| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER LXXIII.
          THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR
        
         THE attention of Europe was diverted from
        unhappy Poland by other scenes of injustice, though not of equal atrocity—the
        German war against Denmark, and mutilation of that kingdom. The Danish
        constitution of 1855 was a source of constant disputes with Germany, but we
        shall pass them over till the year 1863, when they were brought to a crisis.
          With the view of getting rid of German interference, Holstein, a member of the
          German Bund, was declared, by a Danish ordinance of March 23rd, to be
          autonomous and only personally united with Denmark. This measure, it was
          stated in the preamble, was in accordance with the demands of the German Bund,
          but not to be considered definitive. In fact, however, the Germans wanted
          something more. They desired that Schleswig, as well as Holstein, should be
          autonomous, and that the two duchies should be united; and they asserted that in thus
            separating their constitutions, it was the purpose of Denmark to annex Schleswig. Nor was this
              charge without some colour. In the preceding January the Danish States, or Rigsdag, had voted an address to the King that he
              should persist in his endeavours to draw Schleswig to Denmark, to which
              probably he was not disinclined. And the marriage of Alexandra, daughter of
              Christian of Glücksburg, who, by the Treaty of London, 1852, had been
              recognized as heir to the Danish throne, to the Prince of Wales (March 10th,
              1863), may have encouraged the aspirations of the Danish court by the hopes of
              a strong alliance.
   In the following August Austria and Prussia demanded
        that the Danish constitution of 1855 should be abrogated; that the project of a
        new constitution should be submitted to an assembly of the four Danish States,
        viz., Denmark proper, Schleswig, Holstein, and Lauenburg; and that all four
        assemblies should be on a footing of equality. A manifest injustice; since
        Lauenburg, with its population of 50,000 souls, would thus become equal to
        Denmark. And they further demanded that the mixed Danish and German populations
        of Schleswig should be put on the same footing as before 1848.
   Negotiations ensued which came to nothing. On the 1st
        October the Bund resolved on federal execution in Holstein, and Denmark
        was summoned to withdraw the March ordinance within a month. But Denmark was
        proceeding in a contrary direction. On the 13th of November the Rigsraad passed a law for a new Assembly, to consist of deputies from Denmark and
        Schleswig only, to the exclusion of Holstein and Lauenburg. This certainly
        tended to the incorporation of Schleswig, but was not actually such, as both
        States were to preserve their particular constitutions.
         The question entered into a new phase by the death of
        the weak and incapable King Frederick VII, November 15th, only two days after
        the passing of the new law. He was succeeded by Christian IX, the Protocol
        King, as he was called, of the Treaty of London. But the duchies were claimed
        by Prince Frederick of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg,
        a major in the Prussian army, though, as we have seen, his father had renounced
        all claim to them, both for himself and children. But the Prince maintained
        that he was not bound by this renunciation; the Holsteiners recognized him, and the majority of the German Bund supported him.
        Austria and Prussia, which had signed the London Protocol, could not openly
        join this movement, so they affected the part of mediators. But the Prussian
        Parliament addressed the king to disregard the Protocol and recognize Augustenburg, who was also supported by the Nationalverein, the Gross Deutschland Reformverein, and the Particularists, as they
        were called, or opponents of unity, who wanted a Triad, and would have been
        glad to see another State added. The more outspoken Germans confessed that they
        were moved by interested views, for the Danish dominions contained some fine
        ports which they coveted.
   Christian IX being summoned by the Bund to
        withdraw the law of November 13th, requested time, as a constitutional
        sovereign, to assemble and consult the Danish Rigsraad; but this was
        unreasonably refused, and it was resolved to proceed to federal execution.
        Austria and Prussia, in a joint letter to the Piet, December 5th, stated that
        they could not violate the Treaty of London, “so long as they recognized its
        validity” and as that Treaty protected Schleswig, they recommended the Diet to
        confine themselves to execution in Holstein, while they would take the case of
        Schleswig into their own consideration. This unexpected agreement of the two
        great Powers excited much surprise, and at first sight, indeed, appears strange
        enough. But we have already seen that Austria, at this period governed by Count Rechberg, was bent on conciliating Prussia. She
        wanted also to watch over and control Prussia, and to prevent her from enjoying
        alone the fruits of victory. On the other hand, though Prussian interests
        coincided with those of Germany, the democrats in the Prussian Parliament
        accused the government of returning to the policy of Olmütz, and refused a
        grant for the war.
   By order of the Diet, at the instigation of Austria
        and Prussia, 12,000 Saxon and Hanoverian troops, forming the army for federal
        execution, entered Holstein, December 23rd. This was a clear breach of the
        Treaty of London by the kings of Saxony and Hanover; for those sovereigns, as
        well as the King of Würtemberg, had acceded to the Treaty, though the German Bund had not. At the same time Austrian and Prussian troops were posted on the
        Danish frontier as a reserve. The Danes evacuated Holstein, by advice of the
        neutral Powers; Duke Frederick VIII, of Augustenburg,
        was proclaimed there, and joined the army of the Bund at Kiel. Prussia
        connived at this illegal proceeding, though Austria protested. Those Powers had
        now rejected the Treaty of London, which they had recognized at the beginning
        of December. On the 14th of January, 1864, they moved the Diet that Denmark
        should be required to suspend the November constitution within forty-eight
        hours, and that in case of refusal Schleswig should be occupied as a pledge.
        England and Russia advised the revocation, but Christian IX again pleaded that
        he must await the sanction of his Rigsraad. Hereupon it was proposed by
        the neutral Powers that a Protocol should be made in the names of France, Great
        Britain, Russia, and Sweden, recording the intention of the Danish Government
        to make the required concession; but this was also refused by the German
        Powers, on the ground that if they should stop short after preparing to invade
        Schleswig, they would be exposed to disturbance and revolution in Germany. In
        short, they were already resolved to appropriate Schleswig. Bismarck, on being
        asked whether his Government still adhered to the Treaty of London, gave a
        vague and equivocating answer. The view in Berlin was that if Schleswig
        resisted it would lead to war, and that war put an end to treaties. So that a
        strong Power may release herself from her engagements by making an unprovoked
        and unjustifiable aggression. For Bismarck himself had declared in the Prussian
        Chambers, in April, 1849, that the war then prosecuted against Denmark was a
        highly unjust, frivolous, and disastrous one, to support an entirely groundless
        revolution.
         The affairs of Denmark had long engaged the attention
        of the British Cabinet. Lord John Russell, then Foreign Minister, had
        protested, in 1860, against the interference the Germans in Schleswig. In
        January, 1862, he had energetically reproved the proceedings of Prussia, but in
        the summer of that year he accompanied the Queen to Gotha, the centre of the
        German Schleswig-Holstein agitation, where his opinions seem to have undergone
        a change. In the autumn he charged the Danish Government with neglecting their
        engagements as to Schleswig, and proposed to them a new constitution, which
        would have tended to the dissolution of the monarchy. It is unnecessary to
        describe it, as Lord Palmerston, then Prime Minister, pronounced it impracticable.
        In the autumn of 1863, when matters threatened an open rupture, Lord Russell,
        who seems again to have changed his views, addressed notes to the Frankfurt
        Diet, intimating, in a haughty tone, that Great Britain could not remain an
        indifferent spectator of German pretensions. On the 28th of December the
        English Cabinet sent a copy of the Treaty of London to the Frankfurt Diet, and
        invited the European Powers to a Congress, to discuss the Danish question.
        France at once declined. Only a little before England had rejected Napoleon’s
        proposal for a Congress about Polish affairs. That refusal was no doubt a wise
        one, for the French Emperor proposed to open up the Treaties of 1815, and
        consequently the whole state of Europe, which would have caused endless debate
        and confusion. But the abrupt style of the reply, which the French characterized as brutal, had
          given as much offence as the refusal itself. The conduct of France, however,
          throughout this Danish business was very equivocal, and the key of it must be
          sought in some disclosures made by Bismarck in 1870. Napoleon III had formed
          the project of playing the same game with the Prussian Minister as he had done
          with Cavour, and of getting an accession of French territory by helping Prussia
          in the same way. With this view a Secret Treaty between France and Prussia had
          been drawn up by Count Benedetti, the French Minister, which Bismarck neither
          accepted nor positively rejected. In fact, he played the political jilt, and
          led on Napoleon with false hopes till such a course no longer served his
          purposes. Thus Denmark, a little State of less than four million souls, was
          left alone face to face with her gigantic adversaries; for Russia, employed in
          stamping out the embers of the Polish revolt, naturally had no compunction for
          her, nay, may have even felt a secret satisfaction that the acts of the Germans
          afforded some countenance to her own conduct towards Poland.
   Lord Russell renewed his applications to France in
        January, 1864, and proposed material aid, and at the same time he addressed
        threatening notes to the minor German Powers. Drouyn de l’Huys, the French Minister at War, contented
        himself in reply with recommending “benevolent” counsels at Vienna and Berlin.
        Von Beust, the Saxon Minister, told Lord Russell that
        no foreign Power had a right to interfere between the Bund and Holstein, one of
        its States.
   The two great German Powers did not scruple to extend
        their operations beyond Holstein. The Prussian army, under General Wrangel,
        entered Schleswig, February 1st. By the 19th they had seized Holding. To the
        remonstrances of the English Cabinet Bismarck replied, that this had been done
        without orders, but nevertheless the occupation would be continued. The Danes
        had extended and strengthened the celebrated rampart called the Dannevirke,
        which stretched forty English miles from the mouth of the Schlei to Friedrichstadt, having the town of Schleswig for its
        centre. Behind this fortification the Danish army, 50,000 or 60,000 strong,
        under De Meza, was posted. The Prussians, under Gablenz, having been repulsed
        in an assault, it was determined to turn the position. Their right wing, under Prince
          Frederick Charles, took Eckernforde, crossed the
          Schlei at Arnis, and having thus gotten into De Meza’s rear, he was forced to
          abandon the Dannevirke, with sixty guns, and retire by Flensborg to Düppel.
