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Secret chamber in this strange man's heart; the master at work for United Germany.
-- The great Bismarck, during his long and turbulent career, as a rule refused to remain loyal to party affiliations.
The moment a party-theory no longer seemed expedient, the Prussian Junker reckoned neither on political friends.h.i.+p nor on political antipathy.
His whole life, he was engaged in endeavoring to persuade others to adopt his policies, regardless of the fact that opposed policies might be supported by as much if not even by more logic. Bismarck always justified his opportunism by saying that his sense of duty was superior to his private feelings of love or hate; however, his att.i.tude was uniformly directed for or against conditions in proportion as, to his mind, they were charged with good or evil for his beloved Prussia.
Although one of the world's greatest among amiable despots, Bismarck always held himself to be at once free from prejudice and under the hand of G.o.d. Even on this high ground, it would still be easy to show (by many startling episodes in Bismarck's career) well-nigh innumerable changes of front that, to the average mind, must pa.s.s as inconsistencies.
-- Get clearly in mind, then, this giant's political att.i.tudes of gross contradiction, as between promise and performance--otherwise we will miss the essence of Bismarck's genius as a statesman and his peculiar glory as a man large enough to stand beside Caesar.
-- Now here is the master-key, unlocking every door in the secret chambers of his heart: Bismarck, all his long life, kept himself in power by his consummate knowledge of human nature.
Shakespeare dealt with men, on paper, making them march this way or that at the behest of his immortal genius.
Bismarck dealt with men in the open arena of life, had no way of controlling their actions except by the inspiration of his own practical, constructive genius.
It is one thing to control a man's actions, on paper; wholly another--and a greater triumph, is it not?--to master man's ways in the market place, making those around you do not necessarily what they think they ought, but do what you wish.
Thus in some senses Bismarck appears in the figure of the superman; for there is absolutely no question that on many occasions he forced strong men to do his bidding, squarely against their individual preferences!
-- This huge bulk, this deep-drinking, gluttonous Bismarck, this world-defying voice, raged and stormed through his eighty-three years of life--making little men's souls shrink in fear--and ever the essence of his genius was for alignments with men, or against them, using this human clay ultimately for his own peculiar ends, as the potter molds the mud. He knew too that despite the old German family and tribal feuds, the Germans are brothers; standing apart it is true at this hour, fighting each other; yet the day is to come when Bismarck will triumph in his Germany, one and united. It mattered not, he would make friends with his deadly enemy, if such a step seemed advisable to carry out that cherished plan for a free and united Germany.
If he could not bend men to his will by logic, he tried flattery, and if that failed he threatened war, and the war came, too, but not till Bismarck was good and ready. He took his own time, made preparations that defied disaster, then moved forward and swept his enemies off the face of the earth.
-- Thus, there was always evidences of peculiar precaution, even in Bismarck's boldest strokes. He never forgot himself, never did things by halves. It might take a week or a year, or ten years, that mattered not to Bismarck; in the end, he would bring his wishes to pa.s.s. He never courted failure by hastening with some incomplete plan; but with the certainty of Fate, Bismarck abided his time. Obliged to surmount tremendous obstacles, often set back, in the end he carried everything by force before him.
-- We are here reminded of those vast fields of snow seemingly in a state of dead rest, in the higher Alps, through many winters still secretly gaining bulk and encroaching inch by inch all un.o.bserved upon the doomed valley below; then, at the dropping of a mere pebble, the ice begins to slide, nor does the dread avalanche pause for the sobs of the dying. So behind Bismarck's amazing preparedness his ofttimes long deferred but inevitable destruction of his enemies seems to be something that he borrows from the avalanche. It is at once ma.s.sive and inexorable, the power given to but few master-spirits in the history of the world.
-- In political ac.u.men, in administrative and executive capacity Bismarck measures up with Caesar. The smallest facts about such as Bismarck are of more than ordinary interest. Too much time cannot be spent on this great character, in an endeavor to understand the secret springs of his mighty powers.
Aside from the mere biographic outlines of his career, the man presents, in himself, a study that deserves all the thought that can be put on it--in an effort to set forth the realism of his mighty life.
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Bismarck shows himself master at quelling a meeting, checking a mob, stamping out a rebellion, and heading off a king.
