[The Development of the European Nations, 1870-1914 (5th ed.) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link bookThe Development of the European Nations, 1870-1914 (5th ed.) CHAPTER V 8/34
When all is settled, the country will have the liberty to choose as it pleases in what concerns its future destinies[67]." Skilfully pointing the factions to the future as offering a final reward for their virtuous self-restraint, this masterly tactician gained time in which to heal the worst wounds dealt by the war. [Footnote 67: Speech of March 27, 1871.] But it was amidst unending difficulties.
The Monarchists, eager to emphasise the political reaction set in motion by the extravagances of the Paris Commune, wished to rid themselves at the earliest possible time of this self-confident little bourgeois who seemed to stand alone between them and the realisation of their hopes.
Their more unscrupulous members belittled his services and hinted that love of power alone led him to cling to the Republic, and thus belie his political past.
Then, too, the Orleans princes, the Duc d'Aumale and the Prince de Joinville, the surviving sons of King Louis Philippe, took their seats as deputies for the Oise and Haute-Marne Departments, thus keeping the monarchical ideal steadily before the eye of France.
True, the Duc d'Aumale had declared to the electorate that he was ready to bow before the will of France whether it decided for a Constitutional Monarchy or a Liberal Republic; and the loyalty with which he served his country was destined to set the seal of honesty on a singularly interesting career.
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