Reminiscences of the King of Roumania. Mite Kremnitz

Reminiscences of the King of Roumania - Mite Kremnitz


Скачать книгу

       To the German Crown Prince , October 22nd, 1875 .

       To Prince Charles Anthony , November 27th, 1875 .

       From Prince Charles Anthony , December 1875 .

       To Prince Charles Anthony , February 8th, 1876 .

       To Prince Charles Anthony , April 26th, 1876 .

       From the German Crown Prince , May 22nd, 1876 .

       From Prince Charles Anthony , June 9th, 1876 .

       To Prince Charles Anthony , June 24th, 1876 .

       From Prince Charles Anthony , October 16th, 1876 .

       From the German Crown Prince , November 18th .

       To Prince Charles Anthony , January 20th, 1877 .

       From Prince Charles Anthony , January 22nd, 1877 .

       CHAPTER IX

       THE ARMY

       CHAPTER X

       THE WAR WITH TURKEY

       " From Prince Charles Anthony , June 11th, 1877 .

       CHAPTER XI

       THE BERLIN CONGRESS AND AFTER

       From the German Crown Prince , October 19th, 1878 .

       From Prince Alexander of Battenberg , October 20th, '78 .

       To Prince Charles Anthony .

       From Alexander Prince of Bulgaria , August 22nd, 1879 .

       From Prince Charles Anthony , July 24th, 1879 .

       To Prince Charles Anthony , February 11th, 1880 .

       From the German Crown Prince .

       From the German Emperor , March 5th, 1880 . [23]

       From Prince Bismarck , May 20th, 1880 .

       EPILOGUE

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

      Volk und Knecht und Ueberwinder,

       Sie gestehn zu jeder Zeit;

       Höchstes Glück der Erdenkinder

       Sey nur die Persönlichkeit.

      Goethe (West-Oestlicher Divan).

      It is said to have been a chance occasion which gave the first impetus towards the compilation of the German original[1] from which these "Reminiscences of the King of Roumania have been re-edited and abridged." One day an enterprising man of letters applied to one who had followed the King's career for years with vivid interest: "The public of a country extending from the Alps to the ocean is eager to know something about Roumania and her Hohenzollern ruler." The King, without whose consent little or nothing could have been done, thought the matter over carefully; in fact, he weighed it in his mind for several years before coming to a final decision. At first his natural antipathy to being talked about—even in praise (to criticism he had ever been indifferent)—made him reluctant to provide printed matter for public comment. On the other hand, he had long been most anxious that Roumania should attract more public attention than the world had hitherto bestowed on her. In an age of universal trade competition and self-advertisement, for a country to be talked about possibly meant attracting capitalists and opening up markets: things which might add materially to her prosperity. With such possibilities in view, the King's own personal taste or scruples were of secondary moment to him. So the idea first suggested by a stranger gradually took shape in his mind, and with it the desire to see placed before his own subjects a truthful record of what had been achieved in Roumania in his own time. By these means he hoped to give his people an instructive synopsis of the difficulties which had been successfully overcome in the task of creating practical institutions out of chaos.

      As so often happens in such cases, the work grew beyond the limits originally entertained. But the task was no easy one, and involved the labour of several years. However, the result achieved is well worth the trouble, for it is an historical document of exceptional political interest, containing, among other material, important letters from Prince Bismarck, the Emperor William, the Emperor Frederick, the Czar of Russia, Queen Victoria, and Napoleon III. It is, in fact, a piece of work which a politician must consult unless he is to remain in the dark concerning much of moment in the political history of our time, and particularly in the history of the Eastern Question. "The Reminiscences of the King of Roumania" constitute an important page in the story of European progress. Nor is this all. They also contain a study in self-revelation which, so far as it belongs to a regal character, is absolutely unique in its completeness—even in an age so rich in sensational memoirs as our own.

      The subject-matter deals with a period of over twenty-five years in the life of a young European nation, in the course of which she gained her independence and strove successfully to retain it, whilst more than trebling her resources in peaceful work. In this eventful period greater changes have taken place in the balance of power in Europe than in many preceding centuries. A republic has replaced a monarchy in France, and also on the other side of the Atlantic, in Brazil, since the days when a young captain of a Prussian guard regiment, a scion of the House of Hohenzollern, set himself single-handed the Sisyphean task of establishing a constitutional representative monarchy on a soil where hitherto periodical conspiracies and revolts had run riot luxuriously.


Скачать книгу