          For this unavoidable act he was superseded by General von Gerlach. Düppel, also
          a strong place, after a long and brave defence was taken by assault, April
          18th. Meanwhile the Austrians had occupied the northern parts of Schleswig, and
          Duke Frederick was proclaimed there as he had been in Holstein.
           In consequence of the German victories a Conference of
        the Great Powers had been summoned to meet at London, and was opened under the
        presidency of Lord John Russell, April 25th. Napoleon had insisted that the Bund should be represented, though it had been no party to the Treaty of London,
        and Von Beust was appointed to represent it. A
        month’s truce was obtained, May 12th. Prussia required that the duchies should
        be separated from Denmark, leaving open the question of a personal union. As
        the Danes would not consent, Prussia joined Austria and Saxony in demanding the
        duchies for Duke Frederick of Augustenburg. Lord
        Russell now declared that, in order to satisfy Germany, it would be necessary
        to separate Holstein, Lauenburg, and the southern part of Schleswig from
        Denmark, and he proposed a line from the Dannevirke and the mouth of the
        Schlei, the rest of Denmark to be guaranteed by Europe. France assented, with
        the proviso that the inhabitants of Schleswig should choose their own sovereign
        by a plébiscite, which was afterwards
        modified to a vote of the communities. Denmark accepted this line, but Austria
        and Prussia claimed a more northerly one, from Apenrade to Tondern, and on this point the Conference failed.
        Thus England tore up the Treaty of 1852, and agreed to the dismemberment of
        Denmark.
         And now that the question was reduced to a strip of
        land containing some 125,000 or 130,000 souls, Lord Russell proposed to France
        that they should go to war to maintain the line he had laid down. Drouyn de l’Huys asked, very
        sensibly, whether, after suffering Denmark to be disintegrated, it would be
        worth while to go to war now for so trifling an object; and he observed that
        though only a naval demonstration was proposed, such a course affected France
        and England very differently, for the French frontier would be endangered,
        while England
          would run no risk of the sort. Was Lord Russell prepared to give France
          unlimited support? He seemed to think that a threat would suffice, but such a
          calculation might fail. Before the deplorable result of the Polish business,
          the authority of the two Powers had not been lowered, but now words without
          blows would be fatal to their dignity. It must be allowed that this
          of itself was a sufficient and statesmanlike answer to the English proposal;
          but France, as we have already mentioned, had also other secret motives for the
          policy she adopted.
           Denmark had accepted a fortnight’s prolongation of the
        armistice, although she had the best of the naval war, on the understanding
        that England would adhere to the line of demarcation which she had laid down.
        But Lord Russell, after he had failed in his application to France, proposed to
        refer it to arbitration! Bishop Monrad, President of the Lower House of the
        Danish Rigsraad, said in his place: “I cannot explain how this proposal
        was consistent with Earl Russell’s promise.” It is indeed very difficult of
        explanation, except as a means of escaping from an embarrassing position.
         The abortive Conference broke up June 25th, with a
        painful scene. Von Quaade, the Danish Plenipotentiary, reproached the English
        Ministers with abandoning Denmark after having encouraged her to resist. Lord
        Clarendon replied that England had promised nothing, which was no doubt
        literally true; yet all her conduct had been such as to inspire the Danes with
        the expectation that she would help them. It is a sad chapter in England’s
        history. War is a dreadful thing and to be avoided if possible; even the doctrine
        of peace at any price is intelligible, if accepted with its
        consequences— isolation, contempt, at last probably absorption by some more
        warlike Power. But to be determined on peace, and yet to attempt dictation, is
        as absurd as it is dangerous. Cobden, the consistent representative of the
        Manchester school, applauded the policy of keeping aloof; but he complained
        that the want of sagacity of the Foreign Minister had exposed him to rebuffs
        and the country to humiliation. Apologists of the Ministry allege that the
        inaction of England was in a large measure due to the fact that English
        statesmen and public writers found, when they looked into the matter, that the
        Danes were substantially in wrong. If this be so, it makes the matter worse, for the Ministry must
          have been treating the subject some years without having looked into it; and in
          this happy state of ignorance they, at the very last moment, brought the
          country to the brink of a war about it! Perhaps a better apology for them may
          be, that they seem to have been embarrassed by the pacific policy of the
          Peelite section of the Cabinet, led by Gladstone. England, as a French writer
          observes, in spite of splendid budgets, was made bankrupt in reputation. In
            the debates which ensued on the subject in Parliament, the Ministry were beaten
            in the Lords, and escaped in the Commons only by a majority of eighteen. We now
            return to the war.
             The allies overran Jutland, but refrained from
        crossing over to Funen. Christian IX.was now
        compelled to sue for peace, and preliminaries were signed at Vienna, August
        1st. Christian, as rightful heir, ceded Holstein and Schleswig to Austria and
        Prussia, yet at the London Conference they demanded them for Duke Augustenburg! Bavaria, Saxony, and Hesse-Darmstadt demanded
        that Schleswig should be incorporated with the German Confederation; but the
        claims of the Bund were
          contemptuously set aside. Austria and Prussia had used it as a stalking-horse,
          and permitted it to appear at the London Conference ; but when the booty was
          to be divided the phantom disappeared. Bismarck instructed the Prussian
          Ambassador in London to express a hope that the British Government would
          recognize the moderation and placability of the two
          German Powers, which had no wish to dismember the ancient and venerable Danish
          monarchy, but merely to separate from it parts with which further union was
          impossible. Lord Russell despatched a very just and well-written remonstrance;
          to which Bismarck gave no heed. On the 1st of December Austria and Prussia, in
          a joint note, summoned the Bund to withdraw from countries which belonged to
          them by right of conquest; and the Hanoverian and Saxon troops evacuated
          Holstein.
           Thus the one-headed and two-headed eagles had seized
        their prey, but they were soon to quarrel about the division of the spoil. At
        first they held joint possession, and in January, 1865, they established in the
        town of Schleswig a Government in common for both duchies. But such a state of things could of course
          only be provisory. Austria, having little or no interest in those distant
          countries, would willingly have traded on the situation to get an extension of
          territory at the expense of Bavaria, and overtures were made to Bismarck to
          that effect; who, however, did not entertain them. He felt himself to be master
          of the situation. Austria feared to break with him. For, besides her internal
          troubles, she dreaded the resentment of Russia about the Polish business; the
          Venetian question threatened an alliance between Prussia and Italy, and the
          friendship of France was ill-assured. Prussia now required to be put in
          possession of so much territory as would enable her to protect the coast and
          harbours. But for this purpose, the military system of the duchies must be an
          integral part of that of Prussia. She must have a military road through
          Holstein, and the soldiery must take an oath to King William I. The duchies
          were to be admitted into the Zollverein, from which Austria was
          excluded. Rendsborg was indeed to be a federal fortress, garrisoned by
          Austrians and Prussians; but, on the other hand, the important port of Kiel was
          to be exclusively Prussian. All this was virtually little less than annexation.
           Thus little account was taken of the people themselves
        in whose interests the conquest had been ostensibly made ; and not only the Schleswigers but the Holsteiners also, began to regret their former connection with Denmark. In December, 1864,
        the inhabitants of Schleswig, in a farewell address to Christian IX, expressed
        their sorrow at being separated from “the mild rule of the Danish Kings.” The
        Prussians do not appear to have mitigated the acerbity of their political pretensions
        by conciliatory manners. When they entered Jutland they had not only amerced it
        in a heavy contribution and the supply of necessaries for the army, but also
        demanded luxuries for the officers, as wine, cigars, tobacco, etc. A kind of
        secret government under the Duke of Augustenburg was
        formed at Kiel, which was protected by Austria and supported by the German
        democrats with money as well as noisy demonstrations. But in the midst of the
        hubbub, Prussia quietly took possession of Kiel, March 24th, 1865.
         Austria had begun to perceive that she was being made
        a cat’s paw.
          The unpopularity of the Prussian Government seemed to offer a favourable
          opportunity for resisting their pretensions. The Prussian Lower House opposed
          all Bismarck’s measures, refused to pay the costs of the Prussian victories,
          and assailed him with the coarsest personal abuse. A new Assembly followed the
          same course. Austria now supported in the Diet the Duke of Augustenburg;
          while Prussia brought forward the claims of the Duke of Oldenburg, and even
          revived some obsolete ones of her own. Bavaria, Saxony, and Hesse-Darmstadt,
          moved the Diet that the question of a ruler should be decided by a general
          representative Assembly of the duchies freely elected. But, well aware that
          the public feeling there was averse to Prussia, Bismarck declared that he would
          adhere to the Treaty of Vienna, and that, if the States were convoked, they
          must do homage to the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia. He perceived
          that Austria must again be hoodwinked. The King of Prussia met the Emperor of
          Austria at Bad Gastein, and after some negotiations
          the Convention of Gastein was effected, August 14th. It was nothing but a prolonged provisorium.
          Holstein was to be administered by Austria, Schleswig by Prussia, Lauenburg was
          made over to Prussia, she paying Austria 2,1/2 millions Danish rix-dollars. But
          though the Lauenburgers had consented to the
          transfer, it does not appear what right Austria had to sell them. The other
          articles were conformable to the Prussian demands already mentioned, except
          that Kiel was to be a federal port. The King of Prussia was invested with the
          sovereignty of Lauenburg at Ratzeburg, September
          27th, on which occasion Bismarck was made a Count.
