alive in our midst in England, as shown by the evidence of the Eoyal Commission to inquire into the weapons and ammu- nition of our army after the late Egyptian campaign, and it reported that the bayonets, the swords, as well as the ammunition supplied were partly defective or useless. The fiour was rotten, the biscuits mildewed, and almost every other article of food inferior or adulterated. And yet there was nobody to hang ! When a regiment was to embark from an Irish port, it was found that half the men were dead drunk! These are the old traditions ! In Prussia, such is the honest thoroughness and efficient solicitude for the army that, when the war of '70 broke out, as if by magic tlie whole army was found supplied, and kept supplied, with an excellent food, tlie very name of which— the now- celebrated pea-sausage— had never before been heard of by the public. Such is an instance of the " new conditions " of modern warfare. 156 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE ARMY, 157 It is this wondrous efficiency, this honest and effective administration and devotion to duty from top to bottom that arrest our attention. YI. We repeat, it is the honest devotion to duty of the unit in the army that impresses us more than the genius of its leaders. The one must pass away, and men will come forward who are compara- tively untried, but the other can, and must, remain at all hazards. The German subaltern officer works in the midst of his men ; he presides not only over the drill, which in England is left to non-commissioned officers, but he is their moral as well as their technical in- structor. His whole heart is in his profession and with his men, like a foreman in a workshop. Thus he exercises an influence over the character of the rank and file confided to his care that remains with them in after-life. The Prussian army has been the means of raising the moral as well as the physical standard of the masses of the country ! The following extract from the German Field Service Eegulations for 1887, issued for the use of the rank and file of the army, may prove interest- ing : — " The soldier may learn to march and to handle his weapons by practice ; also his body and his mental powers may be developed and steeled ; but time alone can produce that discipline which is the key-stone of the army. This is the first condition of every success, and must be cultivated and nurtured above everything else. A superficial cohesion merely gained through practice will give way in critical moments and under the influence of unforeseen occurrences. Only by the most thorough training of the unit can the necessary cohesive action of the many be attained The officer is the teacher and leader in every department. This necessitates his possessing superiority of knowledge and of ex- perience, as well as superior strength of character. "Without fear of responsibility, every officer in every crisis — even the most exceptional — must devote his whole being to tlie task of carrying out his instruc- tions, even without waiting for orders respecting details. The personal behaviour of the officer is the most decisive influence on the rank and file, for the inferior is subject to the impression that coolness and determination make all along the line. It is not sufficient to conmiand ; the manner of the com- manding exercises a great influence over the sub- ordinates. Conduct and example create confidence, and nerve the troops to action that commands success. .... Every one — from the highest officer down to the youngest soldier — must always bear in mind that omission and neglect are more punishable than a mistake in the choice of means of action." VII. In the Prussian army such a thing as appoint- ment by " public form " or promotion by favouritism ■ — let alone nepotism — is unknown. A rigid system ■/,' 158 IMPERIAL GERMANY. 't \ \ of continually testing tlie capacity of officers is at work. Xo length of service will entitle a man to promotion, unless his superiors in command are thoroughly convinced he is in every way fitted for it. After ten or twelve years' service as a lieu- tenant, a man may be judged fitted to lead a com- pany, and thus gets tlie rank of captain. He may be the best company leader in the Prussian service, and yet not have the material for a staff' officer. If such be the opinion of his superiors, good-bye to his hopes of ever becoming a major. When his turn for promotion comes round he receives a quiet hint to retire, and, as a sop, he carries the titular dis- tinction of major into private life, and silently vanishes from the scene. Service in the Prussian army is a national duty, and not necessarily a career for the individual. Shattered hopes, a lost career it may be, but down you go, as mercilessly as the grass before the scythe, in the interest of the community, in the interest of the huge man- slaying machine, in which you were up till lately the tiniest little rivet, and nothing more. This same test is rigorously applied to every pro- motion right up to the rank of full general. That such a merciless system of mutual observation and criticism can exist without de<:eneratin(]: into a hot-bed of intrigue and favouritism, is, in itself, the highest testimony to the moral qualities of the Prussian officer. In other countries the command of a whole army is often given to an incapable THE ARMY, 159 creneral and the results are invariably such as might be expected. No regard for individual sensitiveness m the German army. There they root it out stump and branch in the interest of the country. No title, no family connections, however powerful, are able to do more than enable an offtcer to serve in one of a few exclusive regiments, but are by no means able to guarantee his promotion therein. And yet, when we bear in mind what the Prussian aris- tocracy has done towards making the army what it is, we could even understand a little favouritism, for they have had their bones broken for generations in the service without hardly ever earning any mate- rial reward in return. If pride of birth be pardon- able, it is so in this instance of generations of un- selfish devotion to a hard service. To be nearly related to a great Prussian commander is, if any- thing, a drawback, for the spirit of rigid impartiality towards one's own kith and kin has before now been the means of even hindering an officer's advance- ment. One of Pield-Marshal Moltke's aides-de-camp throughout the Franco-German War— his brother- in-law— came out of it with no higher rank than cap- tain, and retired some years later through ill-health as major on half-pay. (The number of those whose health was subsequently shattered by that struggle almost equalled those of the killed and wounded.) Fancy a favourite relative and ctide-dc-ccmp of Lord Wolseley through a tremendous war— sup- i6o IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARMY. i6i *^nl| posing we can imagine that fortunate peer leading us in a death-grapple — fancy his aidc-ch-cami) coming back as he started, a poor captain of a line regiment ! Yes, this very poverty is one of the hoops of steel that binds the Prussian army. The day the Prussian ofhcers cease to be poor, that day the supremacy of the Prussian army will be on the wane. The danger of luxury is a greater one than any foreign combina- tion. The present young Emperor, when still Prince William, said as much when he gave those peremp- tory orders to his regiment against gambling that created such a sensation at the time. The key-stone of the moral influence and of the position of the Prussian officer is to be sought in the rigid cultiva- tion of the point of honour that may seem almost exaggerated to our eyes. The slightest slur on the character of a Prussian officer is fatal to his chances of promotion, even if it does not entail his imme- diate dismissal. Thus cases of suicide are very fre- quent from causes tliat would appear trivial indeed to those who are not conversant with the rigidity of Prussian notions on this subject. For an officer to become implicated in a brawl or quarrel connected with personal violence, even if innocent, often entails ruin, as it is the uniform he wears that must be kept sacred at all hazards. YIII. So much for a few of the characteristics of the " new system." But there are others than the mere questions of efficiency of commissariat, conscientious- ness in the performance of duty, intellectual acquire- ments of the officers and leaders, and freedom from foul patronage and nepotism that come up for con- sideration when we examine the qualifications of a victorious army. It is not only the old tactical traditions that go down before the modern improved " system ; " it is the meaner impulse that invariably succumbs to the higher, the morally eflete to the strong and healthy. As the Persians went down before the Greeks, and as they in their turn suc- cumbed to the Ptomans, so the latter in their effeminacy bit the dust before hardy barbarian hordes. How clearly the importance of the moral in- fluence is shown by Oliver Cromwell in liis letters ! " How can we expect loafers and tapsters to stand up against gentlemen with a keen sense of honour and loyalty to their Sovereign ? We must give them an even higher impetus : we must appeal to their God ! " And from that day forward, even without new tactical systems, down went the Poyalists ! They went down before the fierce Covenanters, who sought death at their hands, but kept their powder dry ! Coming to later times, we see the same " spirit " at work deciding tlie fate of nations. In the American War of Independence the oft-victorious English had to lower their standard to their own kin. The watchword of " God save the King " was unable to stifle the cry of men fighting for their existence. f 162 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE ARMY. 163 i« :| m I 4 The young French Eepublic singing the "]\Iar- seillaise " and throwing off' the tyranny of a corrupt feudalism was victorious as long as it fought against such, for it was not so much the old lighting system that lowered Prussia's iiags at Jena as the fact of its army having become a haughty, self-indulgent, separate caste, no longer identical with the nation. r>nt as soon as the Prench watchword of "gloiy^" was seriously tested against the devoted religious fanaticism of the Ptussians, not even the genius of a IN'apoleon could prevail. And once the CJerman nation rose to Luther's hymn, " Eine feste Burg ist unser Clott," when once Ernst Moritz Arndt gave out his " Der Gott, der Eisen wachsen liess, der wollte keine Knechte " (The God that bid the iron be, could never wish for slaves) : when this spirit rose, the day of glory (" le jour de gloire " of the " Marseillaise ") had sunk into night and the French marshals were beaten in every engagement in which the great Napoleon did not command in person until the battle of Leipzig gave him the cotip-de-grdcc. It may be an effect of the imagination, but when we remember the soul-stirring sounds of the famous "Watch on the Phine," " Es braust ein Puf wie Donnerschall .... Fest steht und treu die Wacht am Ehein," we tliink we hear the manifestation of that invincible spirit against which it was but natural that the " Marseillaise " should shriek in vain. When w^e recall those public gatherings in Carls- ruhe, Berlin, and elsewhere after the news of the first victories, when the bare-headed crowd joined in those soul-stirring chorals of Luther's, we feel that spirit was bound to conquer. So nmch for the action of the divine instinct which binds us to the unseen and unknown in its influence on the affairs of man in war. It is divine inasmuch as it appeals to and draws its strength from something higher than our every- day selfishness and vanity — the devotion of each unit to the welfare of the entirety. Where this spirit prevails in the ad- ministration as well as in the peoj^le, cartridges will 1)6 found to go off, there also provisions will be found adequate, and there will victory incline. May that stern sense of devotion to duty, may that rare effi- ciency and integrity in its administrators, may that earnest enthusiasm for an independent, united Fatherland, long distinguish the Germans and pre- serve them as the great nation they deserve to be ! IX. Others may try to copy the system that has shown such excellent results, but they cannot suddenly appropriate the qualities that have made the German army what it is. The one and the other are too much bound up in the qualities of the people, and are the result of the laborious work of generations. Parliamentary legislation born of an excited expression of public opinion cannot supply such to order ! To take but one special feature that has done so much to raise the moral value of the rank and file of the German army — the leavening of the mass with the educated element — the one-year service. It has been tried in France, and had to be given M 2 y ( #.. « n 164 IMPERIAL GERMANY, up. The rank and file of that land of equality, instead of benefiting by its association with the educated classes, were envious of the favoured elements, sneered at them as " aristos " (aristocrats), and made their life a misery to them. The con- sequence is that everybody in France now serves equally his full time in the ranks, and many of the educated classes leave the army thoroughly disgusted with the hardship and coarseness of the life and its associations. The career of General Boulanger in itself throws a lurid light on the incapacity to raise the higher ranks of the army to a level that could inspire confidence in their discipline. The French have copied the cunning of espionage, but the unity of moral purpose does not seem yet to be theirs. They have a great military history, and they love war ; the imagination of the race is cap- tivated by it, but it is doubtful whether the tem- perament of the people fits them for its requirements in our day. Tlie next struggle will solve that ques- tion. But one thing is certain : the days of the hcau sahreur of popular imagination — the prize-fighting warriors of old — are gone from the scene of modern warfare for ever. The tactical training of the unit under a model organization of the whole, led by the comprehensive mind, more surely than ever wins the day. The highest discipline without red tape seems to be the recipe for victory nowadays, for nowhere is independence of judgment, freedom of initiative, from the leader of a corps (VaniUc down to the non-com- missioned ofticer, so cultivated and encouraged as in THE ARMY. 165 the German army. The French temperament pos- sesses these qualities to an eminent degree {Vesyrit dc la situation) but it lacks one of the most im- portant qualities that lead to success always — the due subordination of the individual. Of Austrian military affairs we do not often hear much, but, when we do, it is always a sad business. At. the time of the occupation of Bosnia and the Herzegovina after the Treaty of Berlin, their cavalry not only managed to receive a check at the hands of irregulars, but, almost amusing to relate, their soldiers were on several occasions in danger of star- vation. Poor simple souls ; their leaders had doubt- less heard of the Prussian " fiushness " of cash during the '70 war, and, with true Austrian cunning, they had provided themselves with money ! The unimportant fact tliat Bosnia is not identical with wealthy agricultural France had not suggested itself to these strategic thinkers. But far worse than all this was the little episode at CJraz the other day. Austrian public opinion was in a fever of surmise at the sudden misc-cn- retraitc of General von Kuhn. The journals of the dual-monarchy expressed their surprise, and in the hope that the army would not lose the services of such an eminent soldier in the hour of need. No sooner had public opinion let us into its high estimate of General von Kuhn than that distinguished officer himself assists us to form an estimate of its egregious folly. In his speech to 500 officers at Crraz who made a demonstration in his favour, carrying him home on their shoulders and flourishing their swords, 1 66 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE ARMY. 167 Ai he proved himself to be a windbag, as the following few excerpts prove : — " My prowess at Santa Lucia is known ; it belongs to history. It is less known, perhaps, that at Custozza I stood with only two guns and without any cover against a whole army corps, and thus partially contributed to the success of the day In the year 1 8 5 9 I had the intention of taking the offensive. That it did not take place was not my fault. If the offensive liad l^een followed up, things would look different in Europe to-day (!). If we had taken the offensive at Sadowa tlie victory would have been ours." Of such stuff* are officers wlio hold the highest commands still made in Austria, and such is the standard of the rank of the officers tliat 500 of them can be found to applaud it. Xo wonder the Austrian Emperor judged it was time to shunt such a man. It is not too much to say that tlie conduct of General von Kulin, as well as that of the 500 Austrian officers, was as discreditable as it would be impossible in • CJermany. It only proves what a hopelessly long way Austria is yet from that ideal standard of efficiency which they fondly fancy they have acquired by their defeats from the Prussians ! What a contrast to a man such as von Moltke ! Lord Wolseley does iiot believe he will go down to posterity as one of the greatest captains ; but strip him of strategic exploits that seek in vain in history for a parallel to the magnitude of their scale, strip him of that literary ability that has given us charm- ing books of travel, and a purity, a terseness, a dignity of style that has earned a comparison with Tadtus for the history of the '70 war issued by the Prussian (leneral Staff'; strip him of all this, and a character remains, unsullied in its spotless purity as in its modesty: a cultivated intellect of the highest order. Tlie man whose iron, inuiuestioned, supreme decision has winged the flight of Prussian victory, is almost a hermit in the privacy of his Silesian retreat. This silent warrior, for whom the Germans have found in their expressive language the beautiful words, " der Schlochtenlenker, der Schlachtendenker " (the director, the thinker of battle), when this silent thinker speaks, it is the trumpet-blast of war that (^alls for his utterances. They crystallize ; they turn to cn'anite to mark the milestones of history in which his country figures victoriously. Our Wellington in Spain, and Cincinnatus in Pome, unite to furnish historical parallels to his character. His example is the proudest possession of the Prussian army. X. We cannot conclude this chapter without a word of criticism on our own army system, though it is a thankless task— something like firing at a barn- door ten yards off ; you cannot help hitting it ! In order to raise the scientific qualifications of our officers we have — in mistaken imitation of the 1 68 IMPERIAL GERMANY Prussian tests — introduced a severe system of com- petitive examination. As usual with our official imitations, instead of improving on the original we liave entirely missed the substance and grasped the shadow. Such a tiling as " competitive " examina- tion as a means of entering the army does not exist m Prussia. The Prussian aspirant has to pass "an " examination to test his fitness, but not a "com- petitive " one I Therein lies the difference between the substance and the shadow. Our competitive examinations favour the chances of the bookworm to a ridiculous extent, and in many cases exclude tlie cliaracter capable of quick resolution and prompt initiative— qualities so highly valued in the Prussian service that they are even specially dwelt on in the printed instructions for the rank and file of the army previously referred to. Our present method has given us the Staff* College instructors, and started a system of " cramming " by which men who have been pupils and, later on"^ pre- ceptors at the Staff College are able to earn an income of ^5000 to ^6000 a year by preparino candidates for the service examinations ! It does not i-equire any argumentative force to show that our competitive examinations nmst thus miss their mark, for every form of crannning means knowledge artificially acquired and illegitimately applied. There can be little doubt that it even excludes some of the finest material \\\ the country from the army ! But that is the way we have gone in for the " new system " that laid the Austrians and the French low ! And yet one of our leadino- THE ARMY. 169 journals tells us: "We cannot afford to have it understood throughout Europe that there is any point whatever in which the British army is sur- passed by those of continental nations." If this be true, then it is a dead certainty that we indulge in luxuries we cannot afford. Our newspapers are discussing the excellence of the new German drill regulations and advising their adoption. Vain endeavour; the spirit that still believed in 1855 the verdict of the Duke of Wellington in 1815, that a bullet was no use unless large enough to smash a horse's leg — that spirit, unhappily, lives on among us ! Of our officers themselves the Duke of Cambridge sapiently informed us the other day that the main difference between them and the Prussians consists in the fact that the latter live on their pay and the former do not. No, sir, that is not the only differ- ence ; our officers are not only members of a^ privi- leged class, but they feel and work like Foreign Office clerks, from ten till four. Tliey cannot help it if they would ; the surroundings are too strong for them. It may confidently be said of our army that as long as it is administered as it is, fanned by occa- sional gusts of newspaper and public-speaker panics, so long will it remain a sink down which to throw riiillions of money, but never a reliable means of defence to our country ! ( I70 ) CHAPTEII VIII. THE GERMAlSr ARISTOCRACY. Unde superbit homo, cujus conceptio culpa, Nasci poena, labor vita, neccsse mori ? I. :N"ot only in its character, but in its very composi- tion, the German aristocracy sliows a marked con- trast to our own. With us many of tlie most elo- quent panegyrists of aristocracy are to be found outside its charmed circle; in (lermany it would be difficult to find many sympathizers w^th the nobility among the middle classes or among the masses. And the explanation is not to be sought only in the difference of the two aristocracies themselves. Differences of evolution, of tradition, and of influ- ence account for this and many otlier peculiarities of the German aristocracy. We remember the surprise of a great Prussian landowner on being told of the almost tyrannical power our land laws and our leasehold system give to an English territorial grandee. " How can your people put up with it ? " he exclaimed. And yet such is the case. We have long put up with things that have produced revolutions elsewhere. And yet THE ARISTOCRACY, 171 the English aristocracy still has a large following in the country, whilst in Germany the nobility has next to none. Weighty causes must be found to account for this, quite independent of any amount of servility in the English character, or any want of that amiable compound in the (lerman; both nations, to start with, may have little to reproach themselves with on that score. These causes will be found to exist to a large extent in the following facts and their consequences. II. The ( ierman aiistocracy, notwithstanding its many strong points, has ever been not only guilty of great class seltishness— as has ever been every privileged class— but it has been the victim of its own short-sighted and narrow class feeling. In England a far-sighted policy of sacrificing its units has strengthened the power for good and for evil of a class. In Germany the anxiety of each unit to retain its shadowy advantages has resulted in the loss of what was most valuable to retain, and in the retention of much which, though of small value to-day, has contributed not a little to reap for its holders that lack of sympathy of which we find the Germany aristocracy the object in its own country. In olden times a title meant more than a mere empty attribute of privileged birth; it meant a position of power, either personal or inherited. Not so many centuries ago even the oflspring of royal blood in England, let alone the sons of the nobility, 172 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE ARISTOCRACY, 173 were coininoners. Eoyalty has in our day adopted the fiction that every son of a king is born a prince. The main difference between the aristocracy of England and that of Germany is to be found in the fact that the German aristocracy has slavishly adopted the example of royalty, whereas the English aristocracy has, up to the present day, held to the original idea that a title must represent power. Primogeniture is the key-note of the English aristo- cratic power ; the title is reserved to the eldest son, who inherits the bulk of the property. Thus an English title usually means a large landowner. A German title means in most cases nothing more than an amiable descendant of one of many who once, "perhaps," owned land and power. The English aristocracy lives on its estates in the country,°and there forms centres of social and political life. ' The small percentage of the German aristocracy that lives in the country, even if rich, leads a life of economy, solitude, and intellectual stagnation. It wields neither social nor political influence. ^ Not only in the transmission of titles have the Germans copied the example of royalty, but in other points of scarcely minor importance. The modern royal customs— even laws— of intermarrying only with equals, which were originally designed for political purposes only, have found servile followers among the German aristocracy, without any excuse or pretence of policy. The consequences of such action have shown themselves to be disastrous in more senses than one. They have resulted in the gradual erection of a barrier which in our day may be said to divide the aristocracy of birth from the aristocracy of intellect and the middle classes more than they are so divided in any other European country. The*^ Germans, who before now have been accused of pedantry and doctrinarism, have proved them- selves essentially pedantic and doctrinaire in the constitution of their aristocracy.* It is an unduly extended and yet a closed oligarchy with a weak action of the heart. With us the aristocracy is constantly strengthened by the admission of new blood. Not only that, but the younger branches of a great house pass untitled and unnoticed back into the commonality, and carry with them into the middle-classes their sympathies for their powerful relations. The Cierman system has had the precisely opposite effect. Each scion of a noble family in- herits the title, the social status, and the obligation to marry according to his station {standesgcmdss). This erects a barrier between him and the untitled which has proved disastrous in its results all round. AVhat would a German petty baron think of the son of an English duke, whose ancestry might put half the " Almanach de Gotha " to shame, marrying a commoner's dau'ghter, or entering a wine merchant's or a stockbroker's ottice ? And yet the former very often happens, and the latter has happened, in England without lessening by one iota the prestige of the\ristocracy. The well-connected English member * This applies even with greater force to the Austrians, who in this as in so many other points are one with the Germans. 