-- And after the Frankfort radicals found themselves unable to make Bismarck pick the German crown "out of the gutter," they turned and tried to establish--what do you think?--a republic!
By Autumn, the forces of Revolution spent themselves and Metternich drove the rebels before him, as the hurricane blows chaff. Order was re-established in Vienna and in the Italian states.
The uncompromising Metternich restored the "Old Diet," originally ordered by the Congress of Vienna, 1815, as the one authentic source of political legitimacy for the clas.h.i.+ng German states. It was a clever Austrian by-play.
-- We now return to Berlin. In May, the blood-letting was over, but no prospect of political reform seemed immediately possible.
Bismarck began using what might be called underground methods to head off the demand for that long-promised democratic Const.i.tution.
-- Already the King began to see more clearly. It struck him that this brazen-faced giant might be useful, later on. Had not Bismarck said in his now widely quoted speech: "Soon or late, the G.o.d who directs the battle will cast his iron dice!" It gave His Majesty courage!
-- The King looked to right and left, dissolved one Diet after the other, till he had one to suit him. Otto nudged his King. That momentary weakness of marching with the democrats was something His Majesty wished to forget!
-- Bismarck's position must be clearly set forth. He was no mere reactionary, brandis.h.i.+ng his fists at new leaders, who favored the common people. He knew all about this liberty, equality and fraternity business, from across the Vosges--and he despised the cure-all.
Here is the idea in a few words: Bismarck was not fighting political liberalism, as an end; instead, he protested with his giant's strength at the implied destruction of the Old Regime.
-- He laid the revolt largely to the bureaucratic system, which he characterized as "The animal with the pen!"
He stood fast by his good old Prussian dogma, as outlined in "I am a Prussian!" paralleling "Rule Britannia," and other national hymns.
The song is sung with wild martial vigor, akin to the furious appeal of ancient Polish melodies:
I am a Prussian! see my colors gleaming-- The black-white standard floats before me free; For Freedom's rights, my fathers' heart-blood streaming, Such, mark ye, mean the black and white to me!
Shall I then prove a coward? I'll e'er be marching forward!
Though day be dull, though sun s.h.i.+ne bright on me, I am a Prussian, will a Prussian be!
Sixteen years later, when endeavoring with all his strength to bring about German National unity, his "Prussians we are and Prussians we will remain" was used against him with mocking effect.
-- By October, nerves were steadied. The King sent Gen. w.a.n.grel to occupy Berlin and disperse the radicals--with cannon, if necessary.
That speech has the right sound; but William has before this veered around many times, like a weather-vane, and may he not s.h.i.+ft again?
For the instant, he stood for the Old Regime and Divine-right.
-- The following month William appointed Brandenberg, an old-line Prussian aristocrat, Prime Minister. The siege of Berlin was declared; the a.s.sembly protested but finally gave in. Along in December, without consulting the a.s.sembly, William invited the states to send delegates to Berlin and made an alliance of three kings--Prussia, Saxony and Hanover.
-- What is going to happen next?
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At last the people have a share in their government, but Bismarck sees to it that the radicals are not favored.
-- William's "Tri-regal alliance" failed as fail it must on account of jealousies. Then Wuertemberg replied with a "quadruple" affair, composed of herself, Hanover, Bavaria and Saxony, side by side, under a const.i.tution acceptable to Austria. Quite a stroke, that.
In turn, William set up his Erfurt parliament, March 20, 1850.
Bismarck was fast becoming a "practical politician." Through deft stacking of the cards, the radical delegates drew only the low cards, and the Kreuz-Zeitung crowd and other ultra-conservatives were well supplied with aces and kings.
Bismarck naturally urged more concessions to the Prussian spirit; he tried also to muzzle the press gallery, calling newspapers "fire-bellows of democracy."
Later, he even started newspapers for his political purposes. In this he was not inconsistent, merely logical; his att.i.tude was based on the fact that, at this particular time, he felt called on to fight hostile editors; but made terms wherever it seemed worth while. Such was the man's discriminating glance.
-- The Erfurt "tongue tournament" Bismarck called the whole affair. He did not oppose the King's position in this matter, because, as Bismarck said, "it makes no difference." He spoke contemptuously of the mystical high-flown speeches. Its "Const.i.tution" was quickly forgotten!