           This Convention has been justly styled the Austrian Olmütz.
        It is said to have had secret articles, by which Austria was to have a slice of
        Bavaria if she remained true to the Prussian alliance. The allies let the Diet
        know that all future negotiations about Schleswig-Holstein would be conducted
        without their participation. The Duke of Augustenburg entered into some mean negotiations with the Prussian Government with the view
        of retaining his sovereignty. But Bismarck had obtained from the Prussian
        crown lawyers a decision that his right, if it had ever existed, was abrogated
        by the Peace of Vienna. Thus he had been by turns opposed, upheld, and deserted
        by Prussia, as it suited her views. Both the French and English Foreign
        Ministers denounced the Gastein Convention in
        unmeasured terms, the former calling it worthy of the darkest epochs of
        history. The Convention was a natural consequence of French and English policy.
        The Nationalverein also protested, and the
        Frankfurt Deputies branded the acts of Austria and Prussia as unworthy of
        civilized nations. It was at Gastein, while
        professing friendship to Austria, that Bismarck began his negotiations with
        Italy.
         Austria was in a false position. She sought to
        circumvent Prussia by making herself popular in the duchies. Gablenz, her
        governor in Holstein, was much more loved than Manteuffel, the Prussian
        governor of Schleswig. With the same view she encouraged the pretensions of Augustenburg; though this was clearly contrary to the
        Treaty of Vienna and the Convention of Gastein, by
        which alone she had a footing in Holstein. And to prepare for the inevitable
        struggle—for it was evident that the present arrangements could not last—she
        began to set her own affairs in order.
         The most material point was to conciliate the
        Hungarians. Francis Joseph went to Pesth in July, and
        as a pledge of his good intentions made some changes in the ministry. The
        unpopular imperial constitution was suspended by a decree of September 20th. At
        the reopening of the Reichstag in November, 1864, which had been
        intermitted during the Danish war, the Bohemians absented themselves, as well
        as the Hungarians and Croats. The empire was now divided into two portions east
        and west of the Leitha, Count Mailath being set over
        the former, and Count Belcredi over the latter. But this plan gave even less
        satisfaction than that which it superseded, and was opposed by all the
        provinces except Tyrol. The Hungarians addressed the Emperor for the
        restoration of their ancient constitution, with only a personal union; demands
        which he would not then concede. To conciliate the Venetians, a general amnesty
        was granted, and exiles were permitted to return (January 1st, 1866). The
        Italians looked on these concessions as a sign of weakness, for war between
        Austria and Prussia was beginning to appear inevitable.
         Division of the Austrian Empire. Treaty between Prussia
        and Italy, 1866.
   It is hardly worth while to inquire which Power was
        the actual aggressor. Prussia appears to have opened the diplomatic
        correspondence which ended in war; but Austria gave the occasion for it. She
        had allowed a great popular meeting at Altona in favour of Augustenburg,
        which demanded the assembling of the Holstein States. Prussia regarded this as a traitorous act, and Bismarck addressed
          a note to Vienna (January 26th), in which he accused Austria of promoting
          demagogic anarchy and of being aggressive and revolutionary! Austria declared
          she would not be dictated to as to her government of Holstein. Bismarck had
          observed in the Diet in the preceding August that whoever had Schleswig must
          have Holstein also; and he carried out his policy of annexation amidst the most
          violent opposition from the Lower Chamber, and in spite of the fears of the
          King and Court. So unpopular was he become with the democrats that an attempt
          was made on his life.
           Both Powers began to arm. In the middle of March Austria
        sent large bodies of Hungarians into Bohemia on the pretext of disturbances
        there, and in a circular called on the minor States to prepare themselves for
        war. Prussia, on her side, armed the Silesian fortresses, and sounded the
        middle States whether they would be inclined to side with her. She found but
        few adherents among them. They were in favour of particularismus,
        and dreaded her absorbing tendencies and warlike propensities. Bismarck must
        therefore look abroad for allies. In the preceding summer he had made a commercial
        treaty between the Zollverein and Italy. While still negotiating with
        Austria he assured her, April 5th, that nothing was further from his intentions
        than an attack on Italy, and on the 8th he signed an alliance with Victor Emanuel!
        General Govone had arrived in Berlin in the middle of
        March to arrange it. But it had been concocted long before. In opening the new
        Italian legislature, November 18th, 1865, the King had hinted at an approaching
        change, which would permit Italy to complete her destinies. Bismarck now began
        to show his hand more openly. On April 9th, only a day after signing the
        Italian treaty, Prussia demanded in the Frankfurt Diet a Parliament elected by
        universal suffrage to discuss federal reform.
         In May, Napoleon III renewed his secret negotiations
        with Prussia, proposing to help her with 300,000 men against Austria, and to
        procure for her additional territories comprising from six to eight million
        souls, in return for certain cessions on the Rhine. But Bismarck, fortified by
        the Italian alliance, thought that he might attain his ends without the help of
        France. He seems now to have definitely dismissed Napoleon’s suit, and to have
        told him, like another male jilt of antiquity, “Haud haec in foedera veni.” The history is somewhat obscure; but the French
          Emperor seems now to have turned his attentions towards Austria, and to have
          made a secret treaty with that Power, which, among other things, included the
          cession of Venetia to France. Thus baffled by Prussia, Napoleon resorted to his
          familiar scheme of proposing a Conference of all the Great Powers; but Austria
          would not consent to any discussion of boundaries, and so the project came to
          nothing.
           More negotiations went on between Austria and Prussia,
        containing wonderful insults on both sides: “Very instructive,” says Rustow, “for populations that would learn something.” Among
        these amenities was a circular of Bismarck’s accusing Austria of provoking a
        war with a view to help her finances either by Prussian contributions or an
        honourable bankruptcy! This circular was occasioned by Austria having preferred
        in the Diet, June 1st, a string of accusations against Prussia; declaring at
        the same time that she was ready to submit the decision of the
        Schleswig-Holstein question to that assembly, and stating that she had directed
        the Governor of Holstein to summon the States, that so the wishes of the people
        might be known. Bismarck denied the competence of the Diet, as at present
        constituted, to decide the question, and denounced Austria’s appeal to it, and
        the assembling of the Holstein States, as breaches of the Gastein Convention. In an extraordinary sitting of the Diet, June 11th, Austria, on
        her side, denounced Prussia as having violated that Convention, and demanded
        that the Federal Army, with the exception of the Prussian contingent, should be
        mobilized within a fortnight. Before the Diet had resolved on a definitive
        answer, Bismarck proposed to the different German Governments a scheme of
        federal reform, of which the principal features were that Austria and the
        Netherlands should be excluded from the Bund, and that the federal
        troops should be divided into a northern and a southern army, the first to be
        commanded by the King of Prussia, the second by the King of Bavaria. But the coup
          de maître was that the constitution of the new Bund was to be settled by a Parliament elected by
            universal suffrage! The Conservative Minister who had lately denounced the
            milder proceedings of Austria as democratic and anarchical, assumed the
            national cockade, adopted the programme of the Nationalverein,
            substituted for the vote of an Assembly of sovereign princes that of the
            populace, and proposed to make feudal William I, king by the grace of God, head
            of Germany, by the will of the people! Thus both Powers displayed the grossest
            inconsistencies. Bismarck, whilst advocating a democratic Constitution for
            Germany, showed at Berlin his contempt for the Prussian people and for the
            Parliament, refused to allow in the duchies any other right but that of
            conquest, and forbade the convening of the Holstein States to settle their own
            government; whilst Austria, which had ignored the Bund, in the Treaties
            of Vienna and Gastein, now appealed to its decisions,
            and supported the pretensions of the Duke of Augustenburg,
            which she had repudiated in those treaties as well as in that of London!
             Meanwhile matters were coming to a practical issue.
        Gablenz, the Austrian Governor of Holstein, called an assembly of the States
        for June 11th, whilst Manteuffel, the Prussian Governor of Schleswig, was
        directed, if such an assembly were summoned, to enter Holstein with his troops,
        supported by the Prussian fleet. Manteuffel invaded Holstein, June 8th, and the
        Austrians, being too weak to resist, retired through Hamburg and Harburg into
        Hanover. Augustenburg fled, and Prussia then
        appointed Von Scheel Plessen Governor of Schleswig-Holstein.
         The definitive answer of the Diet to Austria’s demand
        for mobilization was given June 14th, when there appeared to be nine votes for
        Austria and six for Prussia. Those for Prussia were the Netherlands, all the
        free towns except Frankfurt, and the rest were minor duchies. Hereupon the
        Prussian envoy, after stating his case against Austria, declared the Bund dissolved,
        and signifying Prussia’s readiness to form a new Bund with States so inclined,
        left the Assembly. Such was the end of the Confederation of 1815. Next day the
        war broke out. Prussia sent her ultimatum to Saxony, Hanover, and Electoral
        Hesse, which had voted against her, giving them twelve hours to answer; and as
        her proposals were not accepted, war was declared. There was no formal
        declaration of war against Austria.
         Austria had regarded Prussia with contempt; such also
        was the feeling in France, and perhaps throughout Europe. The Prussian army was
        looked upon as a mere Landwehr, or militia, totally unfit for offensive
        warfare. But Bismarck had long been preparing for the conflict. In spite of
        persistent parliamentary opposition, Prussia had a fund of thirty million
        thalers in specie to begin the war. Every other preparation had been carefully
        made. The service of the railroads and telegraphs had been completely organized.
