登陆注册
5437700000207

第207章

But, as I have already hinted, there was one thing which was especially vexatious to him; and this was the evasion, as he considered it, of duty to the German Fatherland by sundry German-Americans. One day I received a letter from a young man who stated his case as follows:

He had left his native town in Alsace-Lorraine just before arriving at the military age; had gone to the United States; had remained there, not long enough to learn English, but just long enough to obtain naturalization; and had then lost no time in returning to his native town. He had been immediately thrown into prison; and thence he wrote me, expressing his devotion to the American flag, his pride in his American citizenship,--and his desire to live in Germany. I immediately wrote to the minister of foreign affairs, stating the man's case, and showing that it came under the Bancroft treaties, or at least under the construction of them which the German Government up to that time had freely allowed. To this I received an answer that the Bancroft treaties, having been made before Alsace-Lorraine was annexed to the empire, did not apply to these new provinces, and that the youth was detained as a deserter. To this I replied that, although the minister's statement was strictly true, the point had been waived long before in our favor; that in no less than eight cases the German Government had extended the benefit of the Bancroft treaties over Alsace-Lorraine; and that in one of these cases the acting minister of foreign affairs had declared the intention of the government to make this extension permanent.

But just at this period, after the death of Baron von Blow, who had been most kindly in all such matters, the chancellor had fallen into a curious way of summoning eminent German diplomatists from various capitals of Europe into the ministry of foreign affairs for a limited time--trying them on, as it were. These gentlemen were generally very agreeable; but on this occasion I had to deal with one who had been summoned from service at one of the lesser German courts, and who was younger than most of his predecessors. To my surprise, he brushed aside all the precedents I had cited, and also the fact that a former acting minister of foreign affairs had distinctly stated that, as a matter of comity, the German Government proposed to consider the Bancroft treaties as applying permanently to Alsace-Lorraine. Neither notes nor verbal remonstrances moved him. He was perfectly civil, and answered my arguments, in every case, as if he were about to yield, yet always closed with a ``but''--and did nothing.

He seemed paralyzed. The cause of the difficulty was soon evident. It was natural that Bismarck should have a feeling that a young man who had virtually deserted the German flag just before reaching the military age deserved the worst treatment which the law allowed. His own sons had served in the army, and had plunged into the thickest of the fight, one of them receiving a serious wound; and that this young Alsatian Israelite should thus escape service by a trick was evidently hateful to him. That the chancellor himself gave the final decision in this matter was the only explanation of the fact that this particular acting minister of foreign affairs never gave me an immediate answer.

The matter became more and more serious. The letter of the law was indeed on Bismarck's side; but the young man was an American citizen, and the idea of an American citizen being held in prison was anything but pleasant to me, and I knew that it would be anything but pleasant to my fellow-citizens across the water. I thought on the proud words, ``civis Romanus sum,'' and of the analogy involved in this case. My position was especially difficult, because I dared not communicate the case fully to the American State Department of that period. Various private despatches had got out into the world and made trouble for their authors, and even so eminent a diplomatist as Mr. George P. Marsh at Rome came very near being upset by one. My predecessor, Bayard Taylor, was very nearly wrecked by another; and it was the escape and publication of a private despatch which plunged my immediate successor into his quarrel with Bismarck, and made his further stay in Germany useless: I therefore stopped short with my first notification to the State Department--to the effect that a naturalized American had been imprisoned for desertion in Alsace-Lorraine, and that the legation was doing its best to secure his release.

To say more than this involved danger that the affair might fall into the hands of sensation-mongers, and result in howls and threats against the German Government and Bismarck; and I knew well that, if such howls and threats were made, Bismarck would never let this young Israelite out of prison as long as he lived.

