登陆注册
26269700000022

第22章 VII. THE FRANKFORT NATIONAL ASSEMBLY.(2)

But that would have been expecting a great deal too much from an Assembly composed in its majority of Liberal attorneys and doctrinaire professors an Assembly which, while it pretended to embody the very essence of German intellect and science, was in reality nothing but a stage where old and worn-out political characters exhibited their involuntary ludicrousness and their impotence of thought, as well as action, before the eyes of all Germany. THIS Assembly of old women was, from the first day of its existence, more frightened of the least popular movement than of all the reactionary plots of all the German Governments put together. It deliberated under the eyes of the Diet, nay, it almost craved the Diet's sanction to its decrees, for its first resolutions had to be promulgated by that odious body. Instead of asserting its own sovereignty, it studiously avoided the discussion of any such dangerous question. Instead of surrounding itself by a popular force, it passed to the order of the day over all the violent encroachments of the Governments; Mayence, under its very eyes, was placed in a state of siege, and the people there disarmed, and the National Assembly did not stir. Later on it elected Archduke John of Austria Regent of Germany, and declared that all its resolutions were to have the force of law; but then Archduke John was only instituted in his new dignity after the consent of all the Governments had been obtained, and he was instituted not by the Assembly, but by the Diet; and as to the legal force of the decrees of the Assembly, that point was never recognized by the larger Governments, nor enforced by the Assembly itself; it therefore remained in suspense.

Thus we had the strange spectacle of an Assembly pretending to be the only legal representative of a great and sovereign nation, and yet never possessing either the will or the force to make its claims recognized. The debates of this body, without any practical result, were not even of ally theoretical value, reproducing, as they did, nothing but the most hackneyed commonplace themes of superannuated philosophical and juridical schools; every sentence that was said, or rather stammered forth, in that Assembly having been printed a thousand times over, and a thousand times better, long before.

Thus the pretended new central authority of Germany left everything as it had found it. So far from realizing the long-demanded unity of Germany, it did not dispossess the most insignificant of the princes who ruled her; it did not draw closer the bonds of union between her separated provinces; it never moved a single step to break down the customhouse barriers that separated Hanover from Prussia, and Prussia from Austria; it did not even make the slightest attempt to remove the obnoxious dues that everywhere obstruct river navigation in Prussia. But the less this Assembly did the more it blustered. It created a German fleet--upon paper; it annexed Poland and Schleswig; it allowed German-Austria to carry on war against Italy, and yet prohibited the Italians from following up the Austrians into their safe retreat in Germany; it gave three cheers and one cheer more for the French republic, and it received Hungarian embassies, which certainly went home with far more confused ideas about Germany than they had come with.

This Assembly had been, in the beginning of the Revolution, the bugbear of all German Governments. They had counted upon a very dictatorial and revolutionary action on its part---on account of the very want of definiteness in which it had been found necessary to leave its competency. These Governments, therefore, got up a most comprehensive system of intrigues in order to weaken the influence of this dreaded body; but they proved to have more luck than wits, for this Assembly did the work of the Governments better than they themselves could have done. The chief feature among these intrigues was the convocation of local Legislative Assemblies, and in consequence, not only the lesser States convoked their legislatures, but Prussia and Austria also called constituent assemblies. In these, as in the Frankfort House of Representatives, the Liberal middle class, or its allies, liberal lawyers, and bureaucrats had the majority, and the turn affairs took in each of them was nearly the same. The only difference is this, that the German National Assembly was the parliament of an imaginary country, as it had declined the task of forming what nevertheless was its own first condition of existence, viz. a United Germany; that it discussed the imaginary and never-to-be-carried-out measures of an imaginary government of its own creation, and that it passed imaginary resolutions for which nobody cared; while in Austria and Prussia the constituent bodies were at least real parliaments, upsetting and creating real ministries, and forcing, for a time at least, their resolutions upon the princes with whom they had to contend. They, too, were cowardly, and lacked enlarged views of revolutionary resolutions; they, too, betrayed the people, and restored power to the hands of feudal, bureaucratic, and military despotism. But then they were at least obliged to discuss practical questions of immediate interest, and to live upon earth with other people, while the Frankfort humbugs were never happier than when they could roam in "the airy realms of dream," im Luftreich des Traums. Thus the proceedings of the Berlin and Vienna Constituents form an important part of German revolutionary history, while the lucubrations of the Frankfort collective tomfoolery merely interest the collector of literary and antiquarian curiosities.