        The troops were armed with a new needle-gun, which enabled them to fire four or
        five times for the enemy’s once. Accurate maps had been made of the future
        theatre of war, which were in possession of all the officers ; so that a
        Frenchman who accompanied the Prussian army describes them as manoeuvring on
        the enemy’s territory as on a parade ground. The Prussian railways were more
        numerous and convenient than the Austrian. Add that the Prussian troops were
        concentrated, while the Austrians were scattered; that they consisted wholly of
        Germans animated with patriotism, whilst the Austrian army was for the greater
        part composed of Poles, Hungarians, Italians, Bohemians, Croats, etc., many of
        whom served unwillingly. For the sake of security the various regiments had
        been intermixed, though none of the privates and few of the officers could
        understand one another. Nothing had been done to improve the army, which was
        on the old and obsolete footing, though the artillery was the finest in Europe.
        Austria, too, as Bismarck was well aware, was ill prepared, and embarrassed by
        financial and other difficulties. She had sent 164,000 of her best troops to
        defend Venetia, and the Italians had declared war almost simultaneously with
        Prussia.
         A fortnight after mobilization had been ordered,
        Prussia had 326,000 men under arms. Of the extraordinary campaign which
        followed, the military reader will, of course, seek the details in the proper
        authorities; we can here give only the general outlines. Some 60,000 men, under
        Von Falkenstein, were to act in Westphalia and the Rhenish provinces against
        the hostile States of the Confederation. The remainder of the troops, with 900
        guns, under the command in chief of the King, was to be employed in Bohemia. It
        was in three divisions: one, under the Prince Royal, was posted in Silesia;
        the other two, under Prince Frederick Charles and General Herwarth, were to
        enter Bohemia through Saxony, and, marching eastwards, to form a junction with
        the Prince Royal. The whole campaign was conducted by Von Moltke. The Prussian
        problem was to insure the communication between their forces in the east and
        west, to circumscribe the two theatres of operations, and to prevent the
        Bavarians from forming a junction with the Austrians. The Austrian army,
        consisting, including the Saxons, of 240,000 men, under Field Marshal Benedek,
        stretched from Cracow to Prague, through Prerau, Olmütz, and Pardubitz.
         Campaign of 1866
               We will first cast a glance at the operations in the
        west, of 1866. Falkenstein seized Cassel and the Elector himself, who was
        carried to Stettin, June 24th, while the electoral army retired to Fulda.
        Hanover, with its territory, was next occupied; blind King George, with his
        army of about 18,000 men, retreating by way of Gotha and Eisenach, with a view
        to join the Bavarians. Falkenstein, reinforced by Manteuffel and his Prussians
        from Holstein, after some manoeuvring and a bloody battle at Langensalza, surrounded the Hanoverians at Warza, June 29th, and obliged them to capitulate. King
        George was allowed to retire whither he pleased except into his own dominions;
        his troops were disarmed and sent home. Thus the Prussian communications were
        established, and the coalition disorganized.
         In the east the Prussians, under Herwarth, entered
        Saxony, June 16th, when the Saxon army evacuated that country and joined the
        Austrians in Bohemia. By the 20th all Saxony was in the hands of the Prussians,
        and Dresden occupied by a reserve brought from Berlin. Meanwhile Benedek had remained
        inactive. He expected that the main attack would be from Silesia, and that only
        a demonstration would be made from Saxony, so he fixed his head-quarters at Josefstadt, where he was within easy march of the Silesian
        frontier. This mistake was fatal. To arrest the Prussian march from Saxony he
        had posted Clam Gallas, with only about 60,000 men, including the Saxons, at
        Munchengrätz, who, thus isolated, was exposed to the main Prussian force.
         The Prince Royal, having the difficult task of bearing
        the brunt of the Austrian attack on defiling through the passes of Silesia,
        waited till the other two armies had entered Bohemia. These were to march to the Iser, while the
          Silesian army followed the right bank of the Upper Elbe; then, by a converging
          march on Gitschin and Königshof, the united force was
          to direct itself on Vienna, by Pardubitz and Brünn.
          The armies of Prince Frederick Charles and Herwarth entered Bohemia by Gabel
          and Reichenberg, both directing themselves on Munchengrätz. After one or two
          fights, especially at Podol, where the Austrians were
          literally mowed down, the two armies formed a junction. Clam Gallas, threatened
          by a superior force, retired from Munchengrätz towards Gitschen,
          but being defeated in a hard fought battle, retreated to Königgrätz.
   Benedek now saw his mistake, and resolved to recover
        the line of the Iser. But this design was arrested by the movements of the
        Prince Royal, who, having discovered Benedek’s plan, after a demonstration at
        Neisse, entered Bohemia in three columns; the right by Landshut and Trautenau, the centre by Wunschelburg and Braunau, the left by Reinerz and Nachod. Benedek’s danger now stared him in the
        face; yet he did nothing effectual to check the Prussian advance, and contented
        himself with taking up a strong position at Königinhof.
         Battle Sadowa 1866.
         After some fierce battles, especially at Nachod, the Silesian army forced the passes, and, advancing
        on Königinhof, drove the Austrians from it, June 29th. On the same day Clam
        Gallas was compelled to evacuate Gitschin. In the
        evening the armies of the Prince Royal and of Prince Frederick Charles formed a
        junction on the Upper Elbe. Herwarth also came up, and the three united armies
        formed a line of battle of three leagues, facing that part of the Elbe which
        runs from Josefstadt to Königgrätz. Benedek had concentrated
        his troops before the latter place. A great battle was now inevitable. The
        King of Prussia had arrived, and fixed his head-quarters at Gitschin.
        On the 2nd of July was fought the Battle
          of Sadowa. The Austrians were completely defeated, and fled towards the
        Elbe; the bridges sufficed not for their passage; thousands were drowned, while
        the Prussian artillery, playing on them from the heights, destroyed thousands
        more. King William and Bismarck, as a landwehr cuirassier, personally
        took part in the battle. The Austrians lost 4,861 killed, 13,920 wounded, about
        20,000 prisoners, 7 colours, and 160 guns. The Prussian loss was not much more than half that number. Benedek
          retreated, first to Olmütz, then to Pressburg, followed by the Prince Royal.
          Gablenz’s corps and the Austrian cavalry retreated towards Vienna by Brun,
          pursued by the other two Prussian armies.
         The Archduke Albert, the victor of Custozza,
        had been hastily recalled from Italy to take command of all the Austrian
        forces, which he stationed on the left bank of the Danube. By the 18th of July
        the King of Prussia had advanced his headquarters to Nikolsburg, within ten
        miles of Vienna; so much had the Prussians achieved in twenty-five days after
        entering Bohemia. The French Emperor had offered his mediation, which was
        accepted on condition of an armistice, during which the preliminaries of a
        peace should be arranged. These were signed at Nikolsburg, July 26th, on the
        following bases: Austria was to leave the German Confederation, to recognize
        Prussia’s acquisitions in the North, and the new constitution which she meant
        to propose for the Bund; but she consented to no cessions, except Venetia, and
        required that Saxony, the only State that had given her any material aid,
        should be restored in her integrity. Prussia undertook that Italy should adhere
        to the peace, after she was put in possession of Venetia.
   Meanwhile in the West, Falkenstein, after defeating
        the Bavarians and Hessians in several little battles, entered Frankfurt, July
        16th, which Prince Alexander of Hesse had abandoned. Falkenstein took
        possession of this ancient city, as well as of Nassau and Upper Hesse, in the
        name of King William I. The Prussians had long owed the Frankfurters a grudge;
        the rich bankers and merchants of the free city had been used to speak with
        contempt of the poverty-stricken squireens of the
        North. The Prussian exactions were terrible, and made in the most arrogant and
        brutal manner. They were repeated by Manteuffel, who succeeded Falkenstein at
        Frankfurt. The burgomaster is said to have committed suicide. Manteuffel
        continued the war, and defeated the Bavarians on the Tauber, July 25th. On the
        27th Marienberg was attacked, and the citadel blown
        up. The Prussians had also achieved other successes in this quarter, and before
        they heard of the armistice, were in possession of Darmstadt, and had entered Würtemberg.
         Peace of Prague, 1866.
         The definitive Peace
        of Prague, signed August 23rd, confirmed the preliminaries of
        Nikolsburg. Besides the articles mentioned, the Emperor of Austria transferred
        to the King of Prussia his claims on Schleswig-Holstein, with the reserve that
        the inhabitants of North Schleswig were to be retransferred to Denmark if they
        expressed such a wish by a free vote. Prussia confirmed the existence of the
        Kingdom of Saxony, but it was to belong to the new Northern Bund, on
        conditions to be arranged by special treaty. The clause respecting the retransfer
        of the North-Schleswigers, as well as the imaginary
        division of Germany into two parts, north and south of the Main, appear to have
        been inserted in the preliminaries through the French mediation. But Bismarck
        ultimately evaded the execution of the retransfer, and in the negotiations with
        Denmark on the subject, maintained that he was not bound to her, as she bad not
        signed the Treaty of Prague, but solely to Austria!
   Bismarck had received the plenipotentiaries of the
        Middle States with great hauteur at Nikolsburg. He would treat with them
        only separately. With Von Beust, the Saxon Minister,
        who was highly disagreeable to the Prussian Court, Bismarck would not treat at
        all, and he was obliged to resign. The Prussian treaty with Saxony left her
        little more than a geographical integrity and a nominal autonomy. Prussia was
        to direct her military organization; the Saxon garrisons were to be of mixed
        troops, but that of Königstein entirely Prussian. Saxon diplomacy at foreign
        courts was also to be placed under Prussian control. She, as well as Bavaria, Würtemberg,
        Baden, and Hesse, had to pay heavy indemnities. Bavaria had also to cede
        districts near Orb in the Spessart and Kaulsdorf, and an enclave near Ziegenruck.