174 IMPERIAL GERMANY. of the middle classes may well look upon a 2)eer as only his superior by chance of primogeniture ; he is of the same stock — of the same flesh and blood. The (German untitled citizen is cut off from the aris- tocracy without even an imaginary connecting link. In Saxony, indeed, so distinct is the line that se])arates the aristocracy from the jieople that the former can even be seen to be of an entirely different race from the latter. The Saxon nobility is a tall, fair-haired race, witli the true Germanic cast of features, whereas tlie mass of the population is rather short and thickset, with features bearing distinct traces of Slavonic blood. III. German pedantry hugs the magical word " von," the idea of quarterings — even if they be emblazoned on empty space— and, in so doing, has often, here as elsewhere, sacrificed the substance for the shadow. Thus, German pedantry has no idea of the English feeling that classes untitled families among the proudest aristocracy of the country — such as have refused titles, but are well known by their honourable standing of generations. It is the " von " that does it, not the distinction of the family. Though, once the ^' von " possessed, it must be admitted that an old, inferior title stands far higher than a modern one of more ambitious sound. Far be it from us to lose sight of the splendid qualities to be found among the German aristocracy. Still, we cannot help deploring wliat we must con- THE ARISTOCRACY, 175 sider the weak points of an institution which must reform, or lose much that its well-wishers would gladly see it retain. Even German royalty has of late set the German aristocracy a shining example of rising superior to class prejudice, if not in the matter of marriage (this it has often done), yet in another direction. Duke Charles Theodore of Bavaria has set up in regular practice as an oculist at his own expense. He has built a regular hospital for eye diseases, in which the poor receive advice gratis. He himself has his daily hours of consultation from two till five o'clock in his own house, where, assisted by a young doctor in his pay, patients of every station receive advice gratis. It is stated that in the course of a few months he gave advice to 2800 patients and performed 290 operations, among them some of great importance. It is interesting to note that his wife, a princess of Braganza, thoroughly enters into her husband's profession, and constantly performs the duties of nurse to his patients. Another Bavarian prince, Louis Ferdinand, uncle of the present King — married to the Spanish Infanta Maria de la Paz — studied medicine in Munich and Heidelberg. The" Bavarian Government waived the State examination in his favour, and he is now enter- ing on regular practice. Princess Helene of Schleswig-Holstein— aunt of the present Emperor— is not only married to I'ro- fessor von Esmarch, the eminent surgeon, but he is recoiznized and is on the best of terms with the royal relatives of his wife. 176 IMPERIAL GERMANY, Lastly, a Wiirtemberg princess is married to a Breslau doctor, and, strange to say, instead of raising himself in the profession by such a match, he is even said to be looked upon askance by his col- leagues for having married out of his sphere of life. What the untitled intellectual class of Germany thinks of the prejudices and privileges of the Ger- man aristocracy is well illustrated by the following words of the eminent writer, Gustav Freytag:* — " The German commoner will ever be an uncom- promising opponent of all those political and social privileges by w^hich the aristocracy still claim an exceptional position among the people. Not because he is envious of these usages, or that he would wish to put himself in their place, but because he recognizes sadly \ohne Frmde] that in their con- sequence they are apt to warp their judgment, their knowledge of the world, and also their firmness of character. Not only that, but because some of these antiquated traditions, such as the privileged position of the aristocracy at Court, even expose our princes to the danger of sinking down into the narrow horizon of the German Junker, For the noblest force, the leadership in the domain of ideal and practical affairs, lies with the citizen class." * *' Bildern aus der deutschen Vergangenheit," vol. iv. THE ARISTOCRACY, IV. "^n Changes are more easily suggested than carried out, and more so when, as in the case of the German aristocracy, a good deal is to be said for things as they are. Its very poverty has called forth special virtues, and in many other ways the German aristocracy has been able to retain much that is valuable and in danger of being swept away in our democratic age. But even taking the good manners and breeding, so beneficial in social intercourse — the sense of chivalry often inculcated from fatlier to son — at their highest estimate, we must deplore the more than narrow spirit that has so limited their sphere of influence. The English aristocracy is popular because, side by side with the greatest possible development of class power, it has retained its connection w^ith the j)eople by its younger sons, who mingle and intermarry with the middle classes. It is popular because its ranks are constantly recruited from the people, if even in a somewhat eccentric fashion. But, above all, the sources of its popularity must be sought in the extraordinary instances of strong characters it has ever had the good fortune to produce. And not only this, but because the peculiarities of its con- stitution have ever allowed such characters to wield political power, and thus to attain great personal popularity. English nobles have dazzled the popular imagination by their liberal ideas, by their generosity, by their individual superiority to class selfishness. N 178 IMPERIAL GERMANY, They have not weakened the power of their class by so doing, but strengthened its hold on the feelings of their countrymen. And to what an extent they have been successful in so doing may be judged by those who fully realize what the power of a title is to-day in England in our democratic age of transition. An unworthy subserviency of the middle classes, a base instinct of cringing and toadying to the fountain of many favours, may explain " some," but it does not explain by any means " all " the hold the English aristocracy has retained on the imagination of the people. Least of all does it explain the hold it has on the uneducated masses. That influence is partly due to many excellent qualities that the English privileged class has shown from time im- memorial. English popular feeling rightly or wrongly looks upon the aristocracy as a curb on the pretension of royalty. The German people look upon their aristocracy as the toadies of royalty. English nobles do not care to hang about a Court like German nobles, for the German nobles, as a class, feel it their vocation to serve the Crown. They have less sentiment for the country at large, less of a broader patriotism. The quarrel of Bismarck witli Count Arnim re- vealed some of those characteristics of the Prussian Court noble that are so distasteful to the people at large ; in fact, it may be said that the popular feeling that Bismarck was lighting an aristocratic Court intrigue upheld his popularity through this memo- rable trial. THE ARISTOCRACY, 179 Eich Englishmen of position do not like the ^scraping and bowing of Court life ; it is foreign to the best English character. They either mix^vith ^ninces on terms of semi-equality or avoid them. But we are not writing a treatise on the English aristocracy, and we only mention some of its good l)oints and their results in order to show more markedly how similar evidences of class-influence ^re absolutely non-existent in Germany. We can but draw our conclusions. Whoever would expect a noble German landowner to head a subscription list for any scientific or charitable purpose ? Who- ever thinks of asking a noble in Germany to pre- side at a public dinner ? The German Philistine would feel his dignity offended by so doing, though he might be wilHng to toady quickly enough to^'a high-placed official ; but to subordinate himself to a mere title would revolt his nobler self. The Ger- man will bow and cringe to a powerful official, but not to a mere empty title — " Nie und Ximmermehr." The same may almost be said of the highly cultured professional and mercantile classes. The feeling of reverence for the aristocracy does not exist in "the form we know it. ^ As for tlie lower orders, their sentiments for the nobility are such that the least said of them the better. The distrust felt towards the nobility by the masses is so great that the German Conservative party have to take it into account, and are often forced to put forward parliamentary candidates without titles, fearing that it would be impossible to carry through one of their own order. In Enrrknd N 2 i8o IMPERIAL GERMANY, a personal connection of a prominent public man or of a great landlord is sure of a following among the electorate. Even a man like Mr. Gladstone had to fi^ht hard in a Liberal constituency agamst the m> nT^ence of the young and politically unknown son of the great Scotch landowner, the Duke of Buc- cleuch. In Germany being the son of a great landowner would avail him next to nothing. V. It would indeed be reading the signs of the times, wronoly if we only deduced this marked difference from'k greater independence of the German people. It is not that, for the German Philistine can be a^ debasingly fawning as any smiling Briton. lie main explanation lies in the ditierence of the German aristocracy to our own. It no longer has any power to wield for good or for bad, except in its own society. Elsewhere it has little or no influence. It has nothing to give no favours to confer, as the reward for being toadied to Our aristocracy can still give and confer, ihe German has rarely produced men who lead great, movements, who stand in the front rank fighting for new ideas, rallying a large following around them, while casting a lustre on the class they spring from. And if the cases of Stein and Bismarck are held up to us as proofs of the contrary, we submit that the popularity of these great men was, and is, pure y personal, and as it did not spring from, certainly does not at all transmit itself to, the class to which THE ARISTOCRACY. i8i they belong. The susceptibility to such a feeling •does not exist. The German mind can only grasp a popular noble in the light of one who is opposed to liis class. The German middle-class mind, ever suspicious and critical, would refuse to believe in an aristocrat, ^s such, who had not broken with his traditions and cast in his lot with the enemies of his class ! This is a great misfortune for the aristocracy, and partly also for the people, as it robs it of the services of many noble-minded men, who are driven to consume their high aspirations for the general welfare of the community in inactivity, knowing they are not able to come forth except to excite enmity, without any chance of doing corresponding good work. That such is the case is largely owing to the short-sighted policy of the German aristocracy as a class from time immemorial. The individual exceptions to such policy have been too unimportant to be worth recording. The German nobility has held to the letter of its privilege, to its high-sounding titles, to its Court sinecures, to its cheap glamour, to its narrow-minded customs of intermarrying, and in so lc. Such intercourse i84 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE ARISTOCRACY, 185 would broaden the views of many persons in high positions in Germany, and it would gradually help the German people to a more generous appreciation of the many excellent traits of character often hidden away in old crumbling chateaux or devoted only to useless Court routine or sport. To know is often to love, as ignorance is only too often the parent of liatred as well as of vice. A new departure in this direction would strengthen those excellent feelings of solidarity with all the "ood in human nature that underlies much of the o less amiable outward German characteristics. A greater rapijrocliemcnt between the aristocracy (and through it with royalty) and the middle classes would be a new element of strength in the common battle to be waged against the subversive elements that are gradually coming to the fore in all Euro- pean countries. Germany was the starting-point of the spiritual re-birth in the Reformation. Germany is in the centre of Europe, and standing there must be the centre of support to retain all that is wortli retaining from countless generations of effort and strife. But, besides this more serious aspect, there are minor points to be considered that alone are well worth our wishing the barriers between the aris- tocracy and the middle classes might be somewhat removed. German manners in general would greatly improve thereby. That everlasting feeling of anxiety as to our position is death to ease of manner, and not a little accountable for much petty unhappi- ness. Removing the class barrier would facilitate inter- marrying, and would tend to make commercial men look at aristocratic officers less as drones who can only marry for money. Itich commoners might marry aristocrats — a rare case now, when thou- sands of penniless titled old maids are doomed to celibacy, and often eke out their sad existence in those mediaeval institutions we find all over Ger- ji-iany — homes for old maids of noble birth. The •daughters of the poor aristocracy are sadly handi- capped in the competition for husbands. For the ^accomplished daughters of the supposed wealthy foreigners, the many comely English and American girls that swarm on the Continent, often prove too tempting to the poor (merman baron, and make him oblivious to their want of the magic prefix of " von " to their names. VII. Some of the manifestations of aristocratic class pride would be most amusing if they were not so unfortunate in their results. It is not so long ago that at Hanoverian watering-place dances a line was drawn between the nobility and the untitled I At a little Mecklenburgh watering-place like Hei- ligenbad a commoner was looked upon as next door to a culprit. And even nearer the large German towns, at public dances a marked division between the classes can still be easily noticed, as the fore- going will lead the reader to suppose. However, these lamentable traits are only to be met with dn the feudal North. Elsewhere, particularly in 1 86 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARISTOCRACY. 187 the democratic South, thev would not be tolerated. And, even in the North there are many influences at work tending to lessen class prejudice. They die hardest in the out-of-the-way capitals of some of the petty j^rincipalities, where national life pul- sates too slowly to kick the beam of nonsense out of sight. The late Emperor Frederick retained in middle age the pure romantic idealism of early youth. To him every form of privilege and undeserved favour was an abhorrence. He now and then even seemed to go out of his way to honour the untitled. For instance, his friend and aide-de-camp, General Mischke, was not of noble birth. This trait of the Emperor's character was one of the reasons of his great popularity with the intellectual classes. Count Alfred Adelmann, a talented writer and a personal friend of the present Emperor, has long broken lances for the untitled citizen classes and their excellent qualities. He tells the aristocracy that it must either work like the rest or g:o to the wall. To its honour, it must be said, ihat there are many more among the nobility who think likewise. A very amusing and, what is more, an authentic instance of class pride, is worth recording. It is instructive as showing how the most vicious (qualities of a class are always to be found in its j^9an"<'?n^5. A great Berlin banker, who had been ennobled^ and whose son was serving in the army, had invited the officers of his son's reo:iment to dinner. Duriu^ the dinner the colonel noticed that all the otticers of the regiment were present except one who was not in possession of the magical noble prefix of " von '' to his name. Asking his host why the officer in question was not present, the banker replied with a smile, "I intended that we should be entirely cntrc owns!" Whereupon, at a signal from the colonel, all the officers rose and left the house. It seems a pity that such sentiments do not always meet with a like prompt rebuke. Still, we must say, from wide personal observation, that, notwith- standing the German popular prejudice about the army being tlie hot-bed of aristocratic class feeling, it is precisely among German officers that the more absurd prejudices are rebuked and often ludicrously exposed. It is true there are certain regiments the officers of which are almost exclusively drawn from the nobility, but beyond that it would be the greatest mistake to suppose that a title forms a passport to advancement and positions of responsibility in the German army ; nothing of the sort. The powers that be wink at and even encourage a harmless class feeling among officers as far as it can be done without harm to the institution itself. And if it maketh the noble's heart glad to know that all his brother-officers belong to his set, surely the German military aristocracy has earned a right to such small concessions of sentiment. But there they stop! Once class privilege might interfere witli the effectiveness of the huge man-slaying machine, once the sensitiveness of the noble born might endanger the bones of a Pomeranian grenadier,, it is swept away like cobwebs from the corners of a looking-glass. From the moment responsibility is 1 88 IMPERIAL GERMANY. attached to a post, class privileges count for nothing, and, whetlier in the army, in the civil service, or in any other walk of public life, untitled merit takes precedence of the highest birth. To tlie honour of the German aristocracy be it said, poor as it may be in coin of the realm, stripped ^s it may be of territorial, social, or political in- fluence, it stands its ground in the army as well as in the administrative offices of the State with an iron sense of duty and with a high average of intellectual power. In fact, it may be said that the conscientious manner in which the German nobility has performed its duty of late in the army has served more than anything else to decrease the envy that undoubtedly is still felt for it in the Patherland. We remember meeting a grisly-haired Count of the Holy Eoman Empire, a captain in a Prussian foot regiment — the oldest captain in tlie army, we were told. At first we could hardly understand a man of his lineage — for his family figured in the magic " Almanach de Gotha " — being only a captain at his age. The oldest captain in the army ! What a position of relegated fitness ! A glance at the •expressionless bullock's eyes and five minutes' con- versation solved the enigma. His intellectual gifts were limited to the leading of a company, and there he was, leading it. How apposite and fit, how truly Prussian ! That one little instance was well calculated to supply us with the key to many a Prussian victory, had we needed one. The aristo- crats who guide Prussia's destinies are not in the THE ARISTOCRACY, 189 habit of giving a son an important command to soothe the'^feelings of a father whom they feel they cannot again entrust with high office. YIII. A class peculiar to Germany is the poor aiis- tocracy, for a large percentage of the German nobility is very poor indeed, living from hand to mouth. Among them one long struggle goes on to uphold the privileges of birth against the power of money ; and tradition is the only weapon they can wield. Their children are brought up in the Spartan sim- plicity that inculcates self-denial at an early age. The daughters are accustomed to give way to the sons, who have to serve in the army, and to whose equipment every spare mark must needs be devoted. Outward appearances alone must be kept up at all hazards. The mother is the head of the family here more than elsewhere. She it is who nurtures the feel- ing of pride for the noble descent of their family. The veneration for what has descended from bygone generations is excessive, and extends to the merest Uifles. An ornament has no value if it can be bought at a jeweller's shop, whereas the most in- significant bit of jewelry is a treasure if it has descended from a great-grandmother. Yet this poor aristocracy, with all its prejudices, has done a lot to form the sterling hardness of the German character. Althouo-h we must admire the many good points 1 90 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE ARISTOCRACY, 191 of the German aristocracy, we cannot help think- ing their position and prospects as a class to be any- thing but enviable. Whatever their merits as indi- viduals, as a class they are only too likely to reap what has been sown by their forefathers. The more so that they have not got a partisan, a worshipper, and an incense-burner in the clergy, as in England. With us, even if the aristocracy were deprived to-morrow of the popular sympathies it enjoys, it would still have the means of adding to its power by the constant addition to its ranks of wealthy commoners, and by our extravagant rewards for any services it may render to the State. In Germany both these sources of power are non-existent. Wealth does not lead to ennoblement ; and services to the State, in whatever capacity, have seldom been extravagantly rewarded. The case of Bis- marck is unique ; for the dotation to Moltke and other great leaders in the war of 1870 were all but nominal according to our standard. The highest services are invariably only rewarded by the honorary distinction of high orders and the per- sonal friendship of the Sovereign, which accom- panies its recipient into private life on his retire- ment on a frugal pension. The consciousness of having done his duty has to make amends for the lack of opportunity of acquiring worldly riches. To-day, the greater number of them would, but for the profession of arms, be absolutely penniless, if not breadless. For, although the aristocracy largely fills the higher Government civil appoint- ments, their number is limited, and the pay is so little at the start that only those can enter the service who have something to fall buck upon. This can only be looked upon as a great national misfortune, and the more to be deplored when we remember the services the poor German aristo- cracy has rendered to the State as its military servants. We are almost inclined to ask ourselves, Would German unity ever have come about had it not been for the splendid staff of aristocratic, but poor, ofticers who have for generations devoted their lives un- selfishly to the profession of arms and to the ser- vice of the State? The poor German aristocracy has helped nobly towards the creation of a powerful, united Fatherland. ( 192 ) GERMAN SOCIETY. 193 III ilii CHAPTEE IX. GEKMAN SOCIETY. Le commerce des honnetes gens ne pent subsister sans une* certaine sorte de confiance ; elle doit Stre commune entre eux. II faut que chacun ait un air de surete et de discretion qui ne donne jamais lieu de craindre qu'on puisse rien dire par impru- dence. — Larochefoucauld. I. German society in its wider sense is a prism of many, but by no means harmoniously blended, colours. In few countries is the aristocracy of birth so cut off in social life from some of the best intel- lect of the land. Nowhere is intellect found so- largely outside the circles of wealth and high birth,, for German society does not bow to talent alone^ like the French. This distinct social feature is a result from within, for the tendency of the Prussian monarchy of late has been to recognize and raise the purely intellectual elements of the country even more than is done in England. But, whereas with us the recognition of brains is invariably followed by the social acceptance of its possessor's family^ in Germany it stops short of the womenkind. With us a great Professor is distinguished by royalty, and the aristocracy follows suit (if it has not preceded the recognition of royalty), and the upper middle classes follow in its wake, receiving and visit- ing the lion's wife and family. In Germany this is far different. A great artist, a man of letters, an eminent man of science may be loaded with stars, or appointed to high office ; he will be readily received either in his personal or in his official character, but the aristocracy will not visit him, nor will the nobility visit his wife. His wife has no social status. She is not "hoffiihif^" which means she is not qualified to be received at Court, the test of social position in Germany. Even more, should she be of noble birth herself, and pre- vious to her marriage have been presented to her Sovereign, she forfeits this privilege on her marriage with a commoner. These facts may seem of small importance to the casual observer, and yet tliey are accountable for much that is peculiar to German society. They are at the root of, and partly explain, the inadequacy of woman's social status in Germany. In England undoubtedly, too, as well as in Prance and America, there is a definite line drawn between those who belong to and those who are outside the narrower pale of polite society. Still, it is not so patently an ai'bitrary distinction as in Germany. In fact, it does not caiTy with it the sting of its injustice and its irremovability; for in the above countries there are few individuals who, by wealth and a sufficient amount of tact, or by tacking the sails, cannot hope to enter the charmed circle. Whereas in Germany these barriers are almost irre- movable. IIHil! ii I illiil I * ! ! I I ,94 IMPERIAL GERMANY, It is not the mere presentation or non-presentation at Conrt that marks the difference. Tlie arbitrary exclnsion of many of the most cultured women in Germany narrows the circle of their social life, to which they naturally attach more value than men, who are more actively engaged. It causes them to feel a kind of neglect, which produces envy and iealousy. Thus we are often struck in such circles by a tone of bitterness, if not of dislike, when speaking of the aristocracy or even of the Crown. This ° feeling becomes doubly galling when the Germans see strangers admitted in their best society who have neither birth nor breeding nor brains to recommend them. For the nicety of perception of the German mind is often wofully at fault when dealing with foreign elements. Insular assurance and American " shoddy " force the gates of the minor German Courts— Yankee womankind, whose male belongings are at home, per- haps cutting up pork-chops in Chicago ; or a green, awkward Yankee youth, you will find talking to a worthy English countess, of an inquiring mmd, with his hands in his pockets ! The jump from pork- chops to the peerage is apt to unsettle the nerves. English half-pay military or naval captains— a refuse'^of the militia thrown in— sometimes with a ^rowing family, living abroad for economy on a third-floor flat above a butcher's shop, go to Court and have been known to answer the addresses of royalty a^rain with their hands in their pockets. . A shabby-genteel coterie of middle-class sweep- ings who are distantly related to half the .peerage. GERMAN SOCIETY^ 19s and let you know it in and out of season ; a poor, seedy, shunted English diplomatist and his " good lady " ablaze with a Primrose League ' " jewel," and with the face of a cook in front of a Christmas joint — these are a few specimens of the foreign element in German society. For if refined natures are rare in any country, they are rarer still among the travelling representatives of a nation. But such are the elements that push their way in their own country, and, being " hofiahig " at home, can legally claim presentation abroad. Thus it is the fault of the Germans themselves if they make much of foreigners in society ; why don't they make more of themselves ? For, as long as they exclude the untitled, an English, French, or American com- moner, who at home has no barrier but the limits of his bare- faced self-assertion, will be rightly ac- cepted in German society, for he has the requisite standing in his own country. This can only be remedied in Germany when the intellectual classes ia possession of means come more to the front. Unfortunately, present circum- stances are little calculated to fit their womankind •for an enlarged scope of social duties. II. Other social results can also be traced indirectly to this artificial barrier erected between the profes- sional, scientific, and wealthy commercial classes on the one side and the nobility and royalty on the other. 