[The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 2 of 2) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of Napoleon I (Volume 2 of 2) CHAPTER XXIV 3/46
His victory at Rossbach over a great polyglot force of French and Imperialists first awakened German nationality to a thrill of conscious life; and the last success of his career was the championship of the lesser German princes against the encroachments of the Hapsburgs.
In fact, it seems now a mere commonplace to assert that Prussia has prospered most when, as under Frederick the Great and William the Great, her policy has been truly German, and that she has fallen back most in the years 1795-1806 and 1848-1852, when the subservience of her Frederick Williams to France and Austria has lost them the respect and support of the rest of the Fatherland.
A State that would attract other fragments of the same nation must be attractive, and it must be broadly national if it is to attract.
If Stein and Bismarck had been merely Prussians, if Cavour's policy had been narrowly Sardinian, would their States ever have served as the rallying centres for the Germany and Italy of to-day? The difficulties which beset Frederick William III.
in 1805 were not entirely of his own making.
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