<h3> CHAPTER XIX <br/><br/> HOW THE PRUSSIANS AFTER SADOWA CAME HOME TO BERLIN </h3>
<p>There is much more to say on this subject
of cabling which I touched on, perhaps prematurely,
in the last chapter, but it can wait till
certain incidents in Berlin have been described.
Ever memorable to me was this visit to Berlin
in 1866, and for two things. I saw something of
the two greatest forces in Prussia, or two of the
three greatest: the Prussian army and Count
Bismarck. The third, whom I saw, but only saw,
was the King; whom his grandson has since
rechristened William the Great. The Seven Weeks'
War was just over. There were Generals of the
army who expected to enter Vienna in triumph,
as, four and a half years later, the German armies
were to enter Paris. But Count Bismarck had
vetoed this project; by no means desiring to leave
an indelible scar of defeat and humiliation on a
kindred German capital. He wished, and the
King wished, that in the future, and in the near
future, Berlin and Vienna should be friends. In
the interest of that wise policy the purely military
ambitions of these Generals, the Red Prince
perhaps among them, who were soldiers and nothing
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P171"></SPAN>171}</span>
else, were repressed. A consolation was allowed
them in the shape of a triumphal re-entry into
Berlin.</p>
<p>So on the 20th and 21st of September the garrison
of Berlin and Potsdam, fifty thousand strong,
but dividing their strength between the two days,
marched through the Brandenburger Gate, and
up the Unter den Linden to the Opera Platz. By
good luck I had rooms in the Hotel du Nord, then
the best hotel in Berlin, midway in the great
avenue of Berlin; and being on the second floor I
could look well over the trees and along almost the
whole stretch of this fine street, a hundred yards
wide.</p>
<p>It was such a spectacle as presents itself but
seldom to the human eye, German or other. All
things considered, it cannot often have been
surpassed. The whole world was looking on.
For here was Prussia, but three months ago a
second-class European Power, which had suddenly
stepped into the front rank. So dazzling was her
rise that the Emperor Napoleon, looking out of
the Tuileries windows upon a transformed Central
Europe, was already demanding "compensation"
for Sadowa, and demanding vainly. The leadership
of Germany had passed in a night from Austria
to Prussia. The Germanic Confederation had
been dissolved and the North German Confederation,
with Prussia the all-powerful head of it, had
come into existence. With the refusal of Count
Bismarck to listen to the demands of Napoleon,
Prussia stood out in Central Europe as the German
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P172"></SPAN>172}</span>
State which at last was to resist all attempts from
beyond the Rhine to impose the will of a French
ruler upon the German people. It was a Declaration
of Independence; and of something more than
independence.</p>
<p>When the head of that great column of victorious
troops emerged from the great Gate, what Berlin
saw was the instrument by which these vast
changes had been brought about. There were
men of prophetic mind who saw in it the instrument
of greater changes yet to be. But sufficient
for the day was the glory thereof. All Berlin was
in the streets; or in this one street; or in the
windows and on the housetops of the Unter den Linden.
As they cheered I did not think the volume of
sound comparable to what one hears in London on
great days of public rejoicing. There was
rejoicing, of course, and there was enthusiasm, but
it was of the grave German kind; none the less
deep for being less resonant. I cannot remember
being much impressed by these demonstrations,
nor by the flags and other decorations. The
Prussian flag, with its black and red, was a less
cheerful piece of bunting than the Tricolour or the
Union Jack. The Germans have, nevertheless,
ideas of ornament and of art values; perhaps
mid-way between the French, who are supreme in such
matters, and the English, who have no ideas at all
except to hang out all the flags they possess and
trust to luck for harmony and effect. None the
less was the Unter den Linden garlanded with
banners, and the better houses or larger buildings
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P173"></SPAN>173}</span>
were glowing with colour and contrasts. But the
military display was the important thing, and it
was magnificent.</p>
<p>The King came first, riding a little in front of
his headquarters staff and of the Generals who
were in his suite. Whether he might be called
William the Great or not, he was on that day a
kingly figure. The officers with him numbered, I
should think, perhaps a hundred and fifty, mostly
well mounted, in uniforms which, whatever they
might be singly, were splendid in the mass. They
were perhaps too splendid. One would have
liked to see these men in the clothes in which they
had marched and fought; with the stains of war
upon them. But that, I suppose, would have
been abhorrent to the German mind, and especially
to the German military mind, with its deep devotion
to etiquette and its worship of routine and
all forms of military technique. But the echoes
of Austrian battlefields had not yet sunk into
silence, and we knew well enough that these were
no holiday warriors.</p>
<p>They rode slowly. When the King and his
staff had passed there came a surprise. The
procession seemed for one moment to have come
to an end. There was an open space of perhaps
fifty yards. In the centre of it rode three men
The three were: Von Roon, Minister of War;
Moltke; and between them Bismarck in a white
uniform as Major of Cuirassiers. It was when
they came into view that the cheering rose highest.
