[Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire by James Wycliffe Headlam]@TWC D-Link bookBismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire CHAPTER XII 24/27
The House had no alternative except to withdraw their vote. The Constitution as finally agreed on exists to this day as that of the German Empire.
Notwithstanding the evil forebodings made at the time, it has worked well for over thirty years. From the moment that the new State had been created and the new Constitution adopted, a great change took place in Bismarck's public position.
He was no longer merely the first and ablest servant of the Prussian King; he was no longer one in the distinguished series of Prussian Ministers.
His position was--let us recognise it clearly--greater than that of the King and Emperor, for he was truly the Father of the State: it was his will which had created and his brain which had devised it; he watched over it with the affection of a father for his son; none quite understood it but himself; he alone could authoritatively expound the laws of the Constitution.
A criticism of it was an attack upon himself; opposition to him was scarcely to be distinguished from treason to the State.
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