2 mesmf*i?mmmtmtilgmmfmMmmiii>i*^^ 196 mFERIAL GERMANY. GERMAN SOCIETY, «97 i •i|! The German aristocracy is limited to the intel- lectual lite to be found ^vithin its circle, which is sli-htly sporadic. This state of things is disadvan- tageous to the aristocracy, besides narrowing its popularity, as shown elsewhere. The intellectual and wealthy classes are debarred from that contact with a certain urbanity and graciousness of manner, a deference to women, which still, whatever may be said to the contrary, is a marked characteristic o the best German nobility. It is true the excluded classes do their utmost to adopt aristocratic manners, but like all imperfect imitations they lack tinisli, and are liable to be over-done. This applies espe- cially to the womankind. The universities, the army, the pitblic services are open to all classes alike, and there all Germans crain a certain cosmopolitanism of views and manner which if it now and then falls short of a standard that can only be attained in a highly refined family circle yet compares fairly with that of similar classes in other countries. The German women of the middle classes, on the other hand, show tiie painful results of their social restriction in more ways than one. The feeling of their derogatory position begets, as aforesaid— though it be never so much denied— a latent feeling of envy and jealousy, which shows itself in excessive sensitiveness, ihis a^ain, in its turn, is the ever-recurring cause ot exaggeration of manner and want of tact. Thus intercourse with the middle classes is far more dmdlc than with the aristocracy. Their manners are exaggerated in their punctiliousness and exaetion. iind you can innocently tread on toes whilst you fancy that you are gaining golden opinions. The middle classes are often exaoi^erated in their sensitiveness, and, besides that, are grievously given to ill-natured small-talk. Hyper-sensitiveness is one cardinal characteristic of German society, as it is a marked one of CJerman character generally, which a broader and more cosmopolitan horizon of nsocial life could not fail to diminish, if not entirely to banish. To these facts may also be traced that want of prestige in society which marks German women of the untitled classes. A contact with the liiGfhest society would soon show German women the con- sideration wdiich their titled sisters enjoy, and which they would not be slow to strive for. AVhether they would find the sterner sex ready to render it, or whether they would be able to wield the weapons that secure it, is another matter. The fact remains that, however well educated middle-class German women may be, they generally suffer from a pettiness of feeling and thought which is not cal- oulated to make their lords bow down to them amidst the wear und tear of every-day life. And the proof of this is, that they do jiot succeed in being treated with that deference and regard in private life that ladies invariably meet with in the iJerman aristocracy, as well as in the educated society of England, France, and America. .Holding, as we do, that women should be the > are anything but child's play. The middle-aged p o- sioiial m^n. at the slightest insult, remembers his university days, and is ready to meet the fieicest military tire-eater with sword or pistol. III. Leaving duelling out of the question, the above strictures must, of course, not receive acceptance tiUiout a due reservation and allowance to be made Except duelling, they hardly apply f f *° ^^ best society of the wealthier cities of the Lmpirc, besides the former free towns of Hamburg. Bremen Frankfort-on-the-Main. &e. There we fiiid 1 . patrician burgher supreme, and with him all the peculiarities of his supremacy. The days when the good Franktorters used to speak French in their social S-*erings are passed away , also the ambition of the ^cuncmc doree of Hambur^, GERMAN SOCIETY. 205 and Bremen to pass itself off as English has under- gone a slight transition. Nowadays the commerce-gorged types of Frank- fort sun their dull features in the blaze of stars and ribbons earned in tlie dust and glare of battle, and feel themselves belonging to a great militaiy nation against the creation of which they literally raved and whined. The social status of tlie well-educated and wealthy commoner in tlie above-mentioned towns, to which a few others might be added, is a far liigher one than where he is over-sliadowed and left in the cold by a C-ourt and its niilitarv surroundincs. In capitals such as IJreeden and Stuttgart it is com- paratively rare to see a civilian in the best society. Everywhere glittering uniforms ; sets that are patron- ized l)y the tliic of cavalry regiments ; others, more humble, that are content with the infantry, who hardly ever congregate socially. Official bails, where the subaltern and the minor civil official have to dance with the gawky daughters of their superiors till they are black in the face. Here the male element reigns supreme, but in the above-mentioned towns the fair sex exercises a controlling social influence, although it has not always been emj^loyed as well as it might have been. Still, anybody who has mixed in the best society of these towns cannot have failed to notice the well-bred ease of manner of the ladies and their high culture. With the possession of money there has grown a cultivation of the fine arts and a great difiusion of the social amenities of life generally. These towns mostly possess a patri- ;a.is^^giWfc.w pr i | j jq | iiMI':!." m lit* 204 IMPERIAL GERMANY, arclial oligarchy consisting of the wealthiest families, some of them with a liistory reaching back many crenerations. There is less distinction to he found between the titled and the commoner, and yet the petty spirit of cliques that is peculiar to social life m Germany shows itself even there, though in a special form For the wealthy merchant-citizen has a class pride of his own, which is not always justified by the small attention he pays to externals. We remember a charming young man who haded horn Leipsic ; he would persist in showuig a set of grinders as green as the copper hull of an ocean steamer. In everything else he was the essence of punctilio 1 The wealthy citizen is deferential to his woman- kind which has a knack of exacting deference. Ihit he has often a bumptious hauteur and purse pride which put to shame the pride of birth of the noble with sixty-four quarterings. A class that with us is often known for its toadying to the aristocracy now and then shows bloated arrogance in Germany. The wealthy consul— here and there a generous patron of the fine arts, and combining the culture of intellect with the manners of good society— is often an arrogant type of hard-headed counting-house life. Never so uneducated as some of our City mag- nates, he is more arrogant and offensive. This arro- gance is too often the veil under which he tries to hide his conscious social inferiority to the noble of the capitah . . Although the wealthy Frankforter patrician will oive you to understand that he is the equal of any Count of the Holy lioman Empire, he is yet con- GERMAN SOCIETV. 20: scious that lie is only their equal in his own imagina- tion as long as he is within the fuur walls of his beloved father-town. He has a distinct knowledge that though his daughters may receive the best society at home, they have only to marry a com- moner in Berlin or Dresden or Munich in order to lose their social feathers and to be quietly rele<^ated to a place outside the select circle. Thus the con- sciousness of his greatness is a very imperfect one, and, as such, shows all the drawbacks that imperfect convictions are apt to develop in the human heart. After all, the good CJerman patrician town-folk are only human, and, as such, but the creatures of the petty character of their existence. Berlin is the one town in the Empire where un- titled intellect has from time to time held a distinct and recognized social position, and, hand in hand with rarely cultured women, exercised a distinctly bene- ficial social, if not even a political, influence. The intellectual society between the years 1830 and 60 in Berhn wielded more than local influence. Men such as Prince Buckler, Varnhagen von Ense, the Mendelssohns, Lassalle, and women such as Eahel Levin and others, left their stamp on the thought of their time. They inspired as well as entertained. Their fare was of Spartan simplicity, invariably only tea and small cakes, and yet in their hands society offered the only analogy to a French salon (a la Ma- dame Becamier or, in our days, a la Madame Mold) that has ever been realized in Germany. If these ideal conditions no longer exist, on the other hand some advantages remain to German \ • ■ 'l lll'lil' 206 IMPERIAL GERMANY. cosmopolitan socLety tliat are worth noting. If, for example, you meet a man of note or exceptional position, you have not to run the gauntlet o a crowd of middle-class nobodies-to steer through a miasmic atmosphere of sycophancy-in order to get at him The German middle classes have not yet token to lion-hunting and its vulgarizing accessories. IV. In Berlin to-day the Duke of Eatihor unites the mte of intellect and science under his hospitable roof Countess Schleinitz up till lately was a magnet that attracted and retained all that is eminent in the musical world. Postmaster Dr. Stephan receives the aitc of Berlin society, as also do from time to time all the other Ministers. Trince Bismarck s receptions are, of course, familiar to the worhl at Professor Helmlioltz occupies an exceptional position, and in his home he is the centre of a circle which in the world of science could perhaps hardly he equalled for brilliancy outside the walls of raris. Likewise the family of IMcndclssohn has for venerations past taken up a liigh social position in Berlin. From the witty contemporary of Ired- erick the Great downwards, this family has pro- duced a succession of cultivated men and women To-day the Mendelssohns are a centre of polite and intellectual society in Berlin. The weahhy plutocracy, here as elsewhere, cul- tivate the aristocracy (^f intellect and of the fine GERMAN SOCIETY. 207 ^a arts as a fashion, some vain vision of French mlom of past days seemingly being the ideal they liopelessly strive to imitate. ]]esides the above, the wives of one or two celebrities of the world of letters hold receptions which partake of a cosmopolitan character. They endeavour to weld or fuse into a homogeneous social stratum the many characteristic elements Berlin society is composed of. The ex- periment is said to be fairly successful, but those who are best acquainted with them aver that a touch of Bohemianism pervades the whole : an <3xaggeration of stilted forms in some, Hanked bv a somewhat boisterous abandon in others — the whole producing the impression of a spasmodic experiment that is not indigenous to the soil. For behind all these Berlin efforts at social intermingling stalks the proud typical figure of Lieutenant v. Strudelwitz, who would be horrified if a celebrated musician or a literary magnate was seen in his house. To such as he — and he represents a distinct class — a man like Count Hochberg (brother of the wealthy Prince riess) has soiled his escutcheon in accepting the superintendence .of the various royal theatres, although by so doing Count Hochberg is in a position to influence the taste and culture of the public in as marked a manner as any six literary stars combined. Lieut. V. Strudelwitz is a type whose ancestral leanings may be traced in the direction of Meck- lenburg, in that favoured duchy wJiere, up till recently, a mild form of the cat, made of a good solid stick, now and then reminded the humbler ii "-""'i^^mmmmmm 208 IMPERIAL GERMANY. GERMAN SOCIETY. 209 i m mm m inhabitants of the blessings of a patriarchal state of things. For there are even now authorities to be founTl who strenuously aver that the stick is not half so debasing as some of our more civilized forms of punishment. Lieut, v. Strudelwitz's social ambi- tion is the membership of the most exclusive club of the capital, the " Union," where gambling used to be indulged in by otticers until young Prince William., now German Emperor, one day put his foot down in plain terms of prohibition. We should be justified in considering Lieut, v. Strudelwitz as a pure, unadulterated embodiment of the theory of the divine origin of the aristocracy fcr sc if it were not for a suspicious hankering after the flesh-pots which he now and then shows by his unbounded admiration for English wealth. Not only the splendours of England's ancestral homes fascinate his imagination — that would be consistent ; but the more tawdry splendour of four-in-hand clubs, of Eotten Eow, with its fair and sometimes frail eques- trians—these occupy his mind and make him some- times regret that his proud ancestors were not a little more successful in hoarding the loaves and fishes of this world. Now, although Lieut, v. Strudelwitz is the pink of politeness and worldly savoir /aire, he must not be confounded with another equally polished type of military manhood, who is his superior in everything that does not appertain to boot-polish and gold-rimmed eye-glasses. Captain v. K. is of the Alexander Guard Eegi- ment, quartered in Berlin. In him we have one of the finest types of the Prussian officer. He, too, is noble by birtli, but not necessarily narrow in brain and sympathies in consequence. If he admires England, it is tlie history of England's greatness, the Englisli character of energy^ of manliness, that excites his admiration. He and liis like invariably read, if not speak, English, and are pleased to re- member that it was a Scotchman whose history of Erederick the (Jrcat is the standard work on'^his country's greatest king. ^ Although he loves his profession, which he con- siders one that ought to be above the temptation of money-making and petty personal ambition, he yet is able to recognize tlie worth and honour that can be sought and found in every walk of life, however humble. If you refer to the privileges the aris- tocracy possess in the army, he will tdl you it is at most a preference they enjoy, which, if not de- served by constant and unremitting work and attention, only goes for nothing. He admits the prefix of " von " does sometimes confer a prefer- ence, but he does not boast of it, but rather seeks to excuse it by quoting the number of his ancestors and liis relations, who from time to time have shared the darkest days of Prussia's eclipse in the service of the State. Except in some instances of self-asserting pluto- cracy, Cierman society presents one particular nega- tive advantage. It is comparatively free from that restless vulgar cadging (" Streberthum ") to be found in some countries. The toady, the tuft-hunter, the vulgar pushing matron, if not unrepresented, are almost non- lirii ^lO IMPERIAL GERMANY, existent. Not that human nature is different there irom elsewhere. The conditions are healthier in this respect. German society off^ers little tempta- tion to the vulgar who bow down to show and wealth; a toady would seek in vain a profitable return for his *^eff*orts ; and, lastly, rich heirs are too rare to reward the endeavours of intriguing matrons. I ( 211 ) CHAPTEK X. WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE. Wollt Ihr wissen, war sich schickt So fraget nur bei edlen Frauen an. Goethe. Tacitus— that supreme authority on the Germans of old — mentions in enthusiastic language their deference for tlieir womankind. He also praises the German women for their severe chastity, in such striking contrast to the Eomans. Valerius Maximus tells us in reference to their chastity, that the Teuton female prisoners begged victorious Marius to allow them to devote them- selves to the service of their holy virgin Vesta, assuring him they would preserve themselves un- stained like this goddess and her priests. In con- sequence of his refusal, they all strangled them- selves in the following night. Bearing in mind the brutality of those times, the fierce passions and reckless life of the men, this trait of the chastity of the women stands out in bold relief, as also the honour paid to them. In fact, the veneration in which their women were held by the Germans r 2 '"'wm mmm |{||ji| ]>:l 2,2 IMPERIAL GERMANY. 3uns Tight throngli history ; it is met with in the Middle A<^es in the form of Virgin worship, and also in the sentiment of the Minnesingers-the smgers- of love It runs through (German poetry down to the present day. It is true that, in our matter- of-fact time, a little poetry goes to the wall ; hut neither do we expect to find the heroic virUie of (German vestals so ready to run to self-nnmolation as of old. Evil tongues have even heen Known to whisper that German womankind has not always, had sufficient hatred for the enemies of their country to please their lords. In fact, many oh- servers to-day fail to hnd that stern contro of their feeling's the old Eoman historians credit them with Perhaps the sickly kind of sentimental poetry of the last hundred years has had something to do with the development of demonstrativeness- in German womanhood. However, no rule without an exception : the Germans of to-day are as loud as ever in praise of their womankind, and the testi- mony of a stranger may well he added to the chorus of praise. Madame de Stael, in her celebrated book, " De rAllemagne," says : *'The German women possess a charm that is peculiarly their own, a sweet intonation of the voice ; fair hair and dazzhng complexion. They arc modest, their feelings are true, and their demeanour is simple Their careful education and the purity of mind that is natural to them, combine to make lip the charm they exercise." If we may judge the intellectual capacities ot a race by the history of its greatest men, so we can WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE. 213 gauge the moral possibilities of a people by the character of its greatest and noblest women, lii this sense the Germans may well be proud of their womankind. For although the Salic law has pre- vented them producing rulers of the type of our Queen Elizabeth — except in the one splendid in- stance of Maria Theresa— yet women of German blood have before now played a giant's part in history. The Empress Catherine of Ihissia was a born German : Princess Auguste Fredericke of Anhalt-Zerbst. She was a line instance of the power of will and intellect, though she can hardly be said to stand as a model of female virtue. Eut German history shows a fairer figure than her, in Queen Louisa of Prussia, the mother of the late Emperor William. In her were united all the noblest characteristics of German womankind ; and her example, stirring the soul of an entire nation in her time, may be said to be one of the brightest prototypes for the Germans of tlie future to dwell on and to live up to. It has even been stated that, without the moral purification which Prussian society underwent through the bright example of her domestic life, it is hardly possible that the rising of Prussia in 1 8 1 3 against Napoleon could have taken place. An author of the period says of her : " The consort of Frederick William III. w\as en- dowed by nature with everything that can be deemed charming in the sex. The fairest queen with a yet fairer soul : a whole woman in the •M^ords' deepest meaning. No wish to participate in 214 IMPERIAL GERMANY. the rule of her husband was in her character, onl}r devotion to his person, nurtured by love, the purest type of innocence and high womanly modesty ; such were the principal traits in Louisa's character,, which were destined to form the happiness of the kin^T and to be the model of a wife to the nation at large." Another author like the one already quoted, a severe observer of mankind, Herr von Lang, in his- Memoirs, says of the queen : " She was in truth a woman who hovered like an ethereal being over us,, in the form of an angel, with the sweetest persua- sive powers with which she cast the rays of her lovely nature around her, so that everybody was as if transfixed into a dream, charmed by this livings moving fairy picture." This is high, yes, even extravagant praise ; but it is fully borne out by every testimony of friend and foe, amongst the latter Napoleon and his councillor Talleyrand, who said of her : " I knew I should see a lovely queen; but I have seen the loveliest of queens and the most interesting of women." IL Next to history, the literature of a country affords, us a clue to the character of a nation's women. At least, its poets show us what its ideals are like. The heroines of Walter Scott, Eichardson's "Clarissa Harlowe," and, above all, the glorious creations of Shakspeare, are heirlooms to the end of time to- show posterity what English womanhood resembled WOMAXKIXD AND FAMILY LIFE, 2i^ — in its purest ideality, perhaps, the rarest union of tenderness allied to strength of character yet revealed to man. A cursory glance at the German creations of fiction show a marked difference to those of our country. No purer, no fairer types has literature created than those of Croethe and Schiller, yet they are distinctly (merman; they are different from our own. Our ideal women show an independence of character that is absent from the German type. The (rerman figure of poetry enables us to under- stand the national boast that there is nothing like German '' Weibliclikeit " (womanliness). It is un- doubtedly a splendid quality, and yet we cannot bring ourselves to consider its uniqueness as always synonymous with superiority to our own. Each type has its lights and shades, its strong as well as its weak points. But to our insular mind the Ger- man ideal is a little too self-forsjettinj^lv devoted, too slavislily worshipping, not to make us feel a lack of that strong individuality we find, for instance, in women of Slavonic race. There is sometliing in the German ideal of woman- hood that bids us feel their devotion, once given, leaves us no further fields to conquer. There is sometliing in the English and Slavonic type that makes us feel it imperative not only to gain, but to retain, her devotion. Thus we are of opinion that English as well as Slavonic women hold their in- fluence Ipnger than their German sisters. (ioethe's Gretchen ("Faust") is essentially Ger- man in her simple-minded x^urity, but even more st> 2l6 IMPERIAL GERM ANY. WOMANKL\D AAD FAMILY LIFE. 217 |> in her childlike devotion, and, later on, in her re- morse. Of Egmont's " Clarchen " almost the same may be said. They cause us to feel that it must have been easy to gain the love of such simple natures, and that we should have esteemed them lightly accordingly. And yet it is just this blind, simple, childlike devotion which looks up to an Egmont as a superior being that has the greatest charms for the German lover ! It is interesting to note of Fredericke of Sesen- heim, perhaps the sweetest of Goethe's characters — for she was a living reality — that it was her rural simplicity that cooled the poet, or at all events enabled him to tear himself away from her. In Lotte (" Werther's Sorrows") C;oethe has given us another German type — the perfect house- wife cutting bread-and-butter all round. She is thoroughly honest and true to her husband, yet she leaves us with a suspicion that, if poor Werther liad not shot himself, her friendship for him might have presented her with psychological doubts as to how she should reconcile it with her love to her hus- band. If tliese female creations excite the admiration of the men, the lyric poetry of the nation has an inor- dinate influence over the budding female mind. In fact, poetic sentimentality fills them often with far too many illusions to meet the realities of life. For it is an instance of the strange double nature of the German character that, whilst their poetry is so sen- timental, their conduct in daily life is in such marked contrast. Anybody can convince himself of the above by a glance at the numberless advertisements with off'ers of marriage (Heiratlisgesuehe) tliat are to be found in almost every newspaper, not only nowadays, for the custom dates back over a hundred years. These productions are strangely matter-of- fact, sober, and sensible in tone, tlie principal points in request being usually a little money and domestic virtues of manifold description. To our mind, German girls lack that freedom our own enjoy, and, whilst the Germans are never tired of vaunting the virtue of their women, the sliglitest intnnacy witli the other sex, unless followed by immediate betrothal, is sufticient for gossip to lay hold of and discredit them. English women are said to be prudish, but in the art of feeling shocked, Gretchen beats her English sister hollow. At parties you can hardly dance several times with a young lady, or show a little preference for her, without gossip at once busying itself with its being a case of engagement. This is a great pity, and is one of the reasons girls are not brought up in greater independence of thought and character, and taught to look to their own energy as offering a possible career in life, outside wedlock. It is not only with us that women of tlie present day are often too anxious to get married to enable them to discriminate and choose wisely. On tlie other hand, we must admit that German girls are much less influenced by the hope of marrying money and position tlian the •daughters of our well-to-do classes. This is all the more to their credit when we bear in mind that 2l8 IMPERIAL GERMANY. their men are iniicli more anxious to marry money than our own. The daughters of the poor aristocracy have a far greater horror of marrying heneath tliem than our aristocracy, for even money and luxury fail ta overcome their traditional objection to trade. They will marry poverty in almost any form sooner than that. But, side by side with this prejudice, they possess the virtues of order and economy in a rare degree, and, as a class, they have contributed their share to the present greatness of Germany by being the mothers of the great majority of German officers. III. Whilst we, perhaps, carry too little sentiment into our every-day life, German women have a longing for more than they usually get, and it is one of their good points that their disappointment rarely takes an aggressive form. They soon get reconciled to the reality, and make excellent wives and mothers. In fact, if only half-way well treated, no truer, no more dutiful or better w^oman can be found. She may not rise to that independence of thought and conduct we now and then meet in our own country, but neither are her faults coloured by the qualities she lacks. If she be not noted for that sublime union of breadth and boldness of character added to womanliness we behold in some of Shakspeare's heroines, neither is she the fiery termagant, the secret drinker, to be met with elsewhere. Even if not particularly happy at home, her unselfish love l|!w'!. WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE. 219 of her family makes her submit to many things against which the women of other countries rebel, and instances of moral depravity are rarer than in almost any other country ; for, if we are to believe tradition, Irish women in this respect carry the i)alm. The circumstances of the (Jerman woman's life are not of a kind to produce those extraordinary instances of strong-willed initiative we meet witii among our womankind. Her education is more homely, her life more restricted ; the organization of (German society does not give her a sphere of action such as many English women have found and shone in. Her life is comparatively uneventful, not to say monotonous, so that even her virtues, let alone her shortcomings, are tinged w^ith the idiosyncrasies of her surroundings. But if she is inclined to gossip, if she often exasperates her husband by her exacting pettiness, and fails to impress him with that tact or dignity the French possess so pre-eminently, at the bottom she is honest, self-respecting, and reliable to a rare degree. It is only among the German aristocracy and plutocracy that - we meet with anything like the independence of English women. Also the women of the aristocracy are more cosmopolitan and less nationally typical than others. They are more free from the trivial qualities above referred to; but, although superior in manner, they do not show so high a percentage of happiness in married life. Where the women of the middle classes gossip and sulk, those of the aristocracy rebel and intrigue. Divorces are very common, and it is not unusual to 220 IMPERIAL GERMANY. WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE, 22 fi meet half-a-dozen divorced men and women at evening parties in large towns. The faults of the bourgeois are trivial and on the surface ; beneath it the body is healthy, and a little more self-control and attention to details of manner would con- siderably add to their sum of happiness. All in all, the average of married happiness seems to be liigher in Crermany than with us, and several conditions seem partly answerable for it. Of these, perhaps the most prominent are the longer duration of engage- ment, enabling a better prior nmtual acquaintance ; tiie later age Germans marry at; and, lastly, the greater aptitude of average (lerman women for household work and occupation. In Germany the woman's place is at home : there she shines pre-eminent, self-sacrificing, devoted to her family. She is more domesticated tlian tliose of any other nation. It must have been an ungrateful, dyspeptic German husband who invented the saying, *" Weiber und Hunde gehoren ins Haus."