Dreadnought

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by Robert K. Massie


  51 “I never saw Bismarck enter”: Bülow, IV, 307

  52 “unbearably ugly”: Taylor, 112

  53 “Simplicity... complete lack of adornment”: Bülow, I, 27

  54 “They eat here always until the walls burst”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 386

  55 “I have spent the whole night hating”: Taylor, 137

  56 “This pressure on my brain”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 386

  57 “The Chancellor has aged”: Holstein Papers, II, 97

  58 “I don’t like questions”: Taylor, 196

  59 “inclination to transgress”: Holstein Papers, II, 48

  60 “Herbert’s character is unevenly developed”: ibid., 199

  61 “Even now, the ambassadors seek out Herbert”: ibid., 199

  62 “The way to loosen Herbert’s tongue”: ibid.

  63 “Both father and son”: ibid., 200

  64 “eagerness to get rid of Hatzfeldt”: ibid., 208

  65 “Please do not say anything”: Stern, 254

  66 “In every great state”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 231

  67 “I never go to Paris”: Robertson, f.n. 482

  68 “an emperor who could not talk”: Lee, I, 643

  69 “These audiences with young Bismarck”: Bülow, II, 60

  70 “Lately, it almost appears”: ibid., 61

  71 “Herbert, who is not yet forty”: ibid.

  72 “You need not praise him”: ibid.

  Chapter 4

  Bismarck’s Grand Design

  1 “We are satiated”: Robertson, 341

  2 “You know where a war begins”: Holstein Papers, I, 92

  3 “You forget the importance”: Mansergh, 18

  4 “We remember that they are waiting for us”: ibid., 19

  5 “Remember, I forbid you to take Tunis”: Robertson, 349

  6 “If Vienna or London is chosen”: Dugdale, I, 61; DGP, II, 175

  7 “tying our neat, sea-worthy Prussian frigate”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 355

  8 “that was worth the bones”: Taylor, 167

  9 “If I must choose”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 355

  10 “Never will Prussia forget”: Eyck, 188

  11 “Prince Bismarck himself states”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 373

  12 “Bismarck is more necessary than I”: Taylor, 188

  13 “Those men who have compelled me”: Eyck, 265

  14 “The most brilliant victories”: Stern, 439

  15 “Our policy with its criss-cross of commitments”: Holstein Papers, II, xv

  16 “that big Utopian Babbler”: Eckardstein, 52

  17 “that inhuman exception”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 151

  18 “very pleasant days”: ibid., 161; DGP, IV, 38

  19 “would be compatible”: ibid.; ibid.

  20 “England does not need an alliance”: ibid., 167; ibid., 47

  21 “We are uncommonly grateful”: ibid., 168; ibid.

  22 “My Lord, we are told”: Stern, 411

  23 “Neither my colleagues nor I”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 177; DGP, IV, 63

  24 “It is very hard for me”: ibid., 179; ibid.

  25 “in my presence with Lord Derby”: ibid.; ibid.

  26 “I replied to the noble Lord”: ibid.

  27 “why the right to colonize”: ibid., 175

  28 “So long as they remain”: ibid., 176; ibid., 60

  29 “Our friendship can be of great help”: ibid., 171; ibid., 51

  30 “If we fail to push our rights”: ibid., 182; ibid., 77

  31 “The English... have no reason at all”: Bülow, I, 556

  32 “profit England”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 190; DGP, IV, 101

  33 “produced violent gesticulations”: ibid.; ibid.

  34 “Herbert Bismarck has come over again”: Robertson, 443

  35 “Even if you had no colonial aspirations”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 192; DGP, IV, 103

  36 “There is no point in discussing”: ibid.