        Hesse-Darmstadt ceded the landgraviate of Hesse-Homburg, with pieces of
        territory to complete Prussian communications with Wetzler. The districts of
        Hesse-Cassel, north of the Main, were to form part of the new northern
        Confederation.
   Ad interim treaties of alliance, offensive and defensive, were signed between
        Prussia and the States that were to form the new Northern Bund, till its
        constitution should be definitely settled. A Congress for that purpose was
        opened at Berlin, December 15th, and the new federal Pact was signed, February
        8th, 1867. The subscribing States were, besides Prussia and Lauenburg, Saxony,
        Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Saxe-Weimar, Oldenburg, Brunswick,
        Saxe-Meiningen, Saxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Anhalt, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen, Waldeck, the two Reuss,
        Schaumburg-Lippe, Lubeck, Bremen, Hamburg, and Grand Ducal Hesse north of the
        Main; Luxembourg and Limburg were left out. Saxony, the only State likely to
        offer opposition, was militarily occupied by Prussia, and King John came to see
        his new ally at Berlin. The States of the Confederation retained their
        domestic autonomy; but, for federal purposes, such as military organization and
        imposts, they were subject to the decision of the Diet, or Parliament. The
        legislative power was vested in that body, and a federal Council composed of
        representatives from the different States. The number of votes in the Council
        was forty-three, of which Prussia had seventeen, or more than a third. The King
        of Prussia, as President of the Council, had the executive power, and also
        commanded the army of the Bund. Bismarck was made its Chancellor.
         Prussia also sought to extend her influence over the
        southern States, and forced them into treaties with her by representing the
        probable demands of France, who had, indeed, shown her teeth. Secret offensive
        and defensive treaties were signed with Baden, Bavaria, and Würtemberg, for the
        reciprocal guarantee of territories, and in case of war, Prussia was to have
        the command of their armies. They were also bound to her by the Zollverein.
   The results of the war for Prussia were the undivided
        hegemony of North Germany, her supremacy throughout the nation by the
        overthrow of Austria and her exclusion from the Confederation, the military
        command of South Germany, and the ground laid for future economical direction.
        The material advantages were the annexation of Schleswig-Holstein, Electoral
        Hesse, Nassau, Frankfurt, and some minor territories, increasing her population
        to 24,000,000, to which must be added, in a military point of view, 5,000,000
        in the northern Bund, and about 9,000,000 in the southern States
        belonging to the Zollverein. Her territory was rendered more coherent
        and compact; she had received 60,000,000 thalers in indemnities, and she had
        obtained possession of military ports, which rendered maritime development
        possible. King William gained some popularity by soliciting from the Prussian
        Parliament a Bill of Indemnity for the unconstitutional measures he had
        adopted, to insure his success and Prussia’s aggrandizement.
         The first parliament under the new federal
        constitution was opened September 10th, 1867. Seven permanent committees were appointed
          for the affairs of the Confederation, such as war, finance, justice, etc. As
          regards military arrangements, every citizen from the age of seventeen to
          forty-two was subject to serve in the army. This was divided into three
          bodies—the standing army, the Landwehr, and the Landsturm. The
          army is recruited by conscription, from which there is no exemption.
          Conscripts, and those voluntarily enlisted serve seven years in the standing
          army, viz., three with the colours and four in the reserve. They then pass into
          the Landwehr for five years, and afterwards into the Landsturm,
          till they attain the age of forty-two. In time of war the Landwehr may
          be called out for active service; the Landsturm only in case of national
          danger. The total force was computed at 300,000 for the standing army, 450,000
          for the Landwehr, and 360,000 for the Landsturm. The armies of
          the southern States were estimated at 150,000 men in active service, and 42,000
          Landwehr. As the total force was under the command of the King of Prussia, and
          as the southern States were members of the Zollverein, all Germany may
          be said to have been Prussianized.
           Thus Napoleon III, baffled, if not deluded, saw by the affair sudden and unexpected success of Prussia, Germany reconstructed against
        his will, as he had seen Italy before. When, after the rupture between Austria
        and Prussia, Napoleon III changed his secret alliance with Prussia for one with
        Austria, his plan was to look on till some decisive victories,
        which were expected to be on the side of Austria, should threaten the European
        equilibrium, when, at the proper moment, he would intervene, and recast the German
        Confederation. His “ideas” were to take Silesia from Prussia, and give it to
        Austria, in return for Venice, ceded to Italy. In compensation for Silesia and
        the Catholic provinces of the Rhine, which would, of course, become French,
        Prussia was to receive large Protestant territories on the Elbe and Baltic, by which she would become compact, and a bulwark against Russia. The
          combination, says Klaczko, was profound and vast; it
          had only one fault, but that was a fatal one—it did not contemplate the possibility
          of a Prussian victory. It was to be achieved by moral force, without drawing
          sword. Had Napoleon placed 100,000 men on the Rhine, Prussia’s scheme might
          have been modified, if not overthrown. But the Prussian victories did not allow
          time for reflection, and he had confidently relied on Austria being victorious.
          Baffled in his main scheme, Napoleon wanted at least to get something, however
          small; and having, it is said, made some secret demands at Berlin, which were
          not attended to, he cast his eyes on Luxembourg. He was ready to buy it from
          the King of the Netherlands, who, on his side, was willing to sell, and get
          quit of the German Confederation. Austria, England, and Russia intervened, and
          a treaty was signed at London, by which Luxembourg was neutralized. Thus ended
          an affair which at first threatened to disturb the peace of Europe.
           Napoleon had just experienced another mortification in
        the failure of his designs upon Mexico. France, England, and Spain had, in
        1862, despatched a joint expedition to Mexico to obtain satisfaction for
        insults and injuries committed not only on their subjects, but even on
        diplomatic agents, by Juarez, President of the Mexican Republic. England and
        Spain soon withdrew after obtaining what they considered satisfactory amends.
        But Napoleon had formed the chimerical project of establishing in those parts
        a nation of Latin race, as rivals of the Anglo-Americans, and continued the
        war. In 1864, Mexico, with the title of Emperor, was offered to, and accepted
        by the Austrian Archduke Maximilian, and a French army of 25,000 men was sent
        to support him, which took possession of the capital. But quarrels soon arose
        between Maximilian and his protectors; the Americans, quit of civil war, began
        to show hostility towards the new State; public opinion in France pronounced
        itself against this distant, expensive, and ill-judged enterprise, and in 1866
        Napoleon recalled his troops.
         Austria, taught wisdom by misfortune, granted to
        Hungary, in 1867, the constitutional independence she had so long demanded. The
        reconciliation appeared to be complete, and on the 8th of June Francis Joseph,
        after swearing to maintain the ancient Hungarian Constitution, was crowned in
        the cathedral of Buda with the crown of St. Stephen. At the same time a
        separate ministry was constituted for Hungary under the presidency of Count
        Andrassy. These measures, the work of Von Beust, the ci-devant Saxon Minister, who had succeeded to the place of Belcredi in the Austrian
        councils, were accompanied with reforms in the western, or Cis-leithan, provinces of the Empire, and with changes in the
        method of administration to suit the altered circumstances.
   In Italy as soon as the Prussian alliance was
        completed, preparations were made for immediate war. The King, with La Marmora
        at his side, took the command in chief; Garibaldi was at the head of the
        irregular forces, which flocked to him in great numbers. Napoleon III called
        upon the Italians to disarm, but did not press his objection, and contented himself
        with declaring that Italy must take the consequences of her act. La Marmora
        felt secure. The Milanese was in a manner guaranteed by France, and by the Prussian
        Treaty both Powers had engaged not to make a separate peace. Hence Italy felt
        bound to decline the secret offer of Austria before the war broke out to cede
        Venetia to her if she would renounce the Prussian alliance.
         Italian campaign, 1866.
         Victor Emanuel passed the Mincio,
        June 2-3rd, 1866. Cialdini was to cross the Po, and operate in the rear of the
        quadrilateral; Garibaldi was to seize the Trentino, while Persano,
        with the fleet, threatened Venice. Before these diversions were effected,
        General Durando, with only five divisions, ventured a front attack, was easily
        defeated by the Archduke Albert at Custozza, June
        24th, and compelled to recross the Mincio. Garibaldi
        had also been checked at Monte Suello, in Tyrol. But
        Austria, as before related, now recalled her army from Italy, and ceded Venetia
        to Napoleon III. The Italians would willingly have done something to retrieve
        their military honour. After the withdrawal of the Archduke, the Austrians
        retired into the fortresses of the quadrilateral, when Cialdini overran Venetia
        without meeting an enemy, and occupied Rovigo and Padua. Persano was defeated off Lissa by the Austrian admiral, Tegethof,
        with a much smaller fleet; for which Persano was
        deprived of his rank. The Italians now accepted the armistice arranged at Nikolsburg. Cialdini was directed to
          retire behind the Tagliamento, and Garibaldi was
          obliged to evacuate the Trentino. A clamour was raised against the ministry,
          and La Marmora found it necessary to resign.
   After the Peace of Prague Marshal Leboeuf took
        possession of Venetia in the name of Napoleon III. The Peace of Vienna between Italy and Austria was signed October
        3rd. Austria restored the ancient iron crown of Lombardy; Italy, at the
        dictation of Prance, abandoned the Trentino. According to the favourite
        practice of the French Emperor, the Venetians were to decide by a plebiscite
        for annexation to Italy; and the Italians had to endure the humiliation of
        withdrawing their troops lest they should influence the votes. Annexation was
        voted almost unanimously, October 22nd.