* Although in our days of luxury and i>leasure- seeking the exceptions are many and daily in- 'Creasing in number, yet, as a rule, German homes are centres of rare order, economy, and general comfort and happiness. And the words of Schiller «till apply to the German housewife : Und drinnen wallet Die ziichtige Hausfrau, Die Mutter der Kinder, Und herrschet weise Im hiiuslichen Kreise, &c. &c. * Women and dogs should be indoors. And even more than that, for althougli German husbands do not grant their wives that equality of companionship we witness in England and America, yet they share more of their husband's interests tlian the wives of the above-mentioned countries, and in this more resemble their Trench sisters. If her husband be deficient in the small considerations of every-day life, yet he turns to her for advice and moral support in all matters concerning the education of the children and affairs of business. She is a true mother to her children, and wields an influence over them that is, perhaps, only met witli again in France. liising and about almost as early as her servants, she sets them an excellent example, she superintends their work, is invariably an excellent cook herself, and finds her happiness in her home activity. Althougli she exacts more of her dependents than we are accustomed to, yet she asks her servants to do little slie is not able and willing to do herself, although her education fits her for the society of the best. Even if lier servants be poorly paid, and only too often meagrely fed, they are made to feel a greater interest in the family than with us, and family festivities invariably include a crreater reco^- nition of the domestics than in our country. Hence hei" infiiience is decidedly beneficial on her dependents, the morality and happiness of whom are, we believe, above the average of the same class in our country. That the circumstances of life are happier with them, is seen by the few German servants that come to us who can be induced to stay, as hi<^h 222 IMPERIAL GERMANY, i|li |)|i.; wages cannot make up for their isolation. The habits of thrift and industry and cleanliness of person, and the sense of self-respect among them are very .strong, and lead to their becoming the useful wives of the working classes later on. As such they are in every way far superior to the same class at home. It is very unusual for a German servant girl not to have saved a round little sum of money towards starting housekeeping, and it is notliing very unusual to find them enter the married state with a trousseau of linen worth over ^50. Thus, it is not surprising to find a far smaller percentage of the female lower classes engulfed in the pitiless waves of social ruin than in England. If to our mind German wives may in many instances be considered little better than servants, on the other hand, they hold that our womankind inclines to luxury and laziness. There is certainly less of outward pretence in German families, and a far greater percentage of people in the middle classes living well within their income with some- thing to spare than with us. But as everything has its drawbacks, so the household work of the German wife is often the oause, that when you make your morning call and you are told the gmidigc Frau — the gracious lady — will be with you at once, you have to wait half-an- hour till she appears ; or the " gracious lady " has XI headache, or is engaged at her toilet, wdiich often means that she is so hopelessly involved in house- liold affairs that she cannot receive you at all. WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE. 223 IV. Of German Imsbands, the poet Heine, in one of his vicious moods, said, '' German married life is no true wedlock. The husband has no wife, but a servant, and he continues to live on in spirit his isolated bachelor life even in the family circle." We cannot agree with this, for in many respects the German husband is a model of a family man. He upholds the sanctity of the family tie in all its most important bearings, and as an anxious, con- scientious father of his cliildren he has few equals. Englishmen, who so often lose sight of their sons in their teens, can form little idea of the moral influence a German father exercises over his children, even, after they have reached manhood. On the other hand, in the small matters of every- day life, he is not always as appreciative of his consort's qualities as he might be. In fact, he is often unconscious of them, for, being brought up to expect so much, he has rarely the sad experience of what a curse a lazy, pleasure-seeking woman may become. And thus Bismarck's remark that " our wives are the only ladies we are rude to," lias more than a passing meaning. Notwithstanding the many ethereal qualities love-sick Germans credit their women with, once married, they generally become wonderfully sober and matter-of-fact. They know they are the stronger, and, except in rare cases of good breeding, do not scruple to show it when their sensitive nerves are irritated. They are slightly inclined to 224 IMPERIAL GERMANY, III "bully and domineer, and direct contradiction, such as " that is not true " (lias ist nicht wahr), is not at all uncommon, and is thought nothing of. Nor da they like to be told tliat they are often responsible for the petty weaknesses of their women. On the contrary, they are nervously anxious that their help- mates should beliold in their august countenances the effulgence of Jupiter Tonans, and recognize it to be their supreme function to serve and to obey. There is a certain restlessness in the tempera- ment of Germans that bids them devote much of their tune to the exclusive society of their own sex^ which they do in the beerhouses, of which the number and the extensive patronage is beyond belief. Ciermans of almost every j)Osition of life frequent these beerhouses, and those that are married invariably justify this habit by telling their indub^ent wives that it is necessary for the broader intellect of man to seek sweet converse and ani- mation in the society of their own kind. The inter- change of ideas is important to keep themselves^ abreast of the great questions of the day. Those who have enjoyed the privilege of (lerman beer- house society are likely to hold a different opinion of the breadth and wealth of ideas that permeate the smoky atmosphere. However, the fact remains that Crerman husbands spend more of their spare time in men's company without their wives than we do, and hence their women are much restricted to the company of their own sex. This is the more to be regretted when we bear in mind that the education of women in Germany is so excellent^ WOMANKIND AND FAMILY LIFE. 225 that it only requires sucli social fostering as they often seek in vain, in order to make their society the most interesting one could wish, ten times more healthy and entertaining tlian tliat of any beer- house. As it is, ladies' tea parties, so-called " Ivaffeo Klatsch," restrict them to small-talk and petty gossi}), and thus cause a want of breadth of view and feeling entirely unworthy of the excellent education they have received. In this respect German husbands are often selfish, and rarely fight out that victory over their meaner nature by which an Englishman concpiers his longing to spend an evening at his club, and sub- missively hurries home to a fireside, where he does not always receive an adequate welcome. Por the male type of the silent sufferer {dcv stiUc Didder) is much more common with us than in Germany. These remarks, however, apply more to the so-called better middle class ; to the honour of the masses it must be said, that their wives share more of their company. In fact, they usually take their anmse- ments, such as theatre-going, country outings, beer- drinking together. This, indeed, is one of the reasons why, though considerable beer-swillers, they so seldom get intoxicated. However humble the means, there are few working-men's families that have not got a little somethmg week by week set aside for common amusement. We have dwelt on the typical shortcomings, which, as everywhere, mark the majority. The exceptions are also distinctly typical, and nowhere reach a higher ideal of happy family life Q 226 IMPERIAL GERMANY, ( 227 ) ii. llii'lii! m than in Germany. Here we find sympathetic feel- ing blended with rare breadth of philosophic educa- tion and culture, skill in the arts, and delicate tenderness of heart. An illustration of this is brought near to us, and in the loftiest social sphere, as all know who have read the Journals of our Queen. The little touches therein contained of family gatherings at Christmas, and on other occasions, are quite in the ideal German spirit ; no less than the Prince's custom of allotting to each child a garden to be cultivated by its own hand, with tlie festival which was held when the products were by themselves cooked and eaten. This is simply an instance of the idea of the Prussian Prince learning a trade applied to the iemale side. CHAPTER XL THE PHILISTINE. Arrogance is a plebeian vice. I. "We have endeavoured to describe qualities that excited the admiration of Carlyle and many others. It is but meet to point to shadows, if only to set off ■the light. Those who have heard of our national self-suffi- ciency after the battle of Waterloo, and those who can remember the truculent bumptiousness of the French 'Chauvinist element after the Italian campaign of 1859, ought not to be surprised at any manifestation of national conceit in Germany after the victoriesof 1 870. But it must be noted as one of the brightest sides of the German character that their best intellect seems to have remained wonderfully sober in the midst of intoxicating success. This is particularly the case in the army and in diplomatic circles, whilst here and there it is surprising to see a knot of university professors showing more of chauvinistic ardour than of calm philosophy. Even the occasional big words of a Bismarck are invariably uttered with a purpose Q 2 ili 228 IMPERIAL GERMANY. ill ^-:f — as a means to an end. For tliongli he may tell ti>^ tliat tlie (lermans only fear (Joel, we know that they fear a few other items besides — notably, Social Democracy and the Philistine spirit. We can remember the rebuke administered to a man of letters who opined that the Germans would beat the French again. " You must not say that,'" remarked a high Prussian officer present ; " that is in God's hand." Unfortunately, this humility does not characterize the German Philistine, who is largely represented in the community. In him the Germans originally typified the small citizen-class that has had no higher education ; but his cast of mind is found present in other circles as well. His is that narrow^ carping spirit, the existence and growth of which may be regarded as largely owing to the unhappy political condition of the past reacting on the weaJv sides of the national character. German unity was never his ideal, nor has its^ attainment yet shown manv si^^ns of ennoblinoj him. When the advantages enjoyed by other countries only served to instruct and urge on the efforts of Germany's best intellect and character, the Philistine mingled his hatred {Schadoifraide) and envy with a cringing deference to foreign superiority ; and when that did not suffice, he had a little of those qualities- to spare for the best men of his own country. The speciality of hatred termed " Schadenfreude " is essentially a Philistine German quality, and is un- translatable. It means the gratification of j)ent-up .envy — the ]oy over the misfortune of those we had THE PHILISTLXE, n'> 29 previously cringed to and envied. It is allied to a •craze for grumbling ((^fe llaisonmmi) wliich was ever a Philistine virtue. And yet, strange to say, whilst indulging in these feelings with regard to everything around him, the Philistine has ever been the supt porter of the old fossilized order of things. When Aristides was being ostracised, an Athenian,, who did not know him, asked him to mark his shell for him. " What has he done to you that you should wish him to be banished ?" Aristides inquired. " Oh, I am tired of hearing him called the Just," the Athenian Philistine replied. Xeither does his German confrere of to-day like to hear any one praised. In his temperament the querulous rowdy is ready- made. Yet his is the nature that makes his country- men ridiculous by prizing and bowing to empty titles, whilst true distinction is beyond his ken. He alternates between loud aggressive arrogance and mean, cringing servility. To this class Goethe is a haughty aristocrat, \and even poor Schiller a prig. To-day he sneers at ]]ismarck a la Metternich, and to-morrow he boasts that Bismarck is only the mouth- piece of such as he. Yesterday he sneered at the idea of the Germans presuming to beat the French, ^nd to-day he talks of his countrymen ousting the English from South Africa. A trait of his fretful sensitiveness leading to arro- gance was illustrated the other day, when one of the fraternity received a communication from the Im- perial Law Courts at Leipsic in which he was merely •addressed as " well-born," whereas he opined that i iilli : 230 IMPERIAL GERMANY. the title of " high and well born " was liis due. He-. immediately stigmatized the omission as a " colossal want of tact," and paternal government, with an Argus eye for its own dignity, was not long in return- ing the compliment in the form of a fine of £6, or twelve days' imprisonment. Another apposite manifestation of the Philistine- spirit, well known and tolerated in other countries,. has hardly done more than show its cloven foot in. Germany. It did so at the accession to the throne of the present Emperor, when the Court shopkeepers, of Berlin tried to present an address emphasizing their loyalty and devotion. Luckily, the attempt, to gain signatures fell very flat ; so that we may well hope this insidious form of Philistine flunkeyism will not take root in Germany. II. The patriotism of the Philistine is of a peculiarly- aggressive and arrogant kind, yet windy and emptor for all that. It has not even the misdirected concen- tration of French chauvinism, for indifference is mingled with hatred and conceit. This indifference,, indeed, is the cause that he is not impressed, much less carried away, by military glamour : he only suns himself in it, as a cheap form of patriotism. He speaks of the English as a nation of shop- keepers,* yet conveniently forgets that no part of li * To those Englishmen who know something of England having spent millions to abolish the slave trade in her colonies^ i THE PHILISTINE, 211 Bismarck's policy has earned such unqualified ap- proval in the Eatherland as his endeavour to com- pete with the English as traders beyond the sea. He meets his boon companions in the beerhouse, and will enlarge on the enormous strides German com- merce has made of late, being able to laugh at English com2)etitioii, &c. He probably is not aware that the Germans are still a little way off dis- tancing the English, but he forgets what he ought to know and remember — that a good many branches of German trade would be in a sad plight if it were not for those very English who keep them going with their orders, whilst almost every English product is kept out of the country by strong pro- tective tariffs, that enable the Germans at once to oust them and to imitate them successfully. He boasts of the enterprising spirit of German commerce, whereas the principal enterpriser in Germany is the State, whose competition in many ways cripples the initiative of the individual. He rides home from his favourite beerhouse in a tramway car, started and financed by an English company; f(^r several of the German tramways were started by English enterprise and capital.* When he reads that the English company has sold the concern at a good profit and it has been taken over and having ruined her West Indian colonies in the process, this universally current opinion on us as a nation is amusing. The true nations of shopkeepers are those who keep their shops open all the week, Sundays included, from morning until late at night, and whose families literally live in their shops : not the English. * As also were formerly many German gas companies. 232 IMPERIAL GERMANY, m\ by local capitalists, he reviles the sordid instincts of the English, and is disgusted at the huge profit they have made out of the ^oor Germans. Yet, when this amiable individual insures his house or his life, the chances are he will do so with an English company, although the German institutions are per- haps to be preferred. A favourite wp.r-horse of the Philistine is his hatred of the Jews — not that dislike of tlie race which is shared by many high-minded people, who would never think of slandering them, or allowing it to influence their respect for individuals. Xo ; his liatred is based on envy, because they succeed where he makes but a poor shift. Macaulay said that the Puritans hated bear- baiting, not because of the cruelty to the bear, but because of the pleasure given to the spectators. The German Philistine feels nmeh in the same way. He would fain be rich. He dislikes the Jews because they are rich. And yet the chances are that the Philistine will even take his daily opinions from a Jewish paper, and vote for a Jewish town- councilman, or member of parliament. He will even at a pinch employ a Jewish lawyer and call in a doctor of the Hebrew persuasion ; in fact, it throws a lurid light on the helplessness of the Philistine, that the Jews — a foreign but homogeneous element — have gained such ground in their midst, notwith- standina* all such hatred. THE PIIILISTIAE, III. '^ZZ Such is the inconsistency of tlie German I'liilis- tine; and yet, in the aggregate, he is a powerful animal for harm. He has given Prince Bismarck a lot of trouble in liis time. He actually cliuckles with deligliL when the great man is irritated by the venomous onslaughts of Liberal orators. He gloats over the discontent of the working classes as evidenced by the spread of Social Democracy ; he loves to exaggerate it and to foretell the ruin of the future. He does not know that the narrow- minded apathy and incapacity of his class is in part responsible for the growth of what he deplores. It is owing to his want of stamina and national feelino- tliat the Social Democrats have had such easy play. Were it not for the energetic action of the Government, the Philistine middle-class mio-ht be o speedily swallowed up l)y the former; for some of its characteristics have found a congenial held in the new movement — the gos2)el of hate. When Imperial measures are proposed that seem to curtail the privileges of his own petty Sovereign, he rails and throws himself in the breach, or, more literally, buries his head in his beer-mug and mutters his imprecations at Prussian arrogance, ^ot that his meagre loyalty will hold water, for in his own narrow circle he is the life and soul of •opposition to the powers that be. He hates and detests the '' beggarly " aristocracy, and sneers at its pretensions to refinement. And at tlie bottom of it all there is a sneaking fondness for the Austrians, tt 234 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE PHILISTINE, 23> and even for the French ; for up till lately there was a Chinese wall of Philistinism between Prussia and some of the other States, where even to-day patriotism is yet a sickly plant ! Bismarck is reported to have said, " C»ermany is being ruined by the beer plague." And beer is indeed the spirit that inspires the Philistine, the beer politician ixir excellence ! It nourishes his envy. He wonders how much money his neighbours are making. If he hears that one of them is in the habit of having hot suppers at home, he spreads the report that he is living beyond his means. If he thinks the proprietor of his favourite beerhouse is making too much money, this is apt to disagree with him^ and he and his boon companions will suddenly transfer their patronage to the opposite side of the street, in order to show mine host that, although lie may have taken their money, he is nobody after all ;. for if anything irritates the Philistine more than the knowledge that anybody is making money, it is to have to admit the political success of an opponent ! When a German member of Parliament told Bismarck that German unity had fallen like a ripe fruit into his hand — when Windhorst, the great Catholic parliamentary leader, told Bismarck that it was easy to do what he had done, with the Prussian army at his back — that sentiment found a ready echo in the Philistine heart right through the Father- land. Slander is the favourite pastime of the Philistine, and the smaller fry of local lawyers are kept going by the endless despicable quarrels that boil up and overflow out of the cauldron of hate into the. public press; for tlie laws against defamation of character are so vexatious, and at the same time si^ inadequate, that altliough you can hardly say an unkind thing of a neighbour but you may be made to pay a fine of three marks, yet you can indulge in a cataract of invective, and insidiously endeavour to> ruin a person's character, and the law is almost powerless to give protection; for the Philistine originates as well as propagates slander. This state of things suits the temperament of the Philistine,, whose delight is to serve out his neighbour in a mean contemptible spirit. Thus, you can hardly turn over the leaves of the smaller provincial papers without " apologies " and " retractions " of the flim- siest kind meeting your eye. A common form is the following : " Herewith I withdraw my slanders against X, and warn everybody against circulating them any further." We translate the following three notices from the columns of one and the same number of the leading Saxon newspaper : — • " Declaration of Honour. — I regret the insults that I gave expression to, under excitement, with regard to Messrs. Naumann, hotel keepers, in Leutewitz. ''A. 0. Sf:iFERT.*' "We herewith withdraw the insultiuGf remarks made by us with regard to Mrs. Ida Schetal, nea Schultze. (Signed) "P. Bohme. " H. Bohme." " L. Hoenig herewith withdraws the vilifications expressed by him with regard to the Club." mutm 234 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE PHILISTINE, 235 ill and even for the French ; for up till lately there was a Chinese wall of Philistinism between Prussia and some of the other States, where even to-day patriotism is yet a sickly plant ! Bismarck is reported to have said, " Crermany is- being ruined by the beer plague." And beer is. indeed the spirit that inspires the Philistine, the beer politician 'par excellence ! It nourishes his envy. He wonders how much money his neighbours are making. If he hears that one of them is in the habit of having hot suppers at home, he spreads the report that he is living beyond his means. If he thinks, the proprietor of his favourite beerhouse is making too much money, this is apt to disagree with him, and he and his boon companions will suddenly transfer their patronage to the opposite side of the street, in order to show mine host that, although he may have taken their money, he is nobody after all ; for if anything irritates the Philistine more than the knowledge that anybody is making money, it is to have to admit the political success of au opponent! When a German member of Parliament told Bismarck that German unity had fallen like a ripe fruit into his hand — when AVindhorst, the great Catholic parliamentary leader, told Bismarck that it was easy to do what he had done, with the Prussian army at his back — that sentiment found a ready echo in the Philistine lieart right through the Father- land. Slander is the favourite pastime of the Philistine, and the smaller fry of local lawyers are kept going by the endless despicable quarrels that boil up and overflow out of the cauldron of hate into the f public press; for the laws against defamation of character are so vexatious, and at the same time scv inadequate, that although you can hardly say an unkind thing of a neighbour but you may be made to pay a fine of three marks, yet you can indulge in a cataract of invective, and insidiously endeavour to ruin a person's character, and the law is almost powerless to give protection; for the Philistine originates as well as propagates slander. This state of things suits the temperament of the Pliilistine,. whose delight is to serve out his neighbour in a mean contemptible spirit. Thus, you can hardly turn over the leaves of the smaller provincial papers without " apologies " and " retractions " of the flim- siest kind meeting your eye. A common form is the following : " Herewith I witlidraw my slanders- against X, and warn everybody against circulating them any further." We translate the following three notices from the columns of one and the same number of the leading Saxon newspaper : — . " Declaration of Honour. — I regret the insults that I gave expression to, under excitement, with regard to Messrs. iN'aumann, hotel keepers, in Leutewitz. ''A. 0. Seifekt.'' "We herewith withdraw the insultuiGf remarks- made by us with regard to Mrs. Ida Schetal, nee Schultze. (Signed) "P. Bohme. " H. Bohme." "L. Hoenig herewith withdraws the vilifications, expressed by him with regard to the Club." I k-^ 236 IMPERIAL GERMANY. \ i In Germany it cannot be said, " Di minimis leges non curat " ; also, it is to be deplored that the com- parative cheapness and leniency of the penal laws pander to the philistine and other vicious instincts. The law, to our idea, tackles tlie individual too readily in trivial prosecutions, and in serious delicti its punishments are not severe enough. In this, there is too much humanitarian ism. A form of crime very common in Germany — stabbing (often with fatal results) is treated far too leniently. The 3)olicy of hanging a few to encourage the others would be efficacious. The founders of German unity are under no illusions as to the damiers to whicli tlieir labours are still exposed from the spirit of hatred, of envy, and of dogmatic pig-headedness in the Philistine. They fear it more than French battalions and liussian Cossacks. And well they may. It is widespread, and although not particularly demonstrative at present, it is by no means extirpated, much less powerless for harm in the future. It is doubly dangerous, as it even appeals to intellectual men on their weakest side — their vanity. Is it not on record that an eminent German professor, of Eurojiean reputation, whose constant theme was a great and powerful Ciermany, hurried off in a lit of the sulks to Italy when once it came to be ? Merely because his vanity was wounded, that it had not come about in his scholarly fashion. Men of this stamp are prone to hold forth on the sanctity of moral conviction, but fail to see the line that separates this quality from an exaggerated sense of THE PHILISTINE. -j7 pig-headed dogmatism and vanity ! ( Jerman vanity is a very ditl'erent thing from French vanity, but it is none the better for that. If Bismarck had been jwssessed of more vanity, he would have also shown more consistency of the kind that passes current with the Philistines — the consistency of obliquity and greenness of vision ! Those very elements in Germany that were niost obstinate in oj)posing Bismarck's plans are now the ones that are ever airing everything German, and rending the air on festive occasions with tlieir appeals to every German virtue. A German steamer is WTecked in the Bed Sea, and aggressive newspaper articles hasten to reassure the public that such disasters wall not influence the " civilizino- " mission (that bit of French prostitution of language) Germany has o'er the seas. We have even heard it soberly stated that the German language is rapidly gaining ground in the United States ! Such talk is not natural to the hardy Pomeranian or kindred men of arms, whose broken bones have furnished the cement of unity. Such stuff has been gleaned from the cosmopolitan windbags of other countries, and finds parrot-like currency among German Philis- tines. It has not even the merit of originality. The Germans that go to the United States lose their national individuality, and that, together with their w^orking capacity, goes to swell the great aggregate of the English-speaking race over there. Alas ! for the vain hopes of the Philistine ! Bis- marck know^s this, as he knows most other things — notably, the peculiarities of the German Philistines. 