  37 “the extension of Germany”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 397

  38 “they must take care in Berlin”: Balfour, 54

  39 “lively... recollection of the kindness”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 208; DGP, IV, 132

  40 “by your words that our former personal intercourse”: ibid., 209; ibid., 133

  41 “I value Lord Salisbury’s friendship”: Eckardstein, 98

  42 “Here is Russia”: Cowles, 105

  43 “I am not a colonialist”: Eyck, 272

  44 “a German Gladstone ministry”: Taylor, 194

  45 “the sole object of German colonial policy”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 396

  46 “When we entered upon our colonial policy”: Eyck, 275

  47 “I know of no other case”: Eckardstein, 133

  48 “Meanwhile, we leave it on the table”: E.T.S. Dugdale, I, 374; DGP, IV, 405

  49 “I see in England”: Robertson, 436

  50 “We no longer ask for love”: Crankshaw, Bismarck, 406

  51 “The Kaiser is like a balloon”: Empress Frederick, 363

  52 “too much talk of the Chancellor”: Bismarck, New Chapters, 102

  53 “a rascally young fop”: Kennan, 398

  54 “to earn money on certain days”: Bismarck, New Chapters, 105

  55 “The employers and shareholders”: ibid., 118

  56 “the practical aimlessness of the scheme”: ibid., 110

  57 “the increased expectations”: ibid., 113

  58 “The waves will mount higher”: Nichols, 17

  59 “They are not my ministers”: Eyck, 315

  60 “cease all direct correspondence”: Röhl, 45

  61 “The Chancellor... has taken sides”: Eyck, 317

  62 “I am just leaving the political deathbed”: Robertson, 490

  63 “So? I gave the order yesterday”: Bismarck, New Chapters, 166

  64 “Well, of course you had him thrown out”: ibid.

  65 “Not even when your sovereign commands it?”: ibid., 168

  66 “How can I rule”: Taylor, 246

  67 “un garçon mal élevé”: Nichols, 24

  68 “I must greatly deplore”: Bismarck, New Chapters, 178

  69 “With deep emotion”: Nichols, 25

  70 “I am in better health”: Taylor, 235

  71 “I will use it”: ibid., 251

  72 “I am as miserable”: Bülow, IV, 637

  73 “I deeply regret”: Queen Victoria, I, 581

  74 “I ask only for sympathy”: Robertson, 492

  75 “I have bid farewell”: Taylor, 251

  76 “A state funeral”: Stern, 457

  77 “They can make their minds easy”: Robertson, 508

  78 “so that I will not have to see”: Taylor, 256

  79 “We have not doubted”: Nichols, 197

  80 “He has planned an audience”: ibid., 198

  81 “Whatever the Germans may say or do”: Bülow, I, 391

  82 “He stopped when he set foot”: Robertson, 507

  83 “Would it be worthy”: Bülow, IV, 678

  84 “to see how long the old man will last”: Taylor, 264

  85 “Very well”: Bülow, I, 607

  Chapter 5

  The New Course: Kaiser William II, Caprivi, and Hohenlohe

  1 “carries himself well”: Morley, I, 272

  2 “If he laughs”: Balfour, 138

  3 “He was small and... handsome”: Heckstall-Smith, 53

  4 “So we are bound together”: Cowles, 76

  5 “Recruits! You have sworn Me allegiance”: Nichols, 130

  6 “There is only one ruler”: ibid., 106

  7 “terrible responsibility to the Creator”: Bülow, I, 136

  8 “enemies of the Empire”: Balfour, 159

  9 “whether red, black or yellow monkeys”: Bülow, II, 7

  10 “If only I could see the Reichstag”: Balfour, 159

  11 “I adore England”: ibid., 84

  12 “Not one of your ministers”: Topham, 207

  13 “the damned family
”: Bülow, I, 544

  14 “William the Great”: Magnus, 309

  15 “Willy is a bully”: ibid., 214

  16 “the most brilliant failure in history”: ibid., 250

  17 “an old peacock”: Lee, I, 673

  18 “He is a Satan”: Balfour, 265

  19 “as an uncle treats a nephew”: Queen Victoria, I, 439

  20 “discussions of this kind”: ibid., 440

  21 “As regarding the Prince’s”: ibid.

  22 “Most sincerely do I hope”: Lee, I, 652

  23 “How this mistake”: Magnus, 212

  24 “The whole affair is absolutely invented”: ibid., 213

  25 “I am happy to see”: Queen Victoria, I, 505

  26 “Fancy wearing the same uniform”: Lee, I, 654

  27 “I am now able to feel”: Queen Victoria, I, 526

  28 “A Tsar, an infallible Pope”: Empress Frederick, 429

  29 “William never comes”: ibid., 330

  30 “Of course, it would be better”: Cowles, 101

  31 “William is as blind and green”: Barkeley, 191

  32 “I wish I could put a padlock”: Empress Frederick, 434

  33 “My mother and I”: Queen Victoria, I, 485

  34 “this awful lumbago”: Empress Frederick, 463

  35 “a typical Teuton”: Nichols, 31

  36 “First, at least one successor”: ibid., 34

  37 “What kind of a jackass”: ibid., 32

  38 “I know that I shall be covered with mud”: ibid., 33

  39 “If anything can lighten for me”: ibid., 34

  40 “We are getting on well”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 258