   Ricasoli, who succeeded La Marmora, governed with
        moderation. He was not a rabid enemy of the Church, but he was for utilizing
        Church property and suppressing convents. A law for that purpose excited a
        revolt in Sicily, chiefly led by the Benedictines, who possessed many rich
        convents in that island. The rising, however, was soon put down. Ricasoli was
        overthrown for having attempted to suppress public meetings, and was succeeded
        by the more violent Ratazzi. This minister carried
        out his predecessor’s plans with respect to the Church. It was decided, July,
        1867, that ecclesiastical property should be sold, and the produce administered
        by the State, the clergy receiving a fixed salary. The property of the Church
        in Italy was estimated at 2,000 million francs (about £80,000,000 sterling);
        out of the proceeds were to be compensated some 5,000 monks, distributed in
        1,724 convents.
   Ratazzi indulged in some underhand attempts to get possession of Rome.
        Agreeably to the Convention of September 15th, 1864, the French garrison had
        been withdrawn from Rome before the end of 1866; but their place had in some
        degree been supplied by what was called the Antibes Legion, which had been
        raised for the Pope’s protection. This was virtually a violation of the
        Convention; for the Legion was mostly composed of Frenchmen, who retained their
        position in the French army. They were, however, ill-content with the service
        and the climate, and desertion became frequent. General Dumont, a bigoted
        Papist, who had formed the Legion, was sent to Rome to restore order, when,
        putting on the French uniform, he made an harangue to the soldiers, interlarded with abuse of the Italian Government. Ratazzi did not openly respond to the call of the Chambers
        to repulse foreign intervention at all risks, but he winked at the assembling
        of insurrectionary committees, and did not sufficiently provide for the safety
        of the Pope. Garibaldi appeared once more on the scene, organized a rising at
        Geneva, and had got as far as Arezzo on his way to Rome when Ratazzi caused him to be arrested. He was sent to
        Alexandria, where the garrison gave him an ovation; while at Florence the
        streets resounded with cries of “Death to Ratazzi!”
        who was obliged to shut himself up in his house. Garibaldi was dismissed to Caprera. When the French Government remonstrated against
        his conduct, he made many false and evasive replies. A few of the insurgents,
        among them Garibaldi’s son Menotti, entered the Papal States, but were easily
        repulsed by the Pope’s troops.
         Some more indirect attempts of Ratazzi against Rome, by permitting Italian troops to cross the frontier in
        contravention of the understanding with France, led to such serious
        remonstrances from Napoleon that Ratazzi was dismissed,
        and General Menabrea became Minister, with a Cabinet
        more agreeable to the Emperor. Meanwhile Garibaldi had again escaped, and
        Napoleon, advised of the anxiety of Pio Nono and Cardinal Antonelli, ordered
        his fleet to proceed to Civita Vecchia. Garibaldi was favourably received in
        the places on his line of march; the Papal colours were pulled down, and the
        Italian ones substituted. He defeated the Pontifical troops at Monte Rotondo
        (October 25th), which commands Rome on the north; but before he could enter the
        city French troops had arrived from Civita Vecchia, who joined the Papal troops
        in pursuit of the now retreating Garibaldi, and inflicted on him a severe
        defeat at Mentana. Garibaldi, on gaining Italian
        territory, surrendered himself to General Ricotti; and after a few weeks’ detention,
        he was again dismissed to Caprera.
         The affair at Mentana converted the cooling sympathies of the Italians for France into hatred. The
        French, indeed, evacuated Rome, but only retired to Civita Vecchia, as if to
        secure a constant entrance. But the time was fast approaching when Rome, like a
        ripe pear, would fall of itself into Victor Emanuel’s mouth. Italy was still
        full of disorder. There were many conspiracies and risings of Red Republicans
        and clerical and Bourbon reactionaries. The state of the finances necessitated increased taxation; payment
          was in some cases resisted, and had to be enforced by the military.
   Rome incorporated with Italy, 1870
               Italian history presents nothing more of importance
        till the breaking out of the war between France and Prussia, and the overthrow
        of Napoleon in 1870. Italy declared her neutrality, July 24th, and the
        Government, foreseeing that the war must have a decisive effect on the Roman
        question, concentrated troops on the Papal frontier. The French, having need of
        their troops at Civita Vecchia, withdrew them in August; and after their fatal
        defeat at Gravelotte, Victor Emanuel notified to Pio
        IX. that his army must enter the pontifical dominions to preserve order and
        protect the Pope himself against revolutionists. The advance of the Italians,
        under General Cadona, was opposed only in a few skirmishes. When they arrived
        at Rome, the garrison was summoned. As the reply was not prompt, a few breaches
        were made in the walls, when the Pope ordered a surrender, and the Italians
        entered Rome, September 20th. The people voted annexation to Italy by a great
        majority, October 2nd. Pio IX fulminated the major excommunication, but without
        naming the King. He had in vain applied to Austria and Spain. The latter
        country had just accepted a sovereign of his opponent’s family.
   The destruction of the Pope’s temporal rule passed
        almost unnoticed, overshadowed by the portentous struggle in France. A new
        parliament, including deputies from the Papal States, voted their incorporation
        with Italy, December 29th, and the removal of the seat of government to Rome
        was fixed for the following June. As if to compensate the Pope for the loss of
        his temporal power, a great addition was made about this time to his spiritual
        dignity. A General Council, the last since that of Trent, voted the Pope’s
        infallibility by a large majority, July 13th, 1870. The idea seems to have been
        suggested by some Jesuits. It had often been debated whether a Pope or a
        Council were superior. To accept infallibility at the hands of a Council seemed
        an acknowledgment of its superiority; but to this it was replied, that it was
        not called to confer infallibility, but merely to declare it. The decree was
        opposed by many foreign bishops, some of them the most strenuous upholders of
        the temporal power, as Monseigneur Dupanloup, Bishop
        of Orleans, and the Austrian Dr. Dollinger.
         SPAIN
            The war between France and Prussia is connected with
        the affairs of Spain. The recent history of that country consists mostly of
        domestic dissensions, and those of an ignoble kind. There were, indeed, many
        parties, as the Pan-liberals, the Progresistas,
        the Democrats or Republicans, the Moderados,
        the Clerical party, etc.; but all, with the exception of the Republicans, who
        were few in number and without influence, disputed only about the choice of a
        sovereign or a minister. There were many sudden revolutions, led by military
        men, but none for any great principle. Centuries of bigotry and clerical rule,
        the result of Philip II’s policy and of the Inquisition, had extinguished all
        public opinion, every noble aspiration; hence their endurance of Isabella II,
        a woman who had failed to gain the respect of her subjects.
         But though Isabella was nominally sovereign, she did
        not reign; that was the function of her Prime Ministers, and hence a continual
        struggle for the post. O’Donnell, Duke of Tetuan, of Irish descent, was the
        best of these mayors of the palace. Ostensibly of the Pan-liberal party, he
        made one of his own out of the rest. Arrived at power in 1854 through
        Espartero, whom he ousted, he was in turn driven out by Narvaez, but regained
        his post in 1858, and retained it till 1863. His fall was occasioned by the withdrawal
        of Spain from the Mexican expedition, which displeased Napoleon III. He was
        succeeded for a short time by Miraflores, and then by Narvaez, whose
        reactionary policy caused O’Donnell’s recall in 1865. Isabella’s favourite at
        this time was Marfori, a domestic of the palace, and she, like her mother, sent
        large sums abroad to support her numerous children.
   One of O’Donnell’s first acts after returning to power
        was to recognize Italy, thus throwing over the queen’s kinsmen, the sovereigns
        of Naples and Parma, and insulting the Pope. O’Donnell was not liked at Court,
        and having made himself unpopular by many executions after a foolish
        insurrection at Madrid, Narvaez again seized the helm in July, 1866. His policy
        was retrograde. By a coup d’état, December 30th, he dissolved the
        Cortes, arrested 123 Members, and caused the President, Rosas, and thirty-five
        others to be transported.
   Narvaez died suddenly in April, 1868, and was
        succeeded by Gonzales Bravo, also an Absolutist. O’Donnell had also died
        suddenly at Biarritz, in November, 1867. Bravo transported several military
        chiefs, including Marshal Serrano; but he, as well as the Queen, were soon
        overthrown. In September, 1868, Admiral Tapete had prepared an insurrection at
        Cadiz, where he was joined by Prim. Their programme was the sovereignty of the
        people. Serrano and other banished generals contrived to return, and proclaimed
        universal suffrage as the panacea for Spain’s ills. Revolutionary juntas were
        established in several towns; that at Seville first demanded the fall of the
        reigning dynasty. Isabella, then at St. Sebastian, dismissed Bravo, who fled to
        France, and appointed General Concha in his place. But the Royalists were
        defeated by Serrano at the bridge of Alcolea, on the
        Quadalquiver, and a Provisional Government was established at Madrid, with
        Serrano at its head, and Prim Minister at War. Barcelona, Saragossa, and other
        towns rose against the Queen, who fled to France. Napoleon III lent her the château
        of Pau, but declared himself neutral. A new constitution was promulgated in
        June, 1869, and Serrano was elected Regent. He expelled the Jesuits, dissolved
        many religious communities, and proclaimed liberty of conscience; but the
        Pope’s Nuncio still remained at Madrid, with a Spanish stipend.