238 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE PHILISTINE, 239 He knows that, side by side with the great qualities of the nation, there lurks a good portion of paltry egotism in public as well as in private life. He is the one great man of his time, who has dared to tell his countrymen of their failings. We know of no other public man in any country who has had similar courage. But he could do it, and they have had to hear it, for they knew they could not bluster and intimidate the man of iron. And many like him all the better for this. They instinctively feel that he has earned the right to tell them the truth, thougli loth to admit it. The late Emperor William, as well as Bismarck, felt that the social evils of the age will not be met by appeals to the Philistine spirit, much less by any initiative from that quarter. This is why they strove to take the initiative, which so many doc- trinaires condemn them for doing. Whether it will succeed the future will show, but it only wants an acquaintance with the Philistine to understand the attempt being made. IV. Although the Philistine is a coarse animal, he is yet a very sensitive one. For although education is supposed to refine outward manners, it is mainly owing to tlie Philistine influence that we meet coarseness and arrogance allied to a high standard of book education in Germany more than elsewhere. An average Englishman will stand any amount of blowing-up if he sees at the outset that he is in the wrong. Somehow common-sense tells him that is the main issue, and the blowing-up merely a natural consequence. Not so the German Philistine : you must not trespass on his sensitiveness, be he ever so much at fault ; you must remember liis dignity ! Thus it will not surprise us to learn that the Philis- tine is devoid of humour. Over-sensitive people never have any humour. True humour is good- natured and does not mind being the subject of laughter. In his soft moments he is sensible to lyric poetry; mostly of a sickly, namby-pamby kind. In fact, it must have been a German Philis- tine recovering from one of his fits of the lyrical blues, who invented the national proverl), " In Geld- sachen hort die Gemiithlichkeit auf " (in money matters there is an end of sentiment). A sober, utilitarian dogma, which cannot be beaten in the works of the late John Stuart Mill or of Professor Clifford. But over practical utilitarianism the Philistine cannot afford to lose sight of the " ideal." So he has initiated a crusade against the use of forei<^n words in the language. Everything foreign must be extirpated root and branch ! This would seem less unnatural were it not that, up till yesterday, the Philistine would have hailed the French or Austrians with open arms if they had come and given the Prussians a thrashing. But that was yesterday ! To-day even the French language nuisD be tabooed, and, if possible, discarded. A con- gi'ess of card-players is held in Leipsic, and although it hesitates to banish " all " foreign denominations 240 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE PHILISTINE. 241 !1 IM! Ill from the popular game of scat, it yet decides to do away with every term of French origin. The next thing they ought to do in a fit of egregious I'hilis- tine consistency woukl be to give up card-phaying altogether, for cards are a French in^ ention ! Naturally, such crazes find no footing in the army, where many denominations are French. In fact, a CJerman army corps is a beautiful (;ernian creation, although the name is French. The recognition and adaptation of what is foreign is a two-edged sword. It may be a sign of mental breadth, but it is liable to go too far ; with the Germans it has often verged on the ridiculous. The running amuck of the Philistines will not all of a sudden obliterate that fact. They are the people who till lately would accept nothing indigenous without strong reservations of " ifs " and " buts," whilst often taking a worthless article unquestioned if guaranteed English or French. That the preference for what is foreign has been a sreat failincj of the Germans, is undoubted. The intelligence of Germany has endeavoured to derive benefit from its attention to foreign matters, whereas the Philistine has learnt nothing but the cheap art of ranting in unison with the beerhouse cry of the time. V. The far-sighted genius of Germany foresaw that the French would sooner or later endeavour to get the left bank of the PJiine. The Philistine saw nothing of the sort : he would even have preferred the rule of Louis Napoleon to the hegemony of Prussia. But Germany's leaders knew even more than that : they knew that, once the French gained the left bank of the Phine, it would not take lonix to Frenchify it ! The left-bank Philistine would not have taken long to assimilate ; are there none living now who still remember the French sympa- thies on the left bank of the Pdiine long after 1 8 1 5 I But God willed it otherwise, and to-day the Philis- tine is at liberty to impair his digestion and ti muddle his brain with his daily mixture of beer and cheap patriotism. The late Lord Lytton praised the Germans as a nation of critics. No wonder they have become celebrated in that capacity, for have they not one- half of the critic's functions — the quality of detrac- tion ready-made in the Philistine ? R ( 242 ) CHAPTEE XII. GERMAN COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. Nil bine labore. I. We have suddenly awakened from the blind in- difference with which only yesterday we regarded the commercial doings of Continental nations, and Germany's recent efforts to secure colonies of her own seem to be at the bottom of this. To-day our newspapers reproduce every item bearing on the development of German home and trans-oceanic trade, that is to be gleaned from ou^^ consular reports .and other sources. Our politicians either trifle with ideas of fair trade, or clamour for general technical education, in order to put us on better terms of competing with the foreigner. In one word, public ■opinion is fairly aroused, and with it a doubt has risen whether our old laws and methods are suffi- cient to meet the commercial exigencies of the times we live in. Side by side with our cry of alarm come the ■echoes of German cries of exultation to our ears. Their commercial success is trumpeted in every COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 243 exhibition by the official world, and their press — united at least in this respect — indulges in vain- glorious boasting ; more so than they have ever boasted of their military success. In fact, there is a German spirit abroad lately, that is aggres- sive in its sudden belief and assertion that every- thing German is the best. But those that give expression to it, must be regarded w^ith suspicion. They are not identical with the elements that liave led their country to victory, but more with those who up till recently — like St. Peter before he Avent out and wept — were only too ready to deny •their nationality again and again ! In view of this it is amusing to remember the stereotyped expression of such people w^hen charac- terizing England's policy as " Kriimer-politik : " -shopkeeper's policy ! And to-day German public opinion, as expressed by their newspapers, literally shrieks in exultation at the imaginary prospect of following in our footsteps and tapping the mythical source of colonial wealth. But where there is so much noise and smoke — not merely fog — there must needs be some fire, and we will endeavour to point to some of it. One of our buijcbears — the German colonies — we can dis- miss with a few statistics, as far as their trade is •concerned, the figures of which are not only com- paratively small, but even show a marked tendency of further declining. In 1884 the total imports from the West Coast of Africa to Hamburg, mostly palm oil, were valued «at 133 million marks, and sank to 1 1 1 million R 2 i 244 . IMPERIAL GERMANY. marks (/5 50,000) in 1887. The exports from Hamburcv thither, which amounted to 41,75 i tons m 1882, rose to 56,000 tons in i 885, only to sink Rf^ain to 42,000 tons in I 887. "^ From East Africa tlie imports to Hamburg ni 1885 amounted to 2695 tons, in value 1,820,000 marks, and have since sunk to 1578 tons, in value 1,139,000 marks (/s6,95o). The exports from Hamburg thither were highest in 1883, with 2830 tons, and now, after a considerable drop in 1886,. remain at 2241 tons in 1887. The exports and imports from and to New Britain,, the Marshall Islands, the Samoa Islands (which da not belong to (lermany), and the (lernian part of New rhiinea, are hardly worth mentioning. The same applies to the trade of the other German ports —Bremen and Liibeck— with the C^^erman colonies. Thus we see that its colonies have hitherto not been worth their cost to Germany, and we can only assume that Bismarck merely looks upon them as a means to an end— the fostering of the spirit of national self-consciousness by appealing to its cupidity and by stimulating production. As such, they doubtless serve their purpose and tend to quicken the national anxiety and greed for foreign trade generally. In fact, the indirect results of Bismarck's aggressive colonial policy have been enormous in th'e moral impetus it has given to the commercial classes. Also protection has had very marked results m increasing home production, though political econo- mists thhik it is for a time only. Tlie textile COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 245 I industries are already complaining bitterly; and, notwithstanding protection, the export of pig-iron, .&c., has decreased during tlie first six months of 1888, from 741,391 tons in the corresponding six months of 1887, down to 584,2 17 tons, and the imports increased in the same time from 112,616 tons to 142,340 tons. Even here protection may have done its duty temporarily by giving the Germans the start they wanted, though it may be unal)le to secure to them lasting advantages. It is us and our own colonies that attract the Oerinan trader, and when we come to consider the immense value the English home markets and our colonies have for the CJerman producer — when we come to consider that it is only those broad views •of commerce we hold that places them open to all the world, we think a little more modesty, not to «ay good-nature, on the part of Germany in speak- ino' of En'dand in commercial matters, would not come amiss. For whilst l^ismarck has been amus- ing himself by humbling our Granvilles and snubbing •our Kiinberleys, we go on buying and paying for •German goods with exemplary insular stolidity. 11. There can be no doubt that the manufacture, •export, and general consumption of German goods has increased enormously, in one steady rising tide, say for the last fifteen years. But (luite as inter- ^stinrr as these undoubted facts are some of their 246 IMPERIAL GERMANY. COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 247 I causes, and \vitli regard to tliese very hazy notions seem to exist. It is not that we no longer possess the qualities^ that made us the greatest merchants and manu- facturers of the globe : it is not that the mantle with these qualities has suddenly fallen on tlie shoulders of Germany, or that technical education,, or that State assistance, or that protection tariffs, or cheap labour, eitlier are, in themselves, the only causes of this high tide of German commerce,, though they all undoubtedly have something to do with it. The fact is, the conditions of trade have changed almost as completely as has the method of travellin(^ since the introduction of railways. The spirit of enterprise, which was long our monopoly, has spread all over the world. The earnest honesty that delights in producing the best possible article as a matter of pride, is ours still ; the commercial apti- tude in subdividing and controlling labour, is ours- still; the splendid machinery in all branches of manu;- facture is also ours still; but these are no longer, as formerly, our monopoly. We have had too good a time of it in the past ; we have been commercially spoilt, and hence have little experience of the trouble and effort it requires to wrest a market from the grasp of a rival, who has hitherto monopo- lized it. This task the Germans have had. Other nations, and especially the Germans, doubtless assisted by their excellent technical schools,* have * Not only their splendid colleges (FohjtecJiniclvm) for teach* learnt from us, and with this our supreme «ndvan- tages under these headings, in the past, have gone from us, possibly for ever ! That all this means a comparative retrograde movement, there can be no doubt. That is to say, although our returns increase, they do not increase in the same proportion as tliose of other nations, who up to yesterday showed no export trade worth enumerating. This state of things has been held up both here and in Germany — liere by alarmists, and in Germany by enthusiastic optimists — as meaning that the days of our commercial and manu- facturing superiority are over. Nothing could be farther from the truth, as a little insight will tend to show. To begin with, material advantages alone do not make a great commercial nation, or Austria and Spain or Turkey might be on a level with us, and the (iermans would be nowhere. r>readth of character and conception go for a great deal — in fact, are inseparable from great commercial enterprise. All great commercial communities of the past have possessed a backbone of strong far-seeing character. The lack of that daring necessary to successful trade is noticeable anion cj the Latin races, who have ing engineering, chemistry, and physical science applied to commerce call for mention, but also their art-industry schools {KuHstyeirerhcschiden). These are most numerous in the South, where in towns such as Frankfort, Niiremberg, Carlsruhe, Stutt- gart, Pforzheim, Hanau, these schools have contributed to an extraordinary development in designing and particularly model- ling, a speciality our skilled workmen are most dellcient in. Mil li^ 248 IMPERIAL GERMANY. not the boldness to throw a sixpence out of the window that a shilling may come in at the door. Neither do they possess, in the same degree as the Germans and English, the discipline and cha- racter which is necessary to control labour. Hence these races do not excel in the production of manu- factured goods ; and even in France it is peculiar to note liow many of their great manufactories are owned by names of German origin. In this particular the Germans are rivals we have every reason to take note of, but that does not say that they are likely to supplant us, notwithstanding their excelling us in the production of medium class goods. In the meantime, our sudden newspaper panic has provided them with an excellent adver- tisement wherever newspapers are read. Some people aver that even now there are very few items the Germans produce that they do not owe their latest improvements to English or Ameri- can ideas. III. We are aware that German commerce has in- vaded many domains hitherto more or less English, but that is a long way off' showing their being equal or on equal terms. This we doubt. Even up to the present day it is an open question how far they would be able to compete, if excellence of quality combined with cheapness were the only things in request. Unfortunately for us, tliey are not always the only points to be considered, and that brings us to COMMERCE AND MANUEACTURE. 249 the main exphination of Germany's success in foreign trade ; it is to be sought and found not so much in the cheapness as in the superior " adaptalnlity " of the German as a producer. As a German has ever been apt to lose his nationality and adapt himself more readily to the country of his adoption, so also in his manufacturing produce he has a greater talent for adapting his wares to the demands and taste of the hour than the more conservative Anglo-Saxon. It is not cheap labour alone that can explain the latest trade successes of the Germans, for there are departments in manufacture in which our native trade has been partly ruined by countries where labour is far dearer than in our own : — witness the depression in the English watch trade, caused not by cheap German articles, but by tlie importation of American watches. The Swiss themselves were, it may be remembered, being beaten out of the field by the United States until they adopted the Ameri- can system of manufacture. \)o we not take our sewing machines from America still, although the Germans in their own protected country are supposed to manufactuie a much cheaper kind ? Yes, it is our own race — not the Germans — that in America often shows a greater skill in the utili- sation of labour-savin g: contrivances and control of skilled workmen than ourselves at home. The •two advantages the Germans possess are the cheap-- ness of their labour, and above all their adapta- bility in applying it to the changing demands of the market. In reference to the latter (piality a glance at one ^»;* 250 IMPERIAL GERMANY. single article of commerce miglit suffice, althougli so^ inaiiv present exactly the same instructive features. In days gone by the only beer to be found in India and the colonies was that of our well-known breweries. Our beer has remained the same, but our colonies and the Continent no longer drink it as before. The Germans have appropriated a large percentage of our export trade in beer, and even send year by year greater quantities to this and other countries. How is this ? Has the world suddenly discovered German beer to be better than English ? This may partly explain, but it does not do so entirely. Tlie fact is simply this, that whereas we have the same strong ales we brewed twenty years ago (of which Sir \V. Gull once said, that nobody above the age of thirty ought to drink tliem), the Germans have in the same period completely changed and improved the character of the beer they brew. Not only hare they avaded themselves of the important discoveries of chemistry during the last twenty years, but many brewers send their sons* as apprentices to Burton - on-Trent, and pay high premiums to the leading firms to allow them to work there. Tiiese men are all technically and scientifically educated beforehand, and when they return home they introduce all the latest technical improvements they have witnessed * The sons of our manufacturers unfortunately rarely make themselves practically familiar with the work of others in their branch of business-a general custom in Germany. That they should work for a time in a menial capacity is, of course, out of the question. COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. 251 in England. Thus the Germans have already solved one important problem our brewers have attemptetl so far in vain; they can bottle their beer without sediment. When the German beer-drinking public asked for dark Ijavarian mixtures, tlie (ierinan brewer, from the North Sea down to within sio^ht of the Alps, brewed the stuff they asked for, and called it Bavarian beer. Later on, when the light-coloured Austrian beers came into fashion, the same colic face took place. And now, that for the past few years the bright brown liquid of Munich itself has become the rage, not only have Munich breweis amassed colossal fortunes, but all over Germany imitations are concocted, which slyly introduced under similar trade-marks to the most celebrated Munich ones,, quench the Teutonic tliirst, and at the same time sail as close to the wind of fraud as the German ** Eeichs Gesetz " (Imperial Law Code) will permit. Another branch of trade, in which the Germans have made extraordinary progress, is the manufacture of pianos.* The most expensive and elaborate pianos in the world have been made in New York, and the CJermans have not been slow to adopt the mechanical improvements one by one as they appeared in America. Possibly many of them were the inventions of hard-workincj German mechanics in New York ; in every case there can be no doubt that the Germans lost no time in casting the frame- work in one piece, and adopting one after the other * According to the Cologne Gazette, 7500 German pianos, and only 900 English ones, were sold in Australia in 1877. 252 IMPERIAL GERMANY, COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, all the little tricky mechanical improvements that go to make the best pianos what they are. During all this time most of our conservative piano-makers have been content to revel in the unctuous satisfaction of being the hcaii j^ossidcntes of the richest market in the world. They (our piano-makers) allow heavy trade discounts to fashion- able musicians who reconnnend their pianos and negotiate a sale, and in the meantime the grand , pianos of Bechstein, Bliitlmer, and others have come over and invaded the concert-rooms, and divided honours, to say the least of it, with our own makers. This is a most striking instance of the immense Advantage the native characteristic of adaptability legitimately gives to Crerman trade, and a most instructive one for us as showing how our lethargic self-satisfaction, plodding on in the dark, is often the cause of our losing our former pre-eminence. Our insular fault of systematically under-estimating our adversaries in trade, as in war, is one of long standing. It becomes doubly instructive when we bear in mind that one of the most important items in the manufacture of pianos is the quality of well- seasoned wood employed, and that no Cierman firms oould possess, by long standing, such stocks and resources in this respect to draw upon as several of our leading London piano-makers. Textile industries supply another instance of the formidable character of ( Jerman "adaptability," which is the more remarkable, bearing in mind our former supremacy. The textile industries are, however, the more suited to the Hermans, as they enable them to avoid one of the disadvantages (Jerman labour is said to be specially exposed to — namely, the tendency to produce inferior goods. In textile industries the supply can be strictly regulated by the demand. The plant of machinery is always, thanks to the excellent technical education in ( Jermany, the latest and the best. With it can be produced the simplest and the most expensive and best goods, immaterial whether the works are situated in Barmen or Cre- feld, or on the Polish frontier, where we have seen the finest wool spun from plant that came from Mldilhausen in Alsace. And this is done in towns such as Crefeld, Bar- men, and Elberfeld, which send tons upon tons of "oods to Enoland and her colonies. Cotton and woollen braids, silk and cotton galloons, bindings- for tailors, Italian cloth, &c. &c., all find their way to our shores at the expense of Manchester and other towns. They almost monopolize the Chinese market with their medium quality of Italian cloth and satin de Chine. This, not so much because they are cheaper, as because they are quicker arid more dexterous in fitting their supply to the changing demands of the markets. Whilst our carpet manufacturers continue making the old-fashioned so-called Brussels, Axminster,. Wilton pile, styles and patterns, the Cernian manu- facturers, quickly discerning the modern taste for Oriental carpets, make excellent and cheap imita- tions of the latter, and send them over to us. In woollen, flannel, cotton, and silk goods the same ^54 IMPERIAL GERMANY. quickness of adapting the article to the require- ments of the day is noticeable, whereas our makers are often too conservative to make a pattern at variance with the character of their stock. For instance, it is well known in the stocking trade that foreign shapes differ from our own, inasmuch as the sizes are larger in proportion to those of some other countries, whilst we are longer in the leg. It is very rarely an English maker can be induced to make a special pattern to suit foreign trade : it does not pay them, they say. The Germans do it readily. The advantage they reap in this respect is very noticeable in trans-oceanic trade. Our consular reports teem with instances to prove this. The British Consul at Paramaibo tells us : " The importation of hardware goods is, on the whole, satisfactory to British trade, but Germany is press- ing very close on the heels of Sheffield by the pro- duction of wares wliich, being cheaper, are also not as serviceable, but are so polished, painted, and put up as to please tlie eye, and the difference in price leads many of the people in this colony to buy these goods in preference to the more durable Endish manufactured goods. IMerchants would do well to look to the manner of placing tlieir goods. A card of German scissors, cheap, and of the poorest material, nicely placed on a pretty card, and hung lip in a shop-window, will attract attention, whilst the better and higher-priced English article, done up in a brown paper parcel and put away on a shelf as not being an article for exhibition in the Nwindow, will lie for years unsold." COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. 