[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 27/27
What other country, he asked, was there where a defeated party would look forward to the help of foreign armies? "There are unfortunately," he said, "many Coriolani in Germany, only the Volsci are wanting; if they found their Volsci they would soon be unmasked." Everyone knew that the Volsci from over the Rhine would not be slow to come when the occasion offered. "It was," he said, "a melancholy result of the centuries of disunion.
There were traitors in the country; they did not hide themselves; they carried their heads erect; they found public defenders even in the walls of Parliament." Then he continued: "Everywhere where corruption is found there a form of life begins which no one can touch with clean kid gloves.
In view of these facts you speak to me of espionage.
In my nature I am not born to be a spy, but I believe we deserve your thanks if we condescend to follow malignant reptiles into their cave to observe their actions." This is the origin of the expression "the _reptile Press,"_ for the name was given by the people not to those against whom the efforts of the Government were directed, but to the paid organs to which, if report is true, so large a portion of the Guelph fund was given. But we must pass on to the events by which the work of 1866 was to be completed..
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|