         The problem was, to find a candidate for the throne;
        for Serrano and his party had no notion of a Republic. Don Carlos, the rightful
        heir, had been defeated, in 1860, in an attempt to regain the crown, and
        compelled to renounce it by an oath. In 1865 arose what was called the
        “Iberian” party, which wished to unite the whole Iberian peninsula under Dom
        Luis, King of Portugal; but the Portuguese were averse to such a union, and
        Luis declined the offer. After the renunciation of Don Carlos, Don John, his
        younger brother, had claimed the crown; and when Isabella fled, he transferred
        his pretensions to his son, Don Carlos, Duke of Madrid, who was proclaimed by
        his party as Charles VII. But he found few adherents. The Duke of Montpensier,
        Isabella’s brother-inlaw, proposed by some, was not approved of by the
        victorious generals. Espartero declined the proffered crown. It was then
        offered to Prince Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, and his
        acceptance of it, though afterwards withdrawn, occasioned the fatal war between
        France and Prussia, under circumstances to be presently related. During that
        war Spain declared her neutrality, and was one of the first Powers to recognize
        the French Republic, by which it was followed. At length, in November, 1870,
        the Cortes elected the Duke of Aosta, second son of Victor Emanuel, who assumed the
        crown he had once refused, and with it the title of Amadeo I.
         FRANCE
             The Franco-German war of 1870 was the result of
        Napoleon III’s political situation. The events of the year 1866 had occasioned
        great discontent in France. A strong opposition, led by Thiers and Jules Favre,
        made damaging attacks upon the imperial government. It was charged with dangers
        incurred abroad from the establishment of Italian unity and of the North
        German Confederation, which were attributed to Napoleon’s undecided policy, and
        to the principle of substituting nationalities for the ancient theory of the
        balance of power. Other grounds of complaint were the abortive mediations in
        Poland and Denmark, and between Italy and the Pope; the congresses so often
        proposed in vain; the failure of the Mexican business, and of the designs upon
        Belgium and Luxembourg; the meddling with Eastern policy, and the net of
        intrigues all over the world. Napoleon had become so despotic that for some
        time he had not allowed the debates to be published. The finances were in the
        greatest disorder, yet 900 million francs had been spent in reconstructing and
        embellishing Paris. Personally the Emperor had lost much of his former energy,
        owing probably to his bad state of health. It was evident that personal rule
        could not last much longer, and that even a successful war, though it might
        check, could not avert its fall.
         The years 1867 and 1868, however, passed over without
        Napoleon’s any very striking events. Napoleon perceived the necessity for some
        changes. The Ministers who could not before appear in the Chambers were
        henceforward authorized to take part sometimes in the debates (January, 1867).
        As if prescient of the approaching struggle, considerable reforms were made in
        the army. In Paris and the larger towns the elections of 1869 were adverse to
        Imperialism. In July a new, but short-lived, Ministry was formed, on the
        principle of parliamentary responsibility. The murder of Le Noir by Prince
        Peter Bonaparte added to the unpopularity of the Imperial Court. To disarm
        increasing opposition, a revised Constitution was sanctioned by a plebiscite,
        May 8th, and a clause in it enabled the Emperor to adopt that method to settle
        any disputed questions. But it was ominous that 50,000 soldiers had voted “No.”
        A new Ministry was now appointed, with the exception of Ollivier, who retained
        office. Count Daru was succeeded by the Duke of Gramont, a pliant courtier, and
          Marshal Niel was replaced by the incapable Marshal Leboeuf.
           Sensible of the change of public
        opinion, except among that ignorant multitude to whom he loved to appeal,
        Napoleon III felt the necessity for some brilliant deed to retrieve the drooping
        prestige of his dynasty; and the acceptance of the Spanish crown by a prince of
        the House of Hohenzollem offered an opportunity to
        fix a quarrel on the Power which had principally overshadowed his own glory.
        Prince Leopold was no member of the Royal Prussian house, though the offspring
        of a common ancestor many centuries ago. He had been selected by General Prim
        for the Spanish crown, as possessing the requisite qualifications of belonging
        to a princely family, of being a Roman Catholic, and of age. As a Prussian
        subject and distant kinsman, Prince Leopold had requested and obtained from
        King William I permission to accept the proffered dignity; but had withdrawn
        his acceptance when it was found to be opposed by the French Emperor. Napoleon
        III’s grudge against Prussia had been aggravated by the prompt and decided
        refusal of Bismarck in the spring of 1869 to help him in the acquisition of
        Luxembourg and Belgium, on his allowing Prussia a free hand in Germany. It is
        said, indeed, that Napoleon himself was not desirous of war, and his practices
        to obtain territory without incurring that risk, corroborate this opinion. But
        he was surrounded by persons who urged him on, the chief of whom were the
        Empress, the Duke of Gramont, and Marshal Leboeuf.
        The French Cabinet was ill informed as to the state of Germany. Their envoys
        had reported a general dislike of Prussia in the Southern States, and the
        probability of their supporting a French invasion. The Emperor had also been
        deceived about the condition of his own army, which Leboeuf had neglected,
        though he falsely represented its efficiency.
         The French Cabinet, not content with the withdrawal of
        Prince Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, required King
        William I to pledge himself that he would never sanction his candidateship for
        the Spanish crown, if renewed; and the French Ambassador, Benedetti, rudely
        accosted the King with this demand on the public promenade at Ems. It was of
        course refused, for there was no alternative but humiliation. France declared
        war, July 19th, 1870. The new German Constitution was now brought to the test.
        The Northern Bund voted 120 million thalers towards the
          expenses; the Southern States, instead of the
            anticipated lukewarmness, or even hostility towards the North, announced with alacrity their
              intention to take part in the war. A French aggression was indeed precisely the
              thing to inspire Germany with but one feeling, and to consolidate its unity. The Germans
                were divided into three armies. Two, composed of North Germans, consisted of
                61,000 men under General Steinmetz, and 206,000 men, including the Saxon corps,
                under Prince Frederick Charles. The South German army, under the Prince Royal,
                amounted to 180,000 men, mixed with Prussians; total 447,000 men, with a
                reserve of 112,000. The whole was under the command-in-chief of the King of
                Prussia, assisted by Von Moltke and Von Roon. The
                King arrived at his headquarters at Coblenz, August 2nd. All the European
                Powers had declared their neutrality. England alone had offered mediation,
                which was declined by both parties.
   The French were earlier in the field. Their army
        consisted of about 300,000 men, and was commanded by the Emperor in person,
        with Marshal Leboeuf as chief of the staff. Eugenie was made Regent during the
        Emperor’s absence. The French plan is said to have been to assemble 150,000 men
        at Metz, 100,000 at Strassburg; and after uniting the two armies, to cross the
          Rhine between Rastatt and Germersheim, and to invade
          Baden, while Canrobert covered the French frontier
          with 50,000 men. Had this plan been carried out before the Germans assembled
          in force, the war might have taken a totally different turn; but Napoleon lost
          a fortnight in unaccountable inaction. His delay has been variously accounted
          for. Some ascribe it to bodily and mental weakness; others say that his army
          was not in a fit state to advance, and that the commissariat broke down.
          However this may be, a defensive attitude, so repulsive to French troops,
          demoralized the army. Napoleon made a show of taking the offensive by a futile
          attack on Saarbrück, August 3rd, which the Germans did not mean to defend.
          Young Prince Napoleon was present with his father at what was called his
          “baptism of fire.” It was a mere piece of stage effect. On the following day
          the defeat of the French under McMahon at Weissemburg,
          by the Prince Royal, initiated an almost uninterrupted series of German
          victories. McMahon was again completely defeated at Worth, August 6th, where he
          was wounded. On the same day, the army under Prince Frederick Charles carried the heights of Spicheren. Both French wings being now compromised, they retired
            into French territory in the direction of the Moselle.
             By the middle of August the Germans had got into
        Lorraine. Luneville, Nancy, and other towns
        surrendered to small detachments of cavalry. The command of the French army was
        disorganized, Napoleon, still nominal chief, seemed paralyzed. Leboeuf retired
        and was succeeded by Bazaine, who made Metz his
        centre of operations. McMahon, who had retreated to Châlons, and Trochu, who
        had also a corps at that place, were to join him there; but the plan was
        frustrated by a manoeuvre of Von Moltke. Napoleon and his son had retired first
        to Verdun, and then to Châlons; whence, being coldly received by the troops
        there, he went to Courcelles, near Reims. In a military view he was now become
        a cipher. At Paris demands had been made for his abdication, and he was
        probably afraid to go there, though it might have been better for his dynasty.
         Battles of Gravelotte and
        Sedan, 1870.
   The Battle of Gravelotte, August 18th, the bloodiest of the war,
        may be said to have decided the campaign. The Prussians gained the victory
        chiefly by their artillery, Von Moltke having united eighty-four guns in one
        battery. But there was a loss of about 20,000 men on each side. Bazaine now threw himself into Metz, where he was blockaded
        by the army of Prince Frederick Charles. Von Moltke directed the army of the
        Crown Prince, with the Saxons, to march upon Paris. McMahon, who was at Reims
        with 100,000 men, should now have marched to Paris, united all the French
        forces before it, and given battle there ; but the Emperor directed him
        against his better judgment, to relieve Metz, and accompanied his march. Being
        overtaken by the enemy’s advanced guard, several combats ensued, and especially
        one at Beaumont, near Sedan, August 30th, in which the French were defeated,
        and their passage through the Ardennes cut off. Next day they were surrounded
        in a sort of amphitheatre, the heights of which were occupied by the German
        artillery. The German army numbered about 200,000 men; McMahon’s, diminished by the previous fights, counted only
          about 112,000. On the first of September was fought the Battle of Sedan. The French made a brave resistance; but a wound,
            which obliged McMahon to resign the command, was fatal to their chances. The German batteries
              closed in upon them, while their own had been demolished. Whole regiments of French were
                made prisoners, or fled in confusion into Sedan; among these last was the
                  Emperor, who had been present at the battle. In the evening the Germans began
                  to bombard the town. In a Council of War, all the French generals declared that
                  resistance was useless. Napoleon wrote to the King of Prussia, surrendering
                  himself a prisoner; and on September 2nd the town capitulated. The French
                  soldiers were disarmed and made prisoners, the officers dismissed on parole.