255 The British Consul at Tangiers, in his report for 1877, tells us how a large trade has sprung up there in English parafhn candles. But already the Germans are at our heels, for they not only imitate our packages of these goods, but make special sizes and shapes to suit the local consumers. In cloth stuffs the same readiness to lit the supply to the demand is visible, witli the result that we only succeed in supplying that place with material for the army. But the consular reports of South America supply us with tlie most interesting matter. The splendid resume of Vice-Consul Tliomas of Santiago (referred to in the Times, October 1887) is indeed instructive reading. He says : " If British trade with Chili has declined for the past twelve years, it is the fault of British manufacturers themselves, and that the Germans have under-sold and beaten us out of the Chilian market in a large number of articles of con- stant consumption in which we were formerly masters of tlie field. They make good medium and inferior goods, and measure the market with such accuracy that they are all promptly sold." This accuracy in " measuring the market " brings US to note the great assistance German commerce derives from the action of their Ciovernment and its officials. A Government, which w^e are taught to believe, is only intent on turning its subjects into soldiers, in reality strains every nerve to assist the foreign trade of the country. Whereas with us hitherto we have not only let our conunercial classes look after themselves, but discouraged consular re- MT 256 IMPERIAL GERMANY, ports, the German consular reports are collected and published all over the country. In England even a consular report can supply a handle for mean party warfare, and this instructive report of Mr. Thomas above referred to is only the result of a criticism in Parliament on a previous report of the same cveutleman. No wonder our consuls shirk publish- ing what is only a means of getting them into hot water. Our Foreign Office need not fear German annexa- tions, but we cannot let Manchester have its way any longer as hitherto ; our administrators must condescend to supply us with information, even if they decline to support our trade interests when- ever they might legitimately do so. AVe have been informed, that when the Chinese ambassador went to Berlin, even Bismarck himself " condescended " to try and influence him to place a large contract for steel rails with a German firm ! And die inventor of steel rails, Sir Henry Bessemer, although a born German, lives in our midst ! Although the Germans hardly possess a shipping yard that" could turn out a first-class ocean-going passenger steamer, they compete with us success- fully as goods and passenger carriers. This is perhaps the most striking instance of all of their talent for " adaptability." They order their ships on the Clyde, and gauge so well what they require that their newest American liners can hold their own, if not even beat the best of our own in speed. Since tlie North German Lloyd's has started a line of steamers to East Asia, they now compete success- I COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. 257 fully with the Peninsular and Oriental line. The Sadism left Hono-komx on March 20, '"6%. and caught the P. & 0. steamer Kaisar-i-Himl ^t Port Said, although the latter had left Hongkonir ^ week after the Sachsen. The averaue run of the .Sachsen was 14J knots an hour, whereas the P. & O. are only obliged by contract to steam 1 1 Jvnots an hour. But not in speed alone does the North German Lloyd's compete with us : their fares 4ire cheaper, and as for general comfort, a passenger, writing in the Loudon ami China Telctjraph, of •July 23, '^S, tells us that the attention, cooking, and general regard for comfort are all that could be desired, and decidedly superior to the same items on the French ships on the same line. IV. Thus the capacity or genius of "adaptability," -combined with an extraordinary concentration and earnestness of purpose, wliich ever shows itself down to the meanest details of commercial life, is one of the most striking causes of recent German com- mercial success. It is a quality that strikes the more readily, when we bear in mind that some •great nations seem to be singularly destitute of it. The Italians, it is true, have of late shown great commercial energy, and many branches of manufac- ture have sprung up and adapted English, French, and German methods and models where they used formerly to rely almost solely on importation or inferior home-made articles. s 258 JMPERIAL GERMANY. Bat the French are an instance in point of a areat producini^ country that rarely goes out of its. way to seek nioilels or ideas beyond its frontier. Subversive in politics, the French are wonderfully conservative in trade. They are patriotic to the decree of hardly seeming to wish ev^n to proht by foi^eicn enterprise. Their mission is to propagate their" own xpecialMs tie fahriqm; as it has long been their privilege to promulgate their pet theories. Herein the French are in marhed contrast to the Russians, who possess the capacity of adapting and assimilating to a remarkable degree. Although yet in their infancy as producers, another generation or two will reveal their powers of rivalry. Not only in the quality of commercial adaptability is to be found the explanation of Germany's success. The patronage and support of its Government, so- strange to our principles, we have referred to ; the thorouMi commercial education of its merchants, its clerks,°and the careful training and superior education of its workmen, supply us with additional evidence. Besides a complete theoretical commercial training,, German clerks in their own country usually speak French and English, and a great number of those that come abroad have mastered Italian and Spanish as well German merchants are to be found all over "the world, taking rank beside our own. The training of their clerks can be seen in the City of London, where they oust the native element. Mr. Goschen has been criticized for saying that they took more pride in their work than our clerks do, and are more con- centrated on it. But anybody passing the lioyal COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. 259 Excliange at the moment one or otherof our great races are being run for, and noticing the enormous crowd of City men congregating to hear tlie result, can look for himself wliether there are any Germans anionsr tliem ! * Tliey are distinguished by sobriety, industry, and intelligence, and make these qualities imperative in those that would compete with them. This is the case particuharly in England and America, and is becoming so in h>outh America, Japan, and in our colonies more every day. In these points we are at a disadvantage; as in thrift, hard-^^lodding commercial training, let alone tlie knowledge of foreign languages, our com- mercial classes are distinctly inferior to theirs. We are thoroughly alive to the excellent quali- ties of the much maligned British workman, but his defects and his disadvantages tell more against him and ns now than before. We do not condemn trades-unions ; in a country believing in the gospel of Manchester they were an iron necessity of self-defence, but their conservatism and the obstinacy of their policy, by which they oppose every innovation, has often done us more harm than their demands for high wages. Also the want of thrift, of self-respect, inseparable from the lower education and meaner social standimj of the I>ritish workman, handicap us sadly, though this is being improved. These items go a long way towards * The great proportion of foreign (mostly German) firms in the City of London is well known, and is in so far explained by their close attention to business. S 2 26o IMPERIAL GERMANY. nullifying otlier advantages we undoubtedly possess. We think it was the late Mr. Brassey who gave it as his opinion that the British workman more than earned his higher wages by the greater value of his labour. That may still hold good of unskilled manual labour, but in all kinds of labour that are influenced by education and by the moral character of the workmen, our working men cannot claim any superiority, either over Germans, French, or Italians. From the foregoing it will be readily understood that the cry for technical education, which we hear on all sides, will not suffice to counterbalance many of the advantages over us the Germans undoubtedly possess. But, even bearing these in mind, we think the notions that prevail in (lermany with regard to their latter-day commercial achievements are exag- gerated ones. V. In general, it may thus be said that a certain lack of originality of taste and production in commerce goes hand°in hand with their skill in adapting the ideas of others, if the one be not actually an outcome of the other. It is not likely that they will be found to agree with this statement, but it is one that can be proved up to the hilt, over and over again. Their new Patent laws, which are excellent, provide efficient protection for their ideas, and yet we seldom come across a patented practical (i.e., commercial as distinct from scientific) invention in Germany, but it turns out to be of English or American origin. COMMERCE A AD MANUFACTURE, 25l Tlie sudden prosperity, or rather liabit of money- spending, that set in after '70 caused a great in- crease of production everywhere, but brought forth little taste and next to no originality. Everybody went back to the past for models — to the Middle Ages for metal work, in which the Germans ever excelled ; and to the periods of renaissance and ro- coco for many other branches of production. There was certainly some ex[)la nation for this turning to the past. It was a time of national excellence in art industry. Yet even in those days the good Ger- mans were slavish copyists of the Italians, except, perhaps, in the one solitary instance, when Marc Antonio (Ilaimondi) pirated the engravings of an Albrecht Diirer. But this gleaning from the past did not stop half- way and adapt itself to modern requirements. It often became ridiculous by slavishly reproducing the old angular unpractical designs of bygone ages. Assisted by their excellent trained designers, the Germans have made great strides in the manufac- ture of furniture. Also the importation of French furniture — a large business formerly — has almost entirely ceased, whereas the Germans now export largely to France and elsewhere. Their success in this, as in several other trades, has been assisted by the many German skilled workmen who were in * Architecture must be excepted from the above strictures. Here, as elsewhere, where the greater trained artistic faculties come into play, the Germans generally excel. 262 IMPERIAL GERMANY. II' Paris before '70, and have since returned to their own country. The best furniture makers of Berlin, Mayence, and Stuttgart produce excellent goods, and little can be said against them on the score of solidity of work- manship or price. But, whereas the English endea- vour to combine lightness with solidity, the Germans, here as elsewhere, are noted for a heavy awliward- ness of style, for which even the excellent carving and turning of some of their work offer no sulhcient atonement. Leaving out the fields of science as before men- tioned, we are of opinion that, besides want of originality, the German possesses little practical ability or taste as a producer.* It is very rarely you meet w^ith an article in Germany that is practi- cally fitted for the end in view^ A glance at the German pottery trade will bear this out, for even their excellent schools for designers have not as yet been much use to them in this branch of production. Although Germany was the first country in Europe in which china was made, it lias long been distanced in its production by France and England. Dresden and Berlin, the two oldest manufactories in Europe, with all the prestige of Boyal origin and Boyal * It must, however, be admitted that this want of practical ability, noticeable at home, does not appear among Germans abroad. They soon adopt English and American practical methods, and even excel in them, as also as inventors. Sir Henry Bessemer, inventor of steel rails, is, as said already, a born German. COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 263 initiative, have done little else than live on an old reputation, and that reputation of a second-rate linikin kind. Both these factories, except for the curiosity of their old models of rococo figures, surely at best a trumpery application of the ceramic art, are simply nowhere. And yet these antiquated styles are the staple fund of inspiration of the numberless fancy china makers all over the country, particularly in Saxony. They are copied to death, down to the vilest imitations. The old pieces of Dresden, Berlin, &c., as being unique, have an anti- quarian hric-a-hrac value in the eyes of collectors ; but if nowadays an elaborate dinner service for a thousand guineas, or an expensive presentation orna- ment is wanted in the world's market, it is usually •ordered of an English or of a French factory. The Erench factory at Sevres even to-day produces works of ceramic art that are far beyond anything Ger- many has ever produced. That the productions of Sevres in the past were incomparably supeiior to anything Germany ever attempted, is too well known to require substantiation. The potteries of Silesia and Bavaria find a large liome market for their goods— thanks to Brotection — although they are mostly clumsy in pattern and ■coarse in material: in fact, very inferior to the Austrian same class article. But a large amount of the better class pottery used in Germany is made in Luxemburi^, in Sarreguemines, as w^ell as imported from France. It is interesting to note that in this special branch •of manufacture, in which the Germans had the first ijiiHi' .Biaii:ii; 264 IMPERIAL GERMANY, start of all others, and in which they have long beem renowned for cheapness, they have not succeeded ia point of excellence — a fact sufficiently proved by their inability to supply the best foreign market with articles for use or for ornament to any appreciable: extent. They do a large business in pottery with America and England and the Colonies, but almost only in medium and inferior goods. We can distinctly trace the benefit the Germans derive from their excellent trained designers to be con- fined to those industries where artistic conventional ornamentation alone is required. Prom the moment the article wanted is one in wdiich the designer is required to adapt his artistic knowledge to the pro- duction of some original, practical design, he gene- rally fails. In this respect, the national art in- dustry schools have hitherto helped him but little. This want of practical ability is, perhaps, one of the reasons why the German instinctively turns abroad for practical models as well as for ideas, and is forced to import a quantity of articles he is unable tO' produce. The want of practical ability in the nation is. abundantly proved by the almost mediaeval cha- racter of their beds, with those dreadful feather counterpanes {^lumeanx), and also by their strange- regardlessness of the laws of health in the lack of ventilation in their houses. Although we hear so much about the cutlery of Solingen and their barefaced imitations of English goods, it is a fact that a large proportion of German carpenters, locksmiths, cabinet-makers, &c., usa COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. 265 English-made* tools. It w%as reserved for an English cheese-paring Government to order the swords for its cavalry in Solingen, with results that are as well known as they are instructive. One of the largest tug steamship companies of Germany, the " Kette," on the Elbe, has to employ English labour for soldering the tug-chains it uses^ or to set them soldered in England. VI. We have endeavoured to point to some instances in which German commerce has fairly competed with our own, even when profiting by and copying our methods. We must now take note of some instances in wiiicli their talent for " adaptation "^ leads to dow^nright piracy, and even fraudulent imi- tation. Not that we intend to reproach the Germans as a nation w^ith the dishonesty of sections of their traders, or think them less scrupulous than our- selves. The fact is, our laws w^re hitherto too lax,, and the Germans too quick to avail themselves of their laxity. We should do the same if the con- ditions allowed of our doing so with success.t We- know too well that a certain percentage of humanity of every land and clime is equally ready to turn an " honest " penny by doubtful means. And when we are able to turn German ideas to account without * A large number of agricultural implements ara imported into Germany from America. The}' are less clumsy, more serviceable^ and cheaper than the German article. "I" On p. 269 we supply an instance in point. 266 IMPERIAL GERMANY. COMMERCE Ai\D MANUFACTURE. 267 l^aying for them, we do it as readily as they; witness our piracies of German theatre pieces, and of other property of an intellectual or artistic kind. Still, it is the duty of our laws to check where we ■cannot change the sordid side of human nature; and, bearing this in mind, it is not without reason we state the opinion that the CJerman talent for adaptation, for producing colourable imitation, and their great want of originality in commerce, place their manufacturers in stronger temptation than our own to seek their designs, their models and patterns in other countries, and thus occasionally to trade on the ideas of others, to a degree that is as astounding as it is stoutly denied in the Fatherland. Not only this, but the loose construction of the •German laws for the protection of trade-marks and designs {Mmtcr Schutz) is very often productive of injustice among themselves as well as to the foreigner, which can never have been contemplated by the high-ndnded men who framed them. ^If their Eegistration system does not work won- ders in protecting their own " geistiges Eigenthum " {cuKjlid, mental property) among each other, it .is not surprising that it affords little protection when the " mental property " pilfered hails from beyond the sea — namely, from England. The commercial envy which is such a living quality among large sections of the population of the Fatherland, conies to assist the interpretation of laws perhaps too loosely defined, and the English complainant is generally non-suited. VII. A case of imitating the trade-mark of the well- known Englisli cotton-thread makers, l>rooks Bros, {a goat's head), is still under consideration before the Leipsic law courts. The German adaptations in the cutlery trade were the subject of lengtliy newspaper discussions during the past year. Among numberless other cases, the Bkcffidd Weekly Telegraph of April 2, 1887, gave fac-similes of German (Solingen) imitations of Messrs. John Xowill and Sons' celebrated cutlery. The pack- ages were identical, witli the exception that Xowill was spelt "Xo^^iill," and Shettield changed to " Shemfeld." If such manoeuvres be sufhcient to steer clear of the charge of intentional fraud in the German law courts, all we can say is, it may be law, but it is not our idea of equity ! The following extract from the Engineer will be read with interest : — '' Importation of British Marked Goods. — There is no mystery about the importation of British marked ooods from abroad. The Custom-House autliorities, although anxious enough to do what is right in the interests of just trading, have managed by one of their General Orders, dating back to 1883 — which came into force in January 1884 — to arrange their regulations so as practically to favour the foreigner. By the 39 & 40 Vict. c. -^6 (1876), it was prohibited to import goods bearing any name, brand, or mark of English manufacture. This sec- 268 IMPERIAL GERMANY, I tion was altered in 1883 to 'name and brand/ *name and place.' Acting under this order, the Customs authorities decline to notice such goods as do not hear both name and place, or name and brand, though the marks put upon them point directly to intent to deceive. For example, goods may come in marked ' Ihown's Steel,' or ' Joseph Eodgers and Sons' Cutlery,' though not an ounce of the steel was made by Brown, and the cutlery was never inside the famous ' No. 6.' A Sheffield steel firm, finding that their steel was being imported into this country marked ' 's steel,' brought the fact under the notice of the Custom House. They contended that, their name being a registered trade- mark, the goods ought to be seized on importation. The Custom House decided against them, and for- warded a copy of the General Order. It would be interesting to know why the provision of the Act of 1876 was overridden by tliis General Order, which seems to have widely opened the door for fraudu- lent dealing. Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but this class of compliment is ex- pensive." The far-famed name of Iiodgers is also imitated as " Ptotgens " along with the firm's mark of the Maltese cross and star. Another remarkable instance is the case of Curtis and Harvey's gunpowder, the descriptive label of which has been closely imitated in both colour and design, the only difference being that the name Curtis is spelt '* Cubtis," and the name Harvey is spelt '' Marvey," but so printed that to a foreign COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 269 purchaser the changes would be hardly notice- able.* Now, although an Act of Parliament was ])assed last year that makes the importation of such goods no longer easy, still our colonies are, as before, open to them. Tliis shows our culpable neglect, when passing the Merchandise Marks Act, of not getting the co-operation and adhesion of India and our colonies. Colonial merchants will often buy the greatest rubbish, and now that these fraudulent imitations can no longer be shipped from British ports, we lose the carrying trade as well. There ought to be no time lost in rectifying this state of things, if possible. Another instance of imitation, although not of a fraudulent character, may be mentioned here. A little town in Saxony (Wurzen) does a large business in fancy biscuits. Althougii the name of Huntley and Palmer is not used, the denominations, the packages, and the very articles themselves are imitated exactly, and sell all over the country, whilst the importation of the original article is hampered by a Protective duty. We must even be thankful if the imitation does not oust the English-made biscuits from our colonies. * The above facts are partly taken from the evidence of the Select Committee on the Merchandise Marks Acts (1862), pub- lished in September 1887. And it is only fair to note that it disclosed evidence of English cutlers stamping their razors ^' Warranted Hamburg ground," and other proofs of our con- tention that honesty of unrestrained human nature is much the same everywhere. 270 IMPERIAL GERMANY. Besides the articles already referred to, we could cite many others. The CJermans copy the water- marks of onr best paper-makers, they even imitate the packages and denominations of our fancy note- paper. Birmingham steel pens likewise claim their attention. Our fancy soaps and all sorts of per- fumery are but stray items picked out at random among an endless catalogue of piracy. But the worst that can be said of German productions they have said theniselves — namely, that their goods are sold as English ; thus they are admittedly imitations and not original. If we look closer at German manufacturers, we find that they fail uniformly to reach the highest standard to be met with in this and other countries. Also the large importation of their goods has had a deteriorating efiect on the public taste, though it has, in many instances, put our own makers on their mettle. They have made the public and the producer consider cheapness before everything else. Besides copying the English, they honour other nations with equal attention. Whatever is brought out in Vienna in the special trades the Viennese excel in — fancy bronzes and leather goods — is im- mediately copied in Offenbach and elsewhere. American sewing machines are kept out by Ger- man imitations. The so-called articles dc Paris of the past almost all hail from Berlin now, even in- cluding an enormous trade in ready-made costumes. Not that there is anything illegitimate in this ; but they even adopt the Erench names and styles of perfumes, of the celebrated liqueurs " Benedictine " and " Chartreuse," and sell imitations in bottles — COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 271 exact copies of the Erench article. But the list is practically inexhau stible. It seems strange, indeed, that in a country whose officials are such models of high-minded rectitude and duty, whose thinkers and men of science stand so high, such slavish imitations in commerce should be so common. Eor it is mainly in certain fields of commerce, that are closely aUied to science, such as chemistry, electricity, and the manufacture of scien- tific instruments and artillery, that the Germans excel. In chemistry they have made some of the most remarkable inventions in our time, only to mention salicylic acid, saccharine, &c. Also their chemical factories, and those of Austria, are legiti- mately beating us in this branch of commerce. In these instances doubtless the natural bent of the national mind for science and their unrivalled technical schools go for something, whereas, in so many other branches, they are little better than imitators of an inferior but earnestly painstaking kind. It is hard to have to say that the people who gave mankind the greatest discovery of the age — the spectroscope of Kirchhof and Ikinsen — are the arch commercial jjirates of our time ! Some years ago the Prussian Government sent Prof. Pteuleaux as their commissary to report on some distant international exhibition. On his re- turn he startled the Eatherland with the verdict that German goods were distinguished by being uniformly cheap and nasty {hillui vnd scJdcchf). This created a great stir at the time, and may have been a somewhat exaggerated verdict ; but tliere w\^s some truth in it, and matters have not 272 IMPERIAL GERMANY. materially changed since, altliougli many patriots fondly pretend that they have. It is not that the (lermans are alone in producing Tubbish — every commercial nation does the same ; but the (lermans have a special faculty for copying the rubbish of other nations, besides producing their own, VIII. Besides imitating everything foreign, whether an idea or a mere pattern, the Germans trade on each other's ideas to an extent that is perhaps unequalled in the world. In fact, were it not for the restrain- ing influence of their somewhat unpractical " Muster Schutz " laws, it would be even worse than it is. Hardly has a certain "brew" of beer gained public favour, than other brewers adopt as similar denominations as the law will admit. The Munich beers are all the rage now, and although the law prohibits the direct advertisement of Munich beer when the decoction liails from Berlin, the brewers ^et round it, by advertising their product as brewed according to Munich " manner " {Miinchncr Art). Some years ago a certain Dr. Jaeger travelled •about the country holding lectures to popularize Jiis system of woollen clothing, and recommending patterns of his own design made by a certain -Stuttgart maker. His propaganda created a great ■demand for the article, which was at once copied by several rival makers, who adopted his designs ^nd denominations. Although not strictly commercial, the following COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE, 273 is a propos. Some years ago a delightful sketch of Berlin middle-class town life, " Die Familie Buch- holz," by Julius Stinde, achieved great popularity and ran through many editions. It will scarcely be believed that the very title was pirated by a compatriot — not by an Englishman or a Frenchman — and a book was offered to the public under the title of the " Buchholz Family in I^aris ! " We have already referred to the Offenbach imitations of English and Viennese leather goods patterns ; for the Viennese are far ahead of the Germans in fancy leather goods,* as they are also in artistic bronzes. But it does not stop here ; the Berlin leather workers copy the Offenbachers, and undersell them in the cheaper German home market. The manufacturers of Offenbach evidently think there is nothing like leather, for some of their leather goods are among the few German articles that seem fairly able to compete with English-made ones, and the trade between Offenbach, England, and America is very large indeed. In jew^ellery a novelty is brought out in Hanau — as often as not the copy of an English or French idea — and is hardly shown to the German trade as " the ne\vest thing out," before it is already copied on a cheaper scale in Pforzheim and hawked all over tlie country. The French, as is well known, only allow one standard of gold for jewellery — namely, that of 1 8 carats. The jewellers of Hanau * The above, although strictly true, may need some qualifica- tion, Inasmuch as the South Germans are lately producing goods in embossed leather which need fear no comparisons. T 274 IMPERIAL GERMANY. and rforzheim set no limits to the alloy they employ, many of their articles hardly deserving the name of gold at all. As in gold, so in fancy silver-work. It is of a much lower standard than our own. The designs are as clumsy as the material is generally thin and poor. The styles are mostly slavishly adapted from mediaeval or old rococo designs, if they are not of late borrowed from military ornamentation and emblems, and are devoid of grace and originality. Fortunately, our silver hall-mark law presents the importation of cheap German silver goods, a bless- ing to be devoutly thankful for. German silver-plated goods have long had a bad name, but it will be news to many that, notwith- standing the continuous beating of the patriotic turn-turn, the Paris house of Cliristoile exports a large amount of plated goods to (Germany. This house has one of the finest shops in r>erlin, and probably does a larger business in Germany than any half-a-dozen German silver-plate manufacturers combined. Even in this second-rate branch of trade, if we take the precious metals themselves as lirst-rate, the Germans not only fail to compete abroad, but cannot hold their own at home. Yet cheapness and underselling are their main resource. Cheapness is tlie explanation of the tons of English printing done in Germany. And partly also this applies to the colour printing, oleography, &c., of wdiich waggon loads come to this country from Leipsic. The Kate Greenaway style has been worked out in Germany. Though in these speci- COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE. 27$ :alities a qualification must be made. The technical excellence of the German work, it may be said, ;goes hand in hand with cheapness in this particular instance. The process of copying and underselling each other is observable in almost every German trade, :and prodiices a keenness of competition often of a kind that is far from elevating. No wonder the Germans are continually com- plaining of over-production. But, as the only thing that is eternal is change, so the Germans may well look forward with hope to the future as likely to hr'mg them more independence of ideas in com- merce, as our time has already brought them national independence. The consciousness of the latter must, sooner or later, react on their manufac- turing industry, but it will not do so in the short space of time it was expected. A nation that for •generations had been accustomed to look abroad for many things besides manufactured articles, cannot ^11 of a sudden create an original supply for its \vants all along the line. In the meantime, it must be a source of gratifi- -cation to all well-wishers of the Fatherland, that the splendid penal laws against adulteration of food liav^e preserved this one vital branch of human pro- duction in Germany from the scandalous manipu- lations we constantly witness in our own country and in America. T 2 ( 276 ) THE GERMAN PRESS, 277 CHAPTER XIII. THE GERMAISr PRESS. Er liigt wie gedruckt.