Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 443 pages of information about Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire.

Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 443 pages of information about Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire.
use to him when he was afterwards placed in the somewhat similar society of Frankfort.  This period in his career did not last long; in June, 1837, we find him applying for leave of absence on account of ill-health.  He received leave for eight days, but he seems to have exceeded this, for four months afterwards he writes from Berne asking that his leave may be prolonged; he had apparently gone off for a long tour in Switzerland and the Rhine.  His request was refused; he received a severe reprimand, and Count Arnim approved his resolution to return to one of the older Prussian provinces, “where he might shew an activity in the duties of his office which he had in vain attempted to attain in the social conditions of Aachen.”

He was transferred to Potsdam, but he remained here only a few weeks; he had not as yet served in the army, and he now began the year as a private soldier which was required from him; he entered the Jaeger or Rifles in the Garde Corps which was stationed at Potsdam, but after a few weeks was transferred to the Jaeger at Stettin.  The cause seems to have been partly the ill-health of his mother; she was dying, and he wished to be near her; in those days the journey from Berlin to Pomerania took more than a day; besides this there were pecuniary reasons.  His father’s administration of the family estates had not been successful; it is said that his mother had constantly pressed her husband to introduce innovations, but had not consistently carried them out; this was a not unnatural characteristic in the clever and ambitious woman who wished to introduce into agricultural affairs those habits which she had learnt from the bureaucrats in Berlin.  However this may be, matters had now reached a crisis; it became necessary to sell the larger part of the land attached to the house at Schoenhausen, and in the next year, after the death of Frau von Bismarck, which took place on January 1, 1839, it was decided that Herr von Bismarck should in future live at Schoenhausen with his only daughter, now a girl of twelve years of age, while the two brothers should undertake the management of the Pomeranian estates.

So it came about that at the age of twenty-four all prospect of an official career had for the time to be abandoned, and Otto settled down with his brother to the life of a country squire.  It is curious to notice that the greatest of his contemporaries, Cavour, went through a similar training.  There was, however, a great difference between the two men:  Cavour was in this as in all else a pioneer; when he retired to his estate he was opening out new forms of activity and enterprise for his countrymen; Bismarck after the few wild years away from home was to go back to the life which all his ancestors had lived for five hundred years, to become steeped in the traditions of his country and his caste.  Cavour always points the way to what is new, Bismarck again brings into honour what men had hastily thought was antiquated. 

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Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.