The people of Germany, deeply feeling the necessity of doing away with the obnoxious territorial division that scattered and annihilated the collective force of the nation, for some time expected to find, in the Frankfort National Assembly at least, the beginning of a new era. But the childish conduct of that set of wiseacres soon disenchanted the national enthusiasm. The disgraceful proceedings occasioned by the armistice of Malmoe (September, 1848,) made the popular indignation burst out against a body which, it had been hoped, would give the nation a fair field for action, and which, instead, carried away by unequalled cowardice, only restored to their former solidity the foundations upon which the present counter-revolutionary system is built.

LONDON, January, 1852.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 河边的呼唤

    河边的呼唤

    本书收录了作者多年来创作的《人在天涯》《河边的呼唤》《惶恐》《小城忧伤》《遍地阳光》等多部反映现实题材的中篇小说作品。
  • 白领伊索

    白领伊索

    本书以伊索寓言加白领攻略的方式,从职场规划、谋取职位、求职成功后的自我完善与发展,一直到对职场生涯最后结果的评价,做了一个链条式论述。
  • 云起苍穹:驭兽小姐别嚣张

    云起苍穹:驭兽小姐别嚣张

    啊咧?穿越了!穿越了!穿越了!我来了!我来了!我来了!作为一个搅屎棍,怎么能不随大流去穿越咧!不能有辱第一搅屎棍的名称!————本文文风已残,后面会转回来的,入坑请慎点,谢谢大家的支持!
  • 至尊宝宝腹黑魔妃

    至尊宝宝腹黑魔妃

    她,二十一世纪让黑白两道闻风丧胆的“毒医”,医毒双绝,手段毒辣,向来本着“人不犯我,我不犯人;人若犯我,屠你满门”!的准则。她,神魔大陆端木家的嫡系小姐,却是一个人人可欺的废柴,也只有爷爷对她好。一朝被恶毒庶妹毒打而死。再次睁眼,早已不是原来那懦弱可欺的灵魂……当二十一世纪的毒药穿越成了往日逆来顺受的废柴,神魔大陆的天即将变了!!!看她在异世如何降神兽,御神器,调教出天才宝宝!!!
  • 韩娱之重生贵公子

    韩娱之重生贵公子

    他是哈佛商学院最年轻的毕业生,是华丽崛起的华尔街之子,是华夏李氏集团最优秀的继承人。“他”是巴黎音乐学院最年轻的博士,是高贵浪漫的钢琴王子,被誉为“法国钢琴的未来”。当他重生成“他”,两个天才灵魂的融合,又将在娱乐圈开启怎样的璀璨人生?歌手?演员?钢琴师?导演?……【PS:娱乐YY文,不要考究,切莫当真。感谢创世书评团提供论坛书评支持。】
  • 鹿晗别再骗我了,我受不起

    鹿晗别再骗我了,我受不起

    ”鹿晗,你还想怎么骗我”“我........”“哼,”女孩冷哼一声强忍着眼泪,转头就走..........
  • 魂怨

    魂怨

    据说,鬼不过是六道众生之一。鬼福报不如人,相当可怜;人不应当怕鬼,应该去同情鬼;人鬼各行其道,本相安无事。鬼找人通常是有未了之缘从而魂生怨气,至人而死。死人禁地,生人勿近!一次偶然的机会,我偷喝了坟前的冥酒,原本以为没有什么事情发生,从噩梦中惊醒,才发现原来自己被一个千年诅咒所束缚,暮然回首,只见阴曹地府就在眼前。生死阴阳,隔岸相望。超越轮回之境,探寻生死奥秘。
  • 最好的幸福是你

    最好的幸福是你

    想必大家都有过年轻的时候,在年轻时都有过一段令人难以忘记的初恋,不管最后你们在没在一起他都是你这一生中最难忘的一部分,谨以此文回忆我的初恋(简文无能正文有爱)
  • 废柴逆袭:嫡女盗墓妃

    废柴逆袭:嫡女盗墓妃

    前世草包小姐?软弱无能?她处处隐忍谦让,以求安稳度日。即使如此,旁人也不如她所愿。再次醒来,群蛇乱舞,她却泰然处之,不畏不惧。后世一改懦弱本性,狠辣,勇敢,赖皮,可爱,小仇不吃亏,大仇能隐忍,权衡利弊,聪慧无双。她是盗墓界翘楚,晓机关,通秘术,武艺超群堪比杀手。一朝穿越,从此废柴逆袭,惊艳绝绝!一斗道士,保自身;二下休书,动京城;三破奇案,结良缘;四入阴谋,救苍生。他是天之骄子,霸气凌人,聛睨一切。遇上她,却处处吃瘪,无可奈何。
  • 校草萌宠:倾怜小丫头

    校草萌宠:倾怜小丫头

    谢谢你,在我失落的时候,陪着我,这么大的恩情,要不,以身相许如何?