*— P(?pM?ar saving. I. Junius was of opinion that Englishmen should sooner give up their Parliament, the responsibility of their'^Ministers, the Habeas Corpus Act, even the ric^ht of taxing themselves, than surrender the free« dom of the press ; for that alone would bring back all these boons. Many Englishmen would be prepared to subscribe to that even^now, but few Germans. They fear the power of journalism, but, as a rule, do not respect it. Not that the German press is one whit less hon- ourable and self-respecting than our own, but the German temperament does not look upon " print ' witli the same awe that we do. As shown by the popular saying, " He lies like print," the critical German mind instinctively feels with Bismarck, when he said in the Eeichstag, February 6, 1888 : « As far as the press is concerned, I cannot attach any decisive weight to it. They say in llussia it * He lies like print. means more than in France. I am of the opposite opinion ; in France the press is a power that in- Ihiences the decisions of the Government ; in llussia it is not the case, nor can it be ; but in both cases the press is, in my eyes, only printing-ink on paper, against which we do not war. For us there can lie no challenge in such materials. Behind every article in the press there is but one individual, who handles the pen in order to publish this article to the world ; the same in a Eussian paper — let us assume it is an independent Eussian paper that is in connection with French secret funds, that is perfectly immaterial. Tlie pen that indites therein an anti-German article, has nobody at its back, but he who holds it in his hand, the single individual, who produces this lucubration in his study, and the protector that a Eussian paper usually possesses, some high official who has got entangled in party politics, and who perhaps happens to grant this paper his protection, both weigh but as a feather against the authority of his Majesty the Emperor •of Eussia." The above sentiments, not only Bismarck but Germans in general apply to the press of every country more or less, and hence the German press never had, and never will have, the power the press wields with us. This leads us to believe that the Germans as a nation are much more mentally phlegmatic than ourselves. Although perhaps more nervously irritable and excitable in some ways, their judgment is more sober and placid; they think more for tiiemselves than we do. 278 IMPERIAL GERMANY, A German will road a violent newspaper article^ and, instead of being carried away by it, like one of ourselves, will say to himself : " That is written by that virulent rascal X ; what can be the matter with, him to-day ?" On the other hand, he will casually read a journalistic opinion at variance with his own from mere intellectual curiosity, where an English- man w^ill studiously avoid reading any paper but the one holding his own views, and will generally blindly adopt the views of his favourite paper, even if they happen to differ from his own. The German reader- retains his independence of judgment far more, and will unhesitatingly stop taking in a paper whose- views no longer suit him. The late Emperor William could never again he- induced to look at the Kmiz-Zcitmig after it had once- taken a line that offended him, though this single act was strangely at variance with that great and good man's character, always so free from every personal feeling of resentment. The Berlin National Zeitung, for instance, in one day lost thousands of readers when it adopted a line of its own that did not agree with their views. The journalistic tactics that are so common with us, of advocating what we previously opposed, are decried in Germany, and looked upon as proofs of want of principle {Mangel an Uchcrzcngnng). A newspaper that avowedly changes its views with, or in advance of, the current of public oj^inion, would wield little influence in Germany, its opinion would not command respect or weight. The journalistie. ambition of shaping public opinion — admirably THE GERMAN PRESS. 279 as it works in this country — does not succeed there. In their anxiety for "conscientious conviction" they often are exaggerated and unpractical, and become Frinc^ncnreitcr — i.e., men that ride about on a broom labelled " Ueberzeugungs treue " (Fidelity of conviction !) The Liberal politician who before the battle of Sadowa had dared to hint at the possibility of Bismarck being in the right, was morally a dead man. The same fate awaited him who twelve years ago dared to find fault with the notorious May Laws against the Eoman Catholics that are condenmed to-day by all parties 1 Also, they carry far more personal feeling into their political opinions than we do, and journalists of opposite ways of thinking are not always ready to give their opponents that credit for honesty of purpose we invariably concede, except in reference to Irish aflairs. In the latter we come very near to German virulence and invective, as to which the following is an example taken at random from the next papers at hand. A polemic between the Democratic Franlfort Gazette and Bismarck's organ, the North German Gazette, yields the following amiable buds of rhetoric : " When some weeks ago the North German Gazette undertook to cast a vile aspersion on the Franlfort Gazette, and we in return accused that sheet of shameless lying, the voluntary Government organ quietly pocketed the accusation. We were not sur- prised at this, as there is no accounting for tastes. 28o IMPERIAL GERMANY, Still, we could hardly have expected that the North German Gazette would have the barefacediiess to bring up that same lie again!" — (Extract Franhfort Gazette, July 24, 1888). Pretty severe this, but the North German Gazette had aggravated its original aspersion by coolly stating that the Frankfort Gazette was not a German paper at all ! Now, as that influential journal is the property of a Jew, that was distinctly hitting below the belt, and calculated to exasperate the party receiving the blow ! Bismarck's own organ, the North German Gazette, seems to have a rather lively time of it, for almost on the same day we find the ultra-Conservative New Cross Gazette de- claring it to be " impertinently arrogant," " untruth- ful," and again " impertinent " ! Yes, political partisanship in tlie press is very violent in Germany, the Prussian Conservative papers, in their blind hatred of everytliing Liberal, attacking even those harmless and charitable con- vivialists, the Freemasons. The Liberal and Demo- cratic press become figuratively black in the face at the mere reference to a Prussian feudalist, and, sad to say, many are the journalistic elements in the Fatherland who would welcome a humiliation to Bismarck, even if it included an injury to the country. Thus party politics show no more amiable characteristics in Germany than with us. Bismarck's estimate of the press has been re- ferred to, but in its manipulation he shows his usual skill. The master mind, that has used all parties and in turn cast them in the shade, plays THE GERMAN PRESS. •281 sad havoc with German journalistic conscientious fads. He drives his opponents wild. He uses his press organs either to coax or to threaten, to butter or to bully, to draw a red herring across their path, or to set up a scarecrow in their fields. It is all the same — it invariably answers the purpose he has in view. ^ Some months ago all Europe was kept in a state of anxiety by a general cry of the German Govern- ment press that the Piussians were massing troops on their eastern frontiers. To-day all is silence or sugar on that subject, and although not a Cossack has since been withdrawn from the frontiers, any paper venturing to hint at Russian troops would be roundly accused of either trickery or want of patriotism ! " That is how it is done," as a popular conjuror used to say at each fresh feat of sleight-of- hand. Xow and then, lately, tliey see through it, and when the North German Gazette is unusually " ram- pa.i:jeous," and the Cologne Gazette joins in, it is generally understood that the tum-tum at the vil- lage fair is being beaten. Something is coming, and soon we shall be invited by the " strong man " at the booth to hurry up, pay our coppei's, and see him throw his hundredweights in the air, swallow fire, and otherwise prove again and again that he is tlie strongest man alive, and the rest of humanity mere blackbeetles. I T 282 i I IMPERIAL GERMANY. II. Thirty years ago our press possessed nearly its present power, and that of Prance numbered some of her most brilliant pens as contributors. In those days the press of Germany was in a very backward condition, its news of antediluvian flavour, and its commercial enterprise equal to + = 0. The last tw^enty years have wrought a great change in this as in so many other matters. Al- though tlie press is hardly, as with us, the road to fame or fortune (except in very rare eases), although few men of known literary attainments contribute to it (with rare exceptions), to-day it is an energetic exponent of public opinion, its news is almost as varied as our own, and although without much political influence, it is carried on on broad com- mercial principles. Germany does not, like England, possess one in- tellectual and political capital, but rather a number of such, and thus no one expose of opinion could possibly command the influence or enjoy the circula- tion possessed by any of our great daily papers. The Eerlin newspapers permeate the north of Germany, but Saxony clings with strong local feeling to those of Leipsic and Dresden. The ]>reslau j)apers are read in Silesia and Eastern Prussia, the Color/nc Gazette circulates princijially in the west, besides a large foreign circulation, and the Frcmlfort Gazette is read all over the south, which possesses only one other paper of note — the AUgeineine Zcitiivg of Munich. Thus it will be seen that there is no strong cen- THE GERMAN PRESS, 285 trality in the press, as with us ; for although one or two of the Berlin papers may be the most widely circulated, no single one of them (perhaps excepting the National Geizette) has the political or literary standing of one or two provincial papers. Also- certain of these, including the Vienna Free Press* have a nipre diffused circulation all over the country than any Berlin paper, the best of which is perhaps the National Gazette. Although no German newspaper can be men- tioned for commercial enterprise beside English or American leading journals, yet there are a few that have outstripped all home competitors in this respect. These are the BerUner TagcUatt, the FranJcfort Gazette, and the Vienna New Free Press. These three are all owuied by .Tews, and are an indirect testimony to the commercial aptitude of that race. (ierman newspapers are, unlike our own, mostly taken in regularly by subscription, and taken in this way cost about as much as our own penny dailies, whilst some of them appear as often as three or four times a day, in morning, afternoon, and evening numbers, with various supplements. Bought singly, they are two to three times dearer. The system by which all German papers can be ordered, paid for, and delivered through the post- oftice, works admirably. As the price of the news- papers does not exceed the cost of paper and print - * Although in reahty Austrian, this paper must be considered German in the same sense that many other things in Austria are German. 284 IMPERIAL GERMANY. ing, their principal income, like our own, is derived from advertisements, and hence, like our own, they cannot afford to offend the interests that advertise, or take an independent line that might jeopardize their circulation. Hence, like our own, German newspapers are forced to adhere to the plain com- mercial principles that alone enable them to exist. To increase their circulation almost all German papers adopt the fcuillet on with its anecdotal gossip, and many of them are forced to publish serial stories, as that has a greater power of gaining subscribers than any other literary merit or loftiness of purpose or principle. III. From a literary point of view, there is a great difference between German papers and our own. In that peculiar form of leader- writing, that talent for grouping of ideas which enables them to put a question superficially, but pithily and clearly, before the reader, so cleverly that he almost loses sight of the fact of its being written from a party stand- point (and thus without impartial intellectual value), the Germans cannot compare with the English. Also, as graphic reporters of passing events, the field of the special correspondent, they cannot com- pare with English or American writers. On the contrary, in the dispassionate, thorough rdsumd of a question as well as in criticism, par»- ticularly on art and science, they surpass us. Pass- ing over those sheets that seem principally to live on a continual round of political squabbling, there THE GERMAN PRESS, 28s are some papers— notably, the Munich AUgemcinc Zcitung — that not only reach a high standard of literary excellence,* but also combine a rare impar- tiality of opinion with serious breadth of treatment. The Allgemeine Zcitung is one of the few German papers that has traditions. It was formerly pub- lished in Augsburg, and to its colunms the poet Heine contributed his well-known Paris letters. Also it has hitherto withstood the temptation of adding to its circulation by the introduction of the feuilleton. In fact, we cannot but consider the Allgemeine Zeitung an ornament and a credit to the journalism of the country. Eor solidity of information on the topics it touches, it is shnply unrivalled among daily papers, and reminds us in tliis of some of our best Peviews without their party bias. It contains more solid intellectual information, as dis- tinct from news, than any paper we know of. Daily it brings exhaustive articles, sometimes in a series, on all sorts of topics of cosmopolitan interest, and the reader is sure to learn something on whatever subject it treats. In London it is only in the leading papers that we find now and then special articles, mostly reviews, of a similar exhaustive character. The following headings of leading articles, taken at random day by day, will enable the reader to judge of the scope of its matter : '' Prussia's Agricultural Administration in the years 1884-87;" "The In- undations of Hwangho " (giving a graphic descrip- * In this respect the Berlin Xatlonal Zcituvg also deserves to be mentioned ; many of its articles are signed by the wniers. 286 IMPERIAL GERMANY. THE GERMAN PRESS. 287 tion of tlie inundations of this great Chinese river durino; the last thousand years, and its bearins: on the civilization of the country) ; " The Constitution of Japan ; " " King Louis I. of Bavaria, as the Edu- cator of his People," &c. ifec. Many of these articles are signed, run through several numbers of the paper, and come from the pen of well-known authorities on the subjects they treat of. That a paper of the stamp of the Allgcmcine Zei- tung must be a popular educator as well as a means of keeping its readers conversant with the current news of the day, goes without saying ; and we can only express the wish that some capitalists could «ee their way to start a newspaper on similar lines in England. The main typical distinction between our papers -and those of Germany consists in the feidlleton — it includes the matter printed under the black line that runs horizontally across the middle of the paper. Although often devoted to sensational or other novels and personal anecdotes, notes on art and literature, it also includes serious criticisms of 'Current art topics. Pictures, theatres, and above all music, are treated and criticized in the feuilleton ; although the value of German criticism on pictures "is disputed, there can be no doubt of the invariable excellence of the average theatrical and musical articles. In fact, a regular perusal of them is almost a liberal education on these subjects. IV. Let us take last a point of view of journalism that journalists are fond of presenting to us before all else — the moral aspect. With regard to the pub- lication of indecent tales and anecdotes, the German press stauils far purer than the French. A paper that would publish a serial story such as " La Terre " of Zola, which appeared first in the Gil Bias (and was even confiscated in Ptussia), would be seized immediately and excluded henceforth from every respectable household. In regard to the publication of obscene trials, the concise laws on the subject remove the most enter- prising newspaper proprietors out of the reach of temptation. The public is excluded from such trials, and, although the press is admitted, the law ordains that no press reports of such trials are allowed, except with the consent of the Court, and after perusal of such reports by the State advocate. There are some people left in Germany who think these officials are more likely to know what is good for public consumption, than enterprising news- paper proprietors. The powers possessed by the Court are certainly liable to be arbitrarily used, it is true ; as they go beyond the right of forbidding the publication of indecency, they apply to high treason and other matters ; these may be some of the disadvantages of paternal government, but the high character of the German bench is a sufficient guarantee against bias and undue influence ; and after all, the benefit of the 288 IMPERIAL GERMANY, THE GERMAN PRESS, 2S9 I community being safe from sewer filtli and floodiiiir, . is very great and cannot be paid for too dearly! The idea of a discretionary limit of publicity endan^ gering the liberty of the subject nowadays is only one fit for the nursery. There are also here and there a few Germans left who think it a doubtful testimony to a country's institutions to have to admit that its vilest abuses can only hope to be remedied, and its filth to be cleansed away, by the action of the press. The German press has not yet, in its self-con- sciousness, come to regard itself as the Augean stable- cleansing Hercules of the community. The CJermans look abroad, and do not feel impressed by the success of the press in that character in other countries. However dreamy and unpractical they may be in some matters, they have common sense enough to suspect an indignation the source of which do'iibles the circulation, for the time, of the righteous organ of public opinion. The one moral blot on German journalism is the character of its advertisements ; they are not always above suspicion, though flagrant cases of impropriety are rare. Still, in the advertisement columns of the German press, the petty spirit of hatred, spite, and slander of the Philistine airs itself. Anonymous attacks on personal character are occasionally met with such as an English jury would deal with severely. But this occurs more in places outside the main stream of national life, in places where the press is intellectually poor, spiteful, and contemptible. There we find sheets that appeal to every local prejudice. alternately cringing and slandering, blatant with beery patriotism whilst living on envious tittle-tattle and scandal. Wherever such sheets are found, it is interesting to note the want of healthy public life, the low state of morality of the population, and the underground spread of Socialism among the w^orking classes. Thus, if a sound press be not always an infallible mentor of public morals, a vicious news- paper is a certain indicator of popular corruption ! One tendency of the German press merits re- probation : the proclivity to comment on cases 8uh jndicc, in contrast to the English press, which, in this respect, is well restrained. But while on im- portant matters restriction is advisable, needless interference is certainly irritating and impolitic. It is a question whether even Bismarck might not, in some instances, have magnanimously followed the example of Frederick the Great, who, when offensive pasquils were issued against him, would order the placards to be put lower down on the walls, that the people might read them the more easily. We have referred to the strong personal and passionate character of the CJerman press to-day, but we cannot conclude without a word of admira- tion for its tone during the war of 1870-71. It was worthy of a great nation. Its earnest tone, totally removed from bounce and bluster, in those days was as admirable as some of its excess of passion, when dealing with internal party politics to-day, is to be regretted. u ( 290 ) SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION, 291 t' ^••;m 1 CHAPTEE XIY. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. If circumstances lead me, I will find Where truth is hid, though it were hid indeed Within the centre. Shaksi'kaue. I. We have striven to point to a few characteristics of Germany in the present day. In conchision, we will endeavour to review our impressions and add to them. For we believe that, without being blind to its social, political, and other shortcomings, there is much in Germany to-day of the deepest interest to us. Far be it from our thoughts that Germany i^5 ever destined to distance the Anglo-Saxon race in the competition for the world's markets. The mass of the German people Itardly possess that aggressive vitality that has made the English race the pioneers of colonization all over the world. Though they spare no pains in tapping trade, if hard work can do it, they are not the people to throw away human lives, and above all money, in order to secure remote ultimate commercial results. If this has to be done on any large scale, it will soon mark the limits of their trans-oceanic enterprise. The present preponderant position of Germany is owing to her great men, to the organization they have effected, and to the excellent qualities of the race that have made that organization possible. But these qualities are not likely to distance the Anglo-Saxon in the long-run. Even the great strides Crcrmany has made in trade do not for a moment lead us to believe that it threatens any serious injury to us.* Their tem- porary spurt of advantage will find its level, and will have helped to quicken our efforts to improve our methods and make the most of the many natural advantages we possess. In the meantime, it is neces- sary for us to see clear and derive profit from so doing. The Germans have profited enormously by studying us ; it is now our turn to profit by study- ing them. We can do so all along the line. In the first place, we must remember we are treating of a country which, up to witliin the last twenty years, was in many material respects genera- tions behind us, and the government of wliich has since been carried on according to principles very much at variance with those by which we in England are guided. We have heard of a poor, police-ridden, tax-choked population, groaning under the terrible military blood-service, suffering from tlie evils of * Already therd are signs of its falling off, and of failure to regulate prices and encourage export by so doing. Protection does not come up to expectation, although it may not have turned out the ruin rabid Cobdenites would propbo«y. U 2 292 IMPERIAL GERMANY, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 293 commercial protection, cursing the onerous conditions- of its existence, and turning with longing eyes to our happy shores to admire within them the abodes of prosperity and freedom. Lastly, we hear that this nation is gagged to such an extent that it can- not even openly complain of its misery. It is true, in Germany some limits are placed on platform oratory and "talk;" also the somewhat autocratic manner of German officials generally in their dealings with the public is not such as we should wish transplanted to our shores. But a<^ainst these, and sundry other shortcomings, many striking advantages can be noticed. 