The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Vol. X

Kuno Francke
The German Classics of The
Nineteenth and Twentieth
Centuries, Vol. X.

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Nineteenth and
Twentieth Centuries, Vol. X., by Kuno Francke This eBook is for the
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Title: The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,
Vol. X. Prince Otto Von Bismarck, Count Helmuth Von Moltke,
Ferdinand Lassalle
Author: Kuno Francke
Release Date: July 30, 2004 [EBook #13056]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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CLASSICS ***

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VOLUME X

PRINCE OTTO VON BISMARCK
COUNT HELMUTH VON MOLTKE
FERDINAND LASSALLE

THE GERMAN CLASSICS
Masterpieces of German Literature

TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH
Patrons' Edition

IN TWENTY VOLUMES

ILLUSTRATED
1914

CONTENTS OF VOLUME X
Prince Otto Von Bismarck
Bismarck as a National Type. By Kuno Francke.
The Love Letters of Bismarck. Translated under the supervision of
Charlton T. Lewis.
Correspondence of William I. and Bismarck. Translated by J.A. Ford.
From "Thoughts and Recollections." Translated under the supervision
of A.J. Butler.
Bismarck as an Orator. By Edmund von Mach.
Speeches of Prince Bismarck. Translated by Edmund von Mach:
Professorial Politics
Speech from the Throne
Alsace-Lorraine a Glacis Against France
We Shall Never Go to Canossa!
Bismarck as the "Honest Broker"
Salus Publica--Bismarck's Only Lode-Star
Practical Christianity
We Germans Fear God, and Nought Else in the World
Mount the Guards at the Warthe and the Vistula!
Long Live the Emperor and the Empire!

Count Helmuth Von Moltke
The Life of Moltke. By Karl Detlev Jessen.
Letters and Historical Writings of Moltke:
The Political and Military Conditions of the Ottoman Empire in 1836.
Translated by Edmund von Mach.
A Trip to Brussa. Translated by Edmund von Mach.
A Journey to Mossul. Translated by Edmund von Mach.
A Bullfight in Spain. Translated by Edmund von Mach.
Description of Moscow. Translated by Grace Bigelow.
The Peace Movement. Translated by Edmund von Mach.
Fighting on the Frontier. Translated by Clara Bell and Henry W.
Fischer.
Battle of Gravelotte--St. Privat. Translated by Clara Bell and Henry W.
Fischer.
Consolatory Thoughts on the Earthly Life and a Future Existence.
Translated by Mary Herms.
Ferdinand Lassalle
The Life and Work of Ferdinand Lassalle. By Arthur N. Holcombe.
The Workingmen's Programme. Translated by E.H. Babbitt.
Science and the Workingmen. Translated by Thorstein B. Veblen.
Open Letter to the Central Committee. Translated by E.H. Babbitt.

ILLUSTRATIONS--VOLUME X
Bismarck Meeting Napoleon after the Battle of Sedan
Prince Bismarck. By Franz von Lenbach
Prince Bismarck. By Franz von Lenbach
Princess Bismarck
Coronation of King William I at Königsberg. By Adolph von Menzel
Emperor William I. By Franz von Lenbach
King William's Departure for the Front at the Beginning of the
Franco-German War. By Adolph von Menzel
Prince Bismarck. By Franz von Lenbach
The Berlin Congress. By Anton von Werner
Prince Bismarck. By Franz von Lenbach
The Bismarck Monument at Hamburg. By Lederer
William I on his Deathbed. By Anton von Werner
Moltke. By Anton von Werner

Count Moltke
Moltke at Sedan. By Anton von Werner
King William at the Mausoleum of his Parents on the Day of the
French Declaration of War. By Anton von Werner
The Capitulation of Sedan. By Anton von Werner
Ferdinand Lassalle
The Iron Foundry. By Adolph von Menzel
Flax Barn in Laren. By Max Liebermann
* * * * *

BISMARCK AS A NATIONAL TYPE[1]
BY KUNO FRANCKE, PH.D., LL.D., Litt.D. Professor of the History
of German Culture, Harvard University.
No man since Luther has been a more complete embodiment of
German nationality than Otto von Bismarck. None has been closer to
the German heart. None has stood more conspicuously for racial
aspirations, passions, ideals.
It is the purpose of the present sketch to bring out a few of these
affinities between Bismarck and the German people.
I
Perhaps the most obviously Teutonic trait in Bismarck's character is its
martial quality. It would be preposterous, surely, to claim warlike
distinction as a prerogative of the German race. Russians, Frenchmen,
Englishmen, Americans, undoubtedly, make as good fighters as
Germans. But it is not an exaggeration to say that there is no country in
the world where the army is as enlightened or as popular an institution
as it is in Germany.
The German army is not composed of hirelings of professional fighters
whose business it is to pick quarrels, no matter with whom. It is, in the
strictest sense of the word, the people in arms. Among its officers there
is a large percentage of the intellectual élite of the country;
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