[Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire by James Wycliffe Headlam]@TWC D-Link book
Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire

CHAPTER XVI
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Then the trade in Swedish wood threatened to interfere with the profits from the German forests, an industry so useful to the health of the country and the prosperity of the Government.

But if Free Trade would injure the market for the natural products of the soil, it did not bring any compensating advantages by helping industry.

Germany was flooded with English manufactures, so that even the home market was endangered, and every year it became more apparent that foreign markets were being closed.

The sanguine expectations of the Free-Traders had not been realised; America, France, Russia, had high tariffs; German manufactured goods were excluded from these countries.

What could they look forward to in the future but a ruined peasantry and the crippling of the iron and weaving industries?
"I had the impression," said Bismarck, "that under Free Trade we were gradually bleeding to death." He was probably much influenced in his new policy by Lothar Bucher, one of his private secretaries, who was constantly with him at Varzin.
Bucher, who had been an extreme Radical, had, in 1849, been compelled to fly from the country and had lived many years in England.


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