                    Napoleon, after an interview with William ., was escorted to the palace of Wilhelmshohe, near Cassel, assigned to him as a residence.
                     The news of this disaster occasioned great uproar at Paris. The
        Empress fled to England, and, on the 4th of September, the deputies, coerced by the
          National Guard and a mob, decreed the fall of the imperial dynasty, and
            the establishment of a Republic. Gambetta, a young advocate, who had signalized
            himself by a violent attack on the Emperor, now took the lead, and became
            Minister of the Interior, with Jules Favre as Foreign Minister. The deputies of
            Paris constituted themselves a Provisional Government; and General Trochu,
            made governor of Paris by the Empress Regent, turned with fortune, and retained
            his post under the Republic. Thiers, who had no post in the Government,
            undertook a bootless mission to London, St. Petersburg, Vienna, and Florence,
            to solicit help.
             After the fall of Sedan, Prince Frederick Charles
        blockaded Bazaine in Metz, while the rest of the
        German army resumed the march to Paris. That capital was invested September 19th,
          and, on October 5th, King William established his head-quarters at Versailles.
          Part of the French Government retired to Tours, whither also Gambetta proceeded, after
            escaping from Paris in a balloon. He organized the defence of France with
            indomitable energy and resolution, though, after the fall of Metz, the case was
            clearly hopeless. Marshal Bazaine was compelled to
            surrender that place through want of provisions, October 27th, when 145,000
            efficient soldiers, besides 30,000 men in hospital, became prisoners of war. There were
              now prisoners in Germany, after a war of three months, besides the Emperor,
              four French marshals, 140 general officers, 10,000 officers of lower rank, and
              340,000 soldiers. Marshals Leboeuf, Canrobert, and Changamier were in Metz.
   The Germans had also been successful in other
        quarters. Strassburg had surrendered, September 28th, after a damaging
        bombardment. Dijon was several times won and lost. Gambetta, by extraordinary
        efforts, had organized what was called the “Army of the Loire,” of some 150,000
        men, under the command of Aurelle de Paladine. But this general was at last
        completely defeated at Beaune la Rolande, November 28th. The Tours Government
        accepted the services of Garibaldi, who seems to have been actuated by the spirit
        of adventure rather than by any liking for the French. He collected a band of
        followers of all nations at Besançon, but effected little or nothing.
   Meanwhile the state of Paris was growing daily worse.
        To the miseries of the siege was added domestic sedition. The Commune,
        headed by Flourens, seized Trochu, Favre, and Arago,
        the leading members of the Government, but they were rescued by the National
        Guard. Among several fruitless sallies, one of the most important was that of
        November 30th, led by General Ducrot, when the French, issuing out in two
        columns, each of 30,000 men, overthrew the Wurtembergers and Saxons, and got possession of several villages on the Marne; but the attack
        was not properly supported, and, on the 2nd of December, the French were driven
        back. Want was now growing into actual famine. By the end of October, butchers’
        meat had entirely failed, and resort was then had to the flesh of horses and
        asses. At the beginning of 1871 the famine was become almost unendurable. Small
        portions of horseflesh, and of bread made of bran, were distributed. Many of
        the poorer sort died of cold and hunger. The bombardment, though not causing
        much damage, kept the citizens in continual fear. Yet the Parisians, accustomed
        to all the luxuries of life, bore their privations and dangers with wonderful
        fortitude. There was no talk of surrender. Men of the higher classes served on
        the ramparts as common soldiers, and encouraged the rest by their example.
         A last sally with 100,000 men, in the direction of
        Versailles, made on the 19th of January, seemed at first to promise success, but was ultimately repulsed
          with great loss. Trochu now resigned his governorship. At this time all the
          places in the east of France, except Belfort, had capitulated; in the west the
          Germans had penetrated to Rouen. The French Government had retired to Bordeaux;
          yet Gambetta persisted in a hopeless defence. The civilians, for want of
          military knowledge, were more obstinate than the generals, and thus brought on
          their country many needless calamities. In the north, General Faidherbe, with an army of 120,000 men, first collected by
          General Bourbaki, was defeated by Manteuffel at
          Amiens, and again irretrievably by General von Goben at Beauvoir, January 18th.
          The Germans had taken Le Mans on the 12th, in spite of the able resistance of
          Chanzy, one of the most capable of the French Commanders, and the army of the
          Loire was no longer capable of resistance.
   Jules Favre went to Versailles, January 23rd, to
        negotiate a capitulation, but rejected Bismarck’s terms as too hard. The
        bombardment was now redoubled, and as provisions sufficed not for a week, it
        was necessary to come to terms. Preliminaries were arranged, January 26th, on
        the following principal conditions:—an armistice till February 19th; the
        garrison of Paris, except 12,000 men to keep order, to be prisoners of war; the
        German troops to occupy all the forts; the blockade of Paris to continue, but
        the city to be revictualled when arms had been delivered up; Paris to pay 200
        million francs within a fortnight; a constituent Assembly to meet at Bordeaux
        to settle terms of peace; meanwhile the respective armies to remain in statu quo. The armistice applied also to the
        fleets, but at sea nothing worth relating had been done.
         Frankfurt treaty, 1871.
         Gambetta, despite the capitulation, proclaimed
        resistance to the last; but Jules Favre was despatched to Bordeaux to put an
        end to his Dictatorship. The French army of the East of 80,000 men, being
        completely cut off and in miserable plight, took refuge in Switzerland at the
        beginning of February, and delivered up their arms to the Swiss militia. The
        capitulation of Belfort on the 16th was the last act of the war. It had
        heroically endured a siege since November 3rd, and the garrison was allowed to
        march out with military honours. A National Assembly at Bordeaux elected
        Thiers, who had been
          returned by twenty electoral circles, President of the Republic. He and Jules
          Favre, Foreign Minister, negotiated at Versailles the preliminaries of a
          definitive peace, which were signed February 26th. France was to cede Alsace
          (except Belfort), German Lorraine with Metz, Thionville, and Longwy; to pay an indemnity of 5,000 million francs (200
          millions sterling); the German troops to remain in France till it was paid; portions
          of Paris to be occupied by the Germans till the National Assembly should
          ratify the preliminaries. Agreeably to this last condition, 40,000 German
          troops marched through the Barrière de l’Etoile,
          March 1st, and bivouacked in the Champs Elysees, but retired on the 3rd, the
          preliminaries having been accepted. The definitive Treaty of Frankfurt was signed May 10.
           Thus was terminated, in less than half a year, one of
        the greatest wars on record. It annihilated for a time the military power of
        France and her influence in the affairs of Europe. Russia eagerly seized on the
        occasion. Towards the end of October Prince Gortchakov haughtily repudiated that clause in the Treaty of 1856 which prohibited Russia
        from having any fleets or arsenals in the Black Sea. Lord Granville protested,
        and Odo Russell was sent to Versailles to inquire if Russia acted with the
        approval of Prussia. Hereupon Bismarck proposed a Conference, which was held
        in London early in 1871; but England stood alone, and suffered a somewhat
        ignominious defeat.
         The success of the German arms under the conduct of
        Prussia raised throughout Germany an enthusiasm for that country, and a desire
        to revive a German Empire by placing King William at its head. The King of
        Bavaria intimated early in December that he had obtained the consent of the
        other German Sovereigns and free towns to his proposal that the King of Prussia
        should take the title of German Emperor. The Diet of the North German
        Confederation sanctioned this title, as well as a federal union with Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt, Wurttemberg, and Bavaria. The new Empire was solemnly proclaimed in
        the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles, January 18th, 1871; on which occasion Baron
        Moltke was made a Count, and Count Bismarck a Prince. It was no revival of the
        Holy Roman Empire, which, as Voltaire remarks, was neither holy nor Roman; nor
        was the title of “King of the Germans” to be revived, which would have clashed
        with the rights of the minor
        German kings. The new Empire was indeed little more than an adhesion of the
        States of Southern Germany to the Northern Confederation as a nucleus.
         Thus, in the period of little more than a decade, one
        large Empire rose upon the ruins of another, whilst the equilibrium of the
        European system was materially altered by the establishment of two powerful
        States in its very centre—the Italian Kingdom and the German Empire. If we
        compare the work of Cavour and Bismarck in founding these two States, Cavour’s
        must be pronounced the more complete; for Italian unity is perfect under one
        Sovereign, whilst that of Germany consists only in a confederation of various
        States bound together by treaties which may not always bear a stress without
        breaking. It must, however, be acknowledged that Bismarck’s task was the more
        difficult one; for Cavour was helped by the revolutionary spirit of the
        populations annexed, through hatred of their governments, whilst no such
        symptoms showed themselves in Germany, or, at all events, more rarely, and in
        a milder form. If we compare the characters of the two great statesmen we
        discover in both the same far-sighted views, equal skill in the choice of means
        and instruments, the same unwavering fortitude and perseverance, the like
        daring combined with prudence.
         
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