11. We have found a nation on a high level of edu- cation, and of healthy material prosperity, and whose best sons are imbued with a rare ideality of aim and purpose. The people are animated by a sense of (Uity and an earnest devotion to work,, which are hardly to be surpassed in the world. In this sentiment every difference of creed and party is submerged, until it forms a paramount law of ethics of universal practical application. We seo this particularly in the honesty of the administra- tion of the country as well as in the high standard of rectitude and honour observable in all the educated notably in the professional classes. It is the noral force underlying all this that is more instruc- tive than any outward success, which is merely its result. We have found an absence of pauperism, of 'drunkenness, and other forms of degradation, as striking as they are pleasant to note. The physical appearances of the male population when compared with that of Austria and France, .shows, particularly in the North, a healthy, sturdy, manliness of bearing that is i)artly due to the beneticial hygienic efl'ects of universal military ser- vice. Also the observer is met almost everywhere by outward evidences of progress and prosperity. lierlin, that only numbered 100,000 inhabitants at the beginning of the century, and hardly half a million in '70, possesses now a population of 1,200,000 souls. The Berlin University, only founded at the begin- ning of the century, to-day boasts the tlitc of intel- lectual Germany in its staff (^f }>rofessors, and attracts the greatest number of students of any German Universitv — over four tliousand. Whole suburbs have sprung into existence — to the west, consisting of beautiful private houses ; else- where, factories and works have arisen, re-echoing the sound of the hammer and anvil and steam. The town that only yesterday was noted fur its monotonous, lifeless streets, has now outstripped every town in Europe, except London, in the plenitude of its bustle and life. Public buildings, such as the head post-office, the new town-hall, the different barracks, strike the eye by their vast dimensions, and the new lieichstag buildinor when finished bids fair to become the grandest building of its kind in the world. 294 IMPERIAL GERMANY. SUMMARY AX D COXCLUSION. 29S Nor does Berlin stand alone in the outward signs of increased prosperity. Towns, such as Frankfort- on-the-Main, Munich, Magdeburg, Breslau, Stutt- gart, Carlsruhe, Cologne, Dusseldorf, Dresden, and many others, have wonderfully improved in appear- ance, as also gained in material riches. Everywhere new streets of palatial buildings have risen, and there are now dozens of towns in Germany the shop-windows of which could vie with any in England outside London. Hamburg, the Venice of the North, has become one of the linest towns of Europe. Over ;£^8, 000,000 have been expended upon her harbour and ware- houses ; and her commercial activity can be gauged by the one fact, that within the last few years she has outstripped London as a coffee mart. As for Strasburg, German rule in ten years has. done more than the Erencli did in two hundred. The New L^niversity building is alone well worth a visit to see. Modern public buildings of every description in (jlermany show a grandeur and solidity of monu- mental architecture rarely met with elsewhere. That the soldiers' barracks to be found in almost every large town are gigantic structures w411 surprise no one. In towns such as Berlin, Dresden, and Munich, they form almost separate qnarticrs of their own. But it is the cleanliness and order that particularly strike the eye. The town-halls, the post-othces particularly, and even the police- stations, and the prisons of even second-rate towns, are mostly imposing edifices and models of order and cleanliness. Even the day-schools arc large buildings, uniting excellent practical accommo- dation with chaste architectural style. The theatres of towns such as Dresden, Erank- fort, Leipsic, Berlin, and many others, hardly need a word of encomium on the score of their elegance and solidity. Whetlier large or small, their con- struction and administration are such, that, whereas hundreds of lives have been lost by theatre fires in England, France, Italy, Austria, and even in America, during the last twenty years, no such misfortune has happened in Germany. Those who look closer for indirect evidences of healthy national life, cannot fail to be struck with the excellent municipal organization that regulates town life. Everywhere unexceptionable order and clean- liness have replaced the old sleepy conditions of the past. Part of this is undoubtedly due to the very superior class of men from whom are chosen the mayors and town councillors of the larger German cities. Men such as von Forckenbeck, mayor of Berlin, Dr. Migitel, the mayor of Frankfort-on-the- Main, and one of the leaders of the National Liberal party, have undoubtedly done much to raise the character of municipal administration in Germany.* The splendid bridges over the Ilhine and other rivers are notable instances of excellence of design combined with solidity of work. The railway stations, even of towns such as Hanover and ]\Iagdeburg and * As an instance of the healthiness of municipal government in Germany, it may be mentioned, that the Berlin mimicipality closed the last financial year with a. surplus of ;{;i9i,ooo. 296 IMPERIAL GERMANY. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 297 Strasburg, are beyond anythiug we have to show outside London; wliilst Berlin, Munich, and Frank- fort-on-the-Main each possess a station on a larger scale than our largest — the Midland, at St. Pancras. The Frankfort Station — the largest in the world — covers an area of 33,852 square yards, and is, we believe, a third larger than St. Pancras. It cost over ;^i, 500,000, half of which was contributed by the State, and the other half by the town. Everywhere, o'er hill and dale, are to be found fresh evidences of the vital energy pulsating through every artery of the country. Even country roads are uniformly kept in such order as contrasts strongly with the fate of some of our splendid old highways since the introduction of steam. III. Turning from these outward tangible evidences of national life, we faid, on closer examination, that the population itself is far better-ofl' than we were accustomed to believe. If the happiness of a people be judged by its savings, the German masses seem to stand almost as well as the Enirlish of their own class. According to statistics, there are 105 million pounds sterling in German savings-banks, whereas, in English savings-banks there are only 80 millions. And this does not include the numerous small investors in German Government Stock, a class (until lately, through the Post Othce Savings-Bank)' practically non-existent in England. According to another series of statistics, the wealth of England is calculated as representing i^249 to each inhabitant, whereas every German is only credited w^ith ;^I40. Now if it be borne in mind that the enormous fortunes of England are practically unknown in Germany, that in fact incomes even of a thousand a year are compara- tively rare there, the above quoted average nmst show a high standard of income for the masses of the population. Aristotle said, long ago, that the salvation of a country in a crisis must lie in its middle classes : in their increase lies its hope of permanence and prosperity. The tendency with us is to increase property in the hands of a few individuals, leaving an impoverished middle class, and cutting off the hope of the poorer classes ever rising into the middle class. The problem of the moment is to prevent this accumulation of immense fortunes in few hands, and to spread the wealth throughout the country. This problem the Germans seem to be in the way of solving more satisfactorily than we are. But, however this may be, it is certain that the number of individuals with a reserve of money saved is out of all proportion great in Germany to what it is with us. The small shopkeeper, the mechanic, and even the working man, have pleasures and en joyments within their reach from which their English brothers are all but debarred. They partici- pate in the same amusements as the higher classes — such as public concerts, theatres, and operas, that are within the reach of the slenderest purse. We are told that the German working classes suffer by protection, and it is a sad truth that wheat is 30 per cent, dearer in Geriuany than in England. 298 IMPERIAL GERMANY, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 299 Still, bread is liardly dearer in Germany than with us, and certainly it is far purer. It is unadulterated ! One reason why Germany is better able than we are to bear the strain of a protective tariff' in food stuffs may be, that small peasant proprietors form comparatively such a large body of the people. If wages are generally lower than with ns, on the other hand the people are more thrifty ; they make their money go farther, particularly their wives do ; and such necessaries as beer and tobacco are not only cheaper than in England, but they are unadulterated. The great expansion of trade in the country during the two last decades has circulated vast sums of money among the working classes, which are far better paid than a genera- tion ago. For instance, in Munich tlie wages of builders, plasterers, masons, carpenters and others, have for some time been as high as ever they were with us, although it must be confessed that this is an exception. Also the emigration of skilled labour has largely decreased of late, notwithstanding the alleged baneful results of protection to trade. Tlie American Nation lately significantly noted this fact, and attributed it to the marked improvement in the laws dealing wiih the well-being of the Ger- man labouring classes. How comes it then, will be asked, if so many things are satisfactory in Germany, that a party such as the Social Democrats, bent on the subver- sion of everything existing, has so many followers that it has been able to send over twenty of its Tepresentai^Lves to the Eeiclistag. ? How comes it that CJermany is forced to use such repressive measures against the Socialists, that towns such as Berlin, Leipsic, Hamburg, Stettin, Frankfort, Offen^ bach, &c., are proclaimed in a continued modified state of siege, in order to enable the authorities to cope witJjL them ? The main reasons why it has become so are — Firstly, because of the high and yet politically most defective education of the masses ; secondly, because the introduction of universal suffrage has enabled them to make their opinions felt. (This measure has been considered a grave precipitancy on the pnrt of Bismarck ; but neither he nor anybody else could have foreseen that within ten years of attaining national unity, a million of voters would pin their faith to a party to which the idea of national exist- ence ever seems a secondary consideration.) Thirdly, because of the very character of the masses them- selves, who are less influenced by military glamour^ in some senses more sober and less enthusiastically patriotic than elsewhere. Hence their care for the supremacy of their class interests is less interfered with by other considerations. This is distinctly proved by the great strides the movement has made amidst victory and commercial success. Tart of the spread of Socialism must also be put down more to the gospel of hate than to that of hope ; for, although some of the Socialist leaders are men of undoubted high principle and purity of motive, yet much of the envy and " Schadenfreude "—malicious joy— peculiar to Philistinism have gone to swell the number of their adherents. We talk of class hatred ; but it is 298 IMPERIAL GERMANY, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 299 :fi m Hi !;l Still, bread is hardly dearer in Germany than witli US, and certainly it is far purer. It is unadulterated ! One reason why derm any is better able than we are to bear the strain of a protective tariff in food stuffs may be, that small peasant proprietors form comparatively such a large body of the people. If wages are generally lower than with us, on the othnr hand the people are more thrifty ; they make their money go farther, particularly their wives do ; and such necessaries as beer and tobacco are not only cheaper than in England, but they are unadulterated. The great expansion of trade in the country during the two last decades lias circulated vast sums of money among the working classes, which are far better paid than a genera- tion ago. Tor instance, in Munich the wages of builders, plasterers, masons, carpenters and others, have for some time been as high as ever they were with us, although it must be confessed that this is an exception. Also the emigration of skilled labour has largely decreased of late, notwithstanding the alleged baneful results of protection to trade. The American Nation lately significantly noted this fact, and attributed it to the marked improvement in the laws dealing wiih the well-being of the Ger- man labouring classes. How comes it then, will be asked, if so many things are satisfactory in Germany, that a party such as the Social Democrats, bent on the subver- sion of everything existing, has so many followers that it has been able to send over twenty of its representatives to the lieiclistag ? How comes it that Germany is forced to use such repressive measures against the Socialists, that towns such as Berlin, Lei p sic, Hamburg, Stettin, Prank fort, Offen- bach, &c., are proclaimed in a continued modified state of siege, in order to enable the authorities to cope witli them ? The main reasons why it has become so are — firstly, because of the high and yet politically most defective education of the masses ; secondly, because the introduction of universal suffrage has enabled them to make their oi)inions felt. (This measure has been considered a grave precipitancy on the part of Eismarck ; but neither he nor anybody else could have foreseen that within ten years of attaining national unity, a million of voters would pin their faith to a party to which the idea of national exist- ence ever seems a secondary consideration.) Thirdly, because of the very character of the masses them- selves, who are less influenced by military glamour, in some senses more sober and less enthusiastically patriotic than elsewhere. Hence their care for the supremacy of their class interests is less interfered with by other considerations. This is distinctly proved by the great strides the movement has made amidst victory and commercial success. Tart of the spread of Socialism must also be put down more to the gospel of hate than to that of hope ; for, although some of the Socialist leaders are men of undoubted high principle and purity of motive, yet much of the envy and " Schadenfreude " — malicious joy— peculiar to Philistinism have gone to swell the number of their adherents. We talk of class hatred ; but it is f 300 IMPERIAL GERMANY, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 301 I in Germany that true class hatred exists. No un- •covering before a lord among German Socialists ; but stoning him, if there is a chance. Let those who doubt tliis recall the murders of Prince Lichnowski and General Auerswald in Frank fort-on-the-Main, in 1849. The above facts show tlie danger of the movement, and it finds nurture in a weak spot in the national character. Divested of all theory, it means the antagonism between capital and labour, common to all countries, but with the (Jermans it means more. With us the trades unions, which had their origin in the unspeakable social misery of the working classes, have acted as valves carrying off superfluous steam. Such have been prevented in Germany, and as life is of a less depressing character to the working man, secret combinations of this kind have been less resorted to. Socialism has more of an ab- stract or philosophic basis, tlian the narrower aims of our trades-unions. As a high Prussian legal authority put it to us a little thne ago, we educate the masses to look upon the will of the majority as law. What ■can we say, when the time comes for them to turn round, and, using our own arguments, to aver that they being in a majority their will is law. This is the problem the statesmen of the future will have to face. Xot the dearth or plenty of wages will influence its course. We And the Knights of Labour in America, where wages are higli and employ- ment plentiful. It is part and parcel of the in- -creased flerceness of the struggle for existence of our time. Whereas in Austria active brains have still an easy victory over laziness and stupidity, in Germany — particularly in the North — intelligence is grap- pling with intelligence in the fierce struggle for existence, and breeds Socialism in all the great centres erf commerce and manufacture. As it fell to the French in the last century to deal with feudal aristocracy, so it will probably fall to the lot of Germany to grapple with the problem of this century first. Not because the conditions of its labouring classes are the most onerous — far from it; but for the reasons given above, which place them in the front rank in clamouring for recognition. The late Emperor William, in his message of February 1881, to the working classes, has recog- nized their right to be considered by the State, and the subsequent laws in favour of insurance in case of sickness, in case of accident, and, lastly, for pro- vision for old age, have since emphasized his words. How far these measures will answer, the future alone can show. Those who prophesy a black future for the country from Socialism, may be right, but they would be strangely short-sighted if they surmised that these social problems will only have to be solved in Germany. They will come to the fore in all other countries, and it is very questionable whether they will find other countries more prepared to meet the shock. For in Germany there exists a counter- weight in the fact of the land being largely in possession of the people, which will tell its tale in favour of compromise ; whereas those countries will feel the inevitable upheaval of the masses most in 302 IMPERIAL GERMANY, which the people are most dissatisfied with the social and economical conditions of their existence. If democracy comes to rule, some of the meaner instincts of the race will come into dangerous prominence. Envy, hatred, malice, and all unchari- tableness will find fuller scope than ever. The words of the wise will be unheeded amidst the angry passions of the hour ; for before its advent — if inevitable — it is most unlikely that the leading minds will be able to cast the institutions of the -country in an iron frame, capable of resisting each fresh assault upon it, as the Constitution of America has proved itself able to do. Tiie French still possess the qualities that made them ever a united people against the foreigner; the English have only to be hard pressed to verify the eulogies some of the best and most genial Ger- mans have passed on them as a nation ; but we firmly believe the Germans have only to lose the initiative of Prussia to verify again the truths that have been stated in the past respecting their poli- tical character as a nation, and sink back into the gelatinous mass they rose from. IV. The short reign of Frederick III. and its sequels ^lave thrown a lurid light on the bitter party divi- sions of tlie country. Of the Socialists we have spoken. The ultra-Liberals are only in a degree less opposed to every measure on which authority rests in Prussia. The Eoman Catholics have proved ithat they recognize an allegiance beyond the Alps, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION, 303 above the loyalty to the Sovereign — yes, even perhaps above national interests. The Conservatives, although possessing many lofty characters in their ranks, are as a party too selfish, narrow-minded, and weak ever to be able to wield decisive I*arliamentarv influence. The intellectual backbone of the country is perhaps to be found in the National-Liberal party, though, in its turn, it is anything but a homo- geneous body. As favouritism, jobbery, and the influence of wealth have affected the efficiency of our Whigs and Tories, so impractical doctrinairism is the plague-spot of the Xational-Liberal and Liberal parties. The conscientious politician-professor is the bugbear of German politics, and his enthusiastic admiration of English institutions, not the least suspicious element of his creed ; it is invariably derived from book-knowledge, or from a very short stay in England. These irreconcilable parties and the very character of the German people, of which they are typical, do not hold out a guarantee that Parliamen- tarianism, particularly that of a single all-powerful Chamber, is suited to the character or requirements of the nation. On the contrary, it is the seed- ground of peril for the future. In its bosom are the future allies of the Socialists — the Catholics. The danger that lies in a possible social propaganda of the Catholics can be surmised when we look at Ireland. It is a Democratic, almost Socialistic, movement. The Catholic Congress at Freiburg in Sept. '88 distinctly pointed in the direction of Catholic partici- pation in projects of social reform — the care for the 304 IMPERIAL GERMANY. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 305 masses. It is only necessary to bear in mind the power of the Catholic party in the country and in the lieichstag to feel that, once it joins hands with the Democratic faction, it will be a hot time for the moderate Liberals representing the resisting bulk of the middle classes. On these lines there is un- doubtedly a powerful opening for the Catholic party. For, if it is strong in itself, it is even stronger by the hopeless divisions of its political opponents. A party that presents a united parliamentary phalanx literally, in the words of Lord Tennyson, stands — *' Four square to every wind that blows " — even when the object of its policy is almost anti- national ; it may well bid its enemies beware, if once its policy should be such as to attract the sympathies of large classes of the population. In view of this state of tilings, it is fortunate that a strong central authority is a living reality, at least for the present. It is a healthy point in legal ethics, that offences can be punished in pro- portion to the harm they might inflict on the com- munity, and not by sentimental standards, llc^ ^uUica suprema lex, still holds good, whether for a rebellious diplomatist or a restless professor. It is necessary to bear this in mind in a time that has come to find excuses and defenders for almost any action, however pernicious. When Germany is more consolidated, she can perhaps allow herself the luxury of sentiment in politics, but that time lias not come. The recent endeavour to lessen the services of Bismarck, by seeking to increase the credit of others, has, like previous attempts, signally failed. Surely his reputation has no need of borrowed plumes. But public opinion, as usual, like the peasant wdio wanted to look inside the fowl that laid the golden egg, has always wanted to know exactly whence everything originated. It can never be believed that the late Emperor Frederick wished the world should know, by his Diary, that he had been far more in the work of unity than liad hitlierto been acknowledged. This would be in too strikino- contrast with the conduct of his great father. People already ask themselves what will become oi the country and these elements of discord when Bismarck passes away. Why has he trained no .successors ? But surely neither Pitt, Canning, nor AVellington left any successors either. The State is like a ship that has been guided through shoals, Bismarck at least leaves it with a model working system. If he has somewhat lavishly used up tlnj ^administrative capacity of the country, in one par- ticular, the working material of the nation stands untarnished, supreme — the army. Amidst all the bitterness of political discussion, its chief, Field- Marshal von Moltke, passes like a classic shadow of antiquity from the scene of activity, after himself a))puinting his successor. Tiuis around the army all those who are intent on retaining the means of developing everything that is to be valued in a nation must group themselves. The time may come when all this may be sufficiently safeguarded X 3o6 IMPERIAL GERMANY. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 307 by the free expression of public opinion, but that -time has not yet come. In the meantime the temper of the nation makes it very unlikely it will embark in Quixotic adven- tures, such as the French, by their constitutional periodical " debordements de sang," have indulged in and suffered from. Y. Our attention to what is going on in Germany has increased so much of late, that it must interest us to glance at the feelings of Germany in general towards England and the English. [NTow, although everj^thing English has ever been looked up to hi Germany, and the more so by the higher intellec- tual men who have studied us, of late there has grown a distinctive political dislike for us. It began in our attitude towards Germany during the '70 war : it lias increased since, through a variety of causes. Perhaps the greatest of these is to be sought in the fact that the two nations are passing through such different cycles of public feeling and development as almost to preclude a mutual under- standing. We have been lately suffering from some of the disadvantages of our system, whereas the (Jermans have only just reaped the advantages of heir own ; even their recent progress can but be coked upon as exceptional; bearing the part in mind, the drawbacks remain to be seen. The Germans have only just fought for their national existence, and are still in that primitive frame of mind that calls a spade a spade, whereas we have long arrived at that stage of culture, that often makes us loth to look significant facts and their consequences in the face. This difference of circumstance and feeling must increase the diffi- culty of understanding each other's aims ; but it need not lessen mutual respect, no more than it need prevent our profiting by any lessons the study of the country must convey. Besides the points already referred to, we may learn from it that the possibilities of a great race are not unfailingly in- dicated by its rush towards democracy and by its yearly balance of profit and loss, but also by the great men it produces. In every case the days are past when worn- out methods, blundering incapacity, or defective organization can be atoned for by the self-sacrifice of an heroic race. The battle of life with nations, as with individuals, has become more and more severe and fierce. The fanaticism of blind pa- triotism or belief can no longer be reckoned on as adequate to right a ship unskilfully steered in dan- gerous shoals. Everything points to the serious, ever irretrievable, results of want of preparation of a nation to meet the responsibilities of its position. Erom a study of the (Jerman model administra- tion we may learn not to ask whether our navy or army be rotten, but who are the men we ought to hang for such being the case. The higher the position the greater the crime and its punishment. A study of the points Bismarck has scored off us in foreign policy ought to enable us to learn liov/ to meet him on his own ground, when our legiti- 3c8 IMPERIAL GERMANY. mate interests are trenched upon, and open our eyes to the fact that our present party government renders it difficult for us to do so. Perhaps the most useful lesson the study of Ger- many teaches us to-day is, that laissez /aire as a system of social and political advancement — be- tween an aristocracy of the past and '^ '^^.uiocracy of the future playing at cross purposes — is no longer the only shibboleth to swear by. A few additional watchwords can hardly fail to be sug- <5ested by an impartial study of Germany of to-day. PRINTED BY BAI.KANTVNK, HANSON AND CO. LONDON AND EDINBt'RGii N: , r 'r7.^ ' .-:* -^ •■« ■vt ' •■. * rs 7: ..-' /%'>,^»y>. ■>.:t- >7 >--.S v^'rl'V' ft U?I?;V<^ tt' • •« V ^^►'/'"^'i^ ^v^-^ -'t.-: V ^. -T- .,^.r> . :|^ ?^::'^^^^ii-^5€Kv^^^f^^ iV.r/'V «•>■ .<> Df ->• >:> «.•..»'■ i^ •■ 'V-< i^v.J>/A^^ <^."i>( ^Vi-f.;'/ ^•/^' «-■' t ' ■^.''>' -*::..'.% V ,v" v» .%:'''^'^ 7r,. n'>^s ->. L*.>o ■'^'*'; •ii J-? ••ri .-? m' «* >y '4^ v^. •sj< I'/ t»i f-''^ v»-; ^ C'V - •'*' V, •r -V ^•L-V^/' 1 • "V lL^ ■> ♦;' ii: *:^7.M . -^JJ ^^ \r. •■ ' > ft. <■- .-^^aT.-v "V-^y^/V ^-m^x^SKi .7; .i"«-r ^i^_*^;-' ^A* 'T VI >"' si^ f\U;;?t •i-V-.'-k V. '•'*-«' r^^" '^>l" . ;.-V^'«M i ,-,^ fv.-V ♦* ;- w ..-«■ v' V. 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