  41 “after Bismarck, the greatest German”: Nichols, 34

  42 “to lead the nation back”: Röhl, 65

  43 “previously, independent statesmen”: ibid., 64

  44 “take the good wherever”: ibid., 65

  45 “Caprivi has an absolutely stupid lack”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 259

  46 “A horse which has done well”: ibid.

  47 “would be forced, against his own convictions”: Bülow, I, 638

  48 “I beg you to tell His Majesty”: Nichols, 53

  49 “Nothing more satisfactory”: ibid., 54

  50 “If Bismarck were still at the helm”: ibid., 55

  51 “Bismarck was able to juggle”: Bülow, IV, 55

  52 “simple and transparent”: Nichols, 58

  53 “Well, then, it can’t be done”: ibid., 56

  54 “One thing was said”: ibid., 62

  55 “I drink to Holy Moscow”: Bülow, IV, 639

  56 “of the difficulties of my situation”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 257

  57 “With a beard like this”: Röhl, 72

  58 “No, I would not dream of it”: ibid., 86

  59 “A sensitive old fathead”: ibid.

  60 “indescribable obstinacy”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 271

  61 “One can’t get anywhere”: Nichols, 356

  62 “Caprivi, you get terribly on my nerves”: ibid., 357

  63 “Your Majesty, I have always”: ibid.

  64 “For his successor”: ibid., 329

  65 “My relations with the All Highest”: Röhl, 116

  66 “Nor would it do any good”: ibid., 362

  67 “some one closer to me”: Nichols, 329

  68 “a man neither conservative nor liberal”: ibid., 353

  69 “I’ve been trying”: Holstein Papers, II, 189

  70 “I’m vainly trying”: ibid., 209

  71 “a quiet man”: ibid., 220

  72 “The Chancellor will never send”: ibid., 221

  73 “Age, poor memory, illness”: Röhl, 121

  74 “his shrunken figure”: ibid.

  75 “He felt such contempt”: Bülow, IV, 467

  76 “I am convinced”: Röhl, 128

  77 “Things are going badly”: ibid., 161

  78 “Domestic politics make more noise”: ibid.

  79 “Hohenlohe’s back must be stiffened”: ibid., 173

  80 “In Hohenlohe’s great compliance”: ibid.

  81 “make one last, vigorous effort”: ibid.

  82 “The Holstein of 1888”: ibid., 172

  83 “I know no constitution”: ibid., 213

  84 “I felt it was my official responsibility”: ibid.

  85 “I know that you will do the job well”: ibid., 218

  86 “If the Kaiser wants”: ibid., 229

  87 “almost eighty years old”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 156

  Chapter 6

  “The Monster of the Labyrinth”

  1 “weak chest”: Holstein Papers, I, x

  2 “tall, erect and unsmiling”: ibid., 4

  3 “I’d rather be late”: ibid., 5

  4 “incredibly able intellectually”: ibid., II, 261

  5 “He is very sensitive”: Bülow, III, 126

  6 “I see”: ibid., IV, 623

  7 “You want to know what I think”: ibid., 459

  8 “I have described this scene”: Holstein Papers, II, 271

  9 “I have sometimes gone beyond”: ibid., xvii

  10 “For the first time in twenty-five years”: ibid., 276

  11 “Holstein has once and for all”: Bülow, IV, 607

  12 “You have been guilty of something”: Holstein Papers, I, 131

  13 “Geheimrat Holstein begs to be excused”: Kürenberg, His Excellency the Spectre, 59

  14 “I hear that I have an excellent official”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 263

  15 “How often has it happened”: Eckardstein, 12

  16 “The fellow didn’t bow to me”: Haller, II, 292

  17 “As I perceive you are working... against me”: ibid., I, 287

  18 “If His Majesty does nothing”: ibid., 286

  19 “His rage was all the more senseless”: Bülow, IV, 458

  20 “Neither Caprivi, nor Hohenlohe”: Haller, II, 297

  21 “Holstein’s great talents”: ibid., I, 354

  22 “The situation was made more difficult”: Bülow, I, 216

  23 “Holstein was like the watchdog”: ibid.