The King was popular and the greeting of his
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P174"></SPAN>174}</span>
people had been cordial. But the three men
behind him were the real heroes. Von Roon had
organized the forces of Prussia; Moltke had guided
them to victory; Bismarck had planned and
brought on the war. The Carnot of Prussia; the
soldier of all soldiers of Prussia next after the
great Frederick; the brain and will and directing
force of Prussia, these three; and in all Europe
no other three comparable to them, singly or
together.</p>
<p>So here they rode, these Three by themselves;
apart, as if all that had gone before and all that
was to come after were there in homage to them.
The King and his headquarters staff were but the
advance-guard to these Three. The five-and-twenty
thousand troops who followed were but
their rear-guard. These servants and priceless
possessions of the State were encompassed about by all
that was brilliant and all that was useful in the
State themselves excepted. They bore themselves
as befitted their services and their places, with a
dignity, a serene disregard of everything but their
duty, which belong to real greatness. Berlin
hailed them with cheers of a kind which had been
given to no other. I do not know that any of
the three was precisely what might be called
Popular. Popularity was not what Von Roon
or Moltke or Bismarck had sought. But Berlin
knew, and Prussia knew, that but for these three
there would have been no day of victory for the
Fatherland.</p>
<p>The troops came past in the formation known
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P175"></SPAN>175}</span>
as company front, and as the Prussian companies
were a hundred strong or more, the effect was
admirable. Berlin was thronged with soldiers for
days after this, and the individual Prussian soldier
was not then a very imposing object. He was
well set up, but he and his uniform were not always
on good terms; in short, he was too often slovenly
or slouching. He had, moreover, a stiffness of
bearing which reminded you of Heine's bitter
account of him in earlier days; that "he looked
as if he had swallowed the ramrod with which he
had been thrashed." But in the mass you saw
nothing slovenly, and the stiffness perhaps helped
his officers to dress that company front in a straight
line across the broad street. The front was, in
fact, perfection, and so was the marching, and as
these bodies of drilled men moved up the Linden
they looked like what they had proved themselves,
irresistible. They swept on with a movement as
of some great natural force. Regiment after
regiment swung past. There was never a break or
halt. The machine was in its best working order.
The men carried their heads high, crowned with
victory. And so the tide of war poured through
this peaceful street.</p>
<p>The Prussian uniform was not a brilliant one.
In point of mere costume these troops were not
comparable to many others. The Austrians were
far more smartly dressed; and the English, and
the French. But this blue and red looked
workmanlike, while as for ornament—well, what
ornament was needed beyond the word Sadowa, which
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P176"></SPAN>176}</span>
might have been, but was not, embroidered on
the collars of their tunics? You saw also that
this was a citizen army: the German people were
in these ranks, as the Prussian people. The words
have since become almost convertible, though there
are millions of Germans who will not agree to that.</p>
<p>The regimental officers were well enough mounted
and, so far as one could judge from a parade
like this, were good horsemen. They sat well
down in their saddles. A good seat and good
hands go together, or ought to go together, but
do not always, and the hands seemed heavy if a
horse turned restive. But another thing became
clear as you looked. The officers were of the
elect. The Prussian aristocracy was in the saddle.
There has never been a time since the Great
Elector of Brandenburg when it was not in the
saddle, actually and figuratively. To adopt
Bismarck's phrase at a much later day, in a great
speech at Jena, this country of Prussia has never
been ruled from below. It was not in 1866. Nor
have the Junkers and the nobility of Prussia ever
failed to pay with their persons when the need arose.
In that murderous cavalry charge at Mars-la-Tour,
the ranks were crowded with the sons of Princes,
and Dukes, and Counts, and all the rest; they
rode, no small part of them, to death, and knew
they were riding to death, but no thought of rank
or riches stayed them, nor did any one falter.</p>
<p>It is impossible not to think of these later things
as the memories of these September days in 1866
come back. I looked on then at the beginnings
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P177"></SPAN>177}</span>
of what was foreordained to happen. This was
the army, these were the very men who were to
close about Sedan in that other September of 1870.
Long after that I was to see them again in the
Opera Platz and Unter den Linden when the King
who now rides with his grave gallantry of bearing
at their head was to be buried, on one of the coldest
and perhaps the blackest day Berlin ever saw.
The splendour had departed. The triumph of 1866
had given way to mourning and gloom. And on
the architrave of the Brandenburg Thor, draped
and shrouded, like all Berlin, in black, stood out
in white letters the last greeting of Berlin to its
old-time King, "Vale, Senex Imperator."</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap20"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P178"></SPAN>178}</span></p>
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