  24 “In his blind and petty hatred”: ibid., 266

  25 “Bulow and I”: Haller, II, 292

  26 “to keep in mind the need”: Paul Kennedy, Antagonism, 206

  Chapter 7

  Bülow and Weltmacht

  1 “The question is not”: Paul Kennedy, Antagonism, 311

  2 “as irresistible as a law of nature”: ibid.

  3 “One of the conventional lies”: Carroll, 350

  4 “England is still the state”: ibid., 383

  5 “Only in war”: Padfield, 16

  6 “The State is not an Academy of Art”: ibid., 18

  7 “General Caprivi believed”: Röhl, 162

  8 “has great tasks to accomplish”: Paul Kennedy, “The Kaiser and German Weltpolitik,” in Röhl and Sombart, Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 158

  9 “The German Empire”: Carroll, 378

  10 “I am the sole arbiter”: Lee, II, 136

  11 “I am at my very best”: Bülow, II, 443

  12 “Bülow will be my Bismarck”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 288

  13 “With me, personal rule”: Kathy Lerman, “The Decisive Relationship,” in Röhl and Sombart, Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 222

  14 “Bülow seemed more Latin than German”: Mansergh, 78

  15 “an eel”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 37

  16 “an eel is a leech”: Balfour, 202

  17 “underneath the shiny paint”: ibid., 201

  18 “He would be quite a fellow”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 282

  19 “Bernhard makes a secret”: ibid.

  20 “The closest friend of my life”: Bülow, II, 59

  21 “My earliest memory of Herbert”: ibid.

  22 “
a beautiful girl”: ibid., IV, 17

  23 “wavered and swayed”: ibid., 207

  24 “As I sat next morning”: ibid., 555

  25 “My father said”: ibid., 558

  26 “clean-shaven and pasty”: Holstein Papers, II, 188

  27 “When Bulow wants to set”: ibid.

  28 “A few days ago”: ibid., 204

  29 “The beauty of it”: ibid., 189

  30 “her wonderful eyes, black eyes”: Bülow, IV, 349

  31 “For once in his life”: Holstein Papers, II, 188

  32 “Only if you take the Kaiser”: Bülow, I, 5

  33 “Ever since his apostasy”: ibid., 7

  34 “older and weaker”: ibid., 10

  35 “My dear Bernhard”: ibid., 18

  36 “to build a fleet”: ibid., 19

  37 “Now, what about my ships?”: ibid., 65

  38 “Agreed, agreed”: ibid., 68

  39 “When one has shared bright days”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 281

  40 “I adore him”: Bülow, I, 161

  41 “As a man”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 282

  42 “He is so bedeutend”: ibid., 283

  43 “leading a contemplative existence”: ibid., 288

  44 “Build your nest”: ibid., 285

  45 “An old man full of specters”: ibid., 287

  46 “The sway of the counselors”: ibid.

  47 “Would you accept”: Bülow, I, 433

  48 “Candidly, for me”: ibid.

  49 “Do accept”: ibid., 436

  50 “Secretary of State Count Bülow speaking”: ibid.

  51 “My dear Chancellor”: ibid., 443

  52 “satisfaction that Chlodwig, the old mummy”: ibid., 453

  53 “Under Prince Hohenlohe”: ibid., 459

  54 “Holstein... suggested”: ibid., 454

  55 “sobriety, objectivity”: ibid.

  56 “Bülow gives me his full trust”: Lamar Cecil, German Diplomatic Service, 294

  57 “decades had to pass”: ibid., 38

  58 “The air is thick”: Zedlitz-Trützschler, 104

  59 “Whenever, by oversight”: ibid., 196

  60 “Your light trousers”: ibid.

  61 “Since I have Bülow”: Lerman, “The Decisive Relationship,” Kaiser Wilhelm II: New Interpretations, 241

  Chapter 8

  “Ships of My Own”

  1 “I had a peculiar passion”: William II, My Early Life, 229

  2 “Osborne is the scene”: ibid., 15

  3 “I was allowed to play”: ibid., 74

 

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