It seemed hardly the proper thing, serious as the case was, to ask for my passports. It was certain that, if this were done, there would come a chorus of blame from both sides of the Atlantic. Deciding, therefore, to imitate the example of the old man in the school-book, who, before throwing stones at the boy in his fruit-tree, threw turf and grass, I secured from Washington by cable a leave of absence, but, before starting, saw some of my diplomatic colleagues, who were wont to circulate freely and talk much, stated the main features of the case to them, and said that I was ``going off to enjoy myself''; that there seemed little use for an American minister in a country where precedents and agreements were so easily disregarded. Next day I started for the French Riviera.

The journey was taken leisurely, with interesting halts at Cologne and Aix-la-Chapelle; and, as I reached the hotel in Paris, a telegram was handed me--``Your man in Alsace-Lorraine is free.'' It was evident that the chancellor had felt better and had thought more leniently of the matter, and I had never another difficulty of the sort during the remainder of my stay.

同类推荐
  • 宦游日记

    宦游日记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 祖剂

    祖剂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 灵宝玉监

    灵宝玉监

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 汀州府志

    汀州府志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 赏誉

    赏誉

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 拖拉机汽车底盘构造与维护

    拖拉机汽车底盘构造与维护

    为深入贯彻《国务院关大力推进职业教育改革与发展的决定》以及教育部等六部委《关实施职业院校制造业和现代服务业技能型紧缺人才培养培训工程的通知》精神,宁夏农业学校积极推进课程改革和教材建设,我校农业机械使用与维护专业建设指导委员会及专业教师按照教育部颁布的《中等职业院校农业机械使用与维护专业领域技能型紧缺人才培养培训指导方案》的要求,编写了本书,以供我校农业机械使用与维护专业实训使用。
  • 职场潜规则大全集

    职场潜规则大全集

    本书理论联系实际,由浅入深,由表及里,深刻剖析了职场中不为人知的成功秘密,告诉你什么是必须做的、什么是可以做的、什么是万万不能做的。同时,通过大量的事例教你认识并熟谙职场中的潜规则和规则,掌握同领导、同事、下属相处的艺术,把握好表现与低头的分寸与尺度,规避风险的技巧和招数,让你在恰当的时刻能够醒目地亮出自己,在危急时刻能够占得先机,能够看清表象后面的真实,听出谎言背后的真相,让你看透职场的本质,在工作中不踩地雷,不做“炮灰”,进退自如,平步青云。
  • 保肝护肝食谱

    保肝护肝食谱

    肝脏是人体消化系统中最大的消化腺,也是人体最重要的解毒器官。健康饮食,才能有效保护肝脏功能,预防和调理肝部疾病。
  • 混在异界的卡牌领主

    混在异界的卡牌领主

    这里是奇幻的恐怖世界魔兽很恐怖,没事我有卡牌死亡骑士来了,不用跑我有卡牌什么有亡灵,不要害怕我有卡牌居然还有远古的不死巫妖,别怕我有卡牌………………新书(长生不是道)已发布
  • 轰炸机科技知识(上)(军用航空航天科技大视野)

    轰炸机科技知识(上)(军用航空航天科技大视野)

    军用飞机是直接参加战斗、保障战斗行动和军事训练的飞机总称,是空军的主要技术装备。
  • 佛说四无所畏经

    佛说四无所畏经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 阿姨

    阿姨

    她们是给人家当“阿姨”的。阿姨的专业名称是“家政工”。现代汉语里,阿姨的词条有三:一,是指母亲的姐妹。二,是称呼跟母亲辈分相同、年纪差不多的无亲属关系的妇女。三,是对保育员或保姆的称呼。广义上的家政工都可以算在内。这称呼透着亲切,熟稔,不把人当外人的尊重和好意。深圳许多人家都请着这样的阿姨。袁木兰就是其中一个。做家政的女人,你通常可以从她们的着装打扮、样貌举止识别得出来的。一种职业有一种职业的共相,家政工也不例外。一般说来,她们的年纪都在30岁到50岁上下,太年轻的,才不要给人当“阿姨”呢——“小姐”都好过它啦。
  • 卑鄙的圣人:曹操1

    卑鄙的圣人:曹操1

    曹操的计谋,奸诈程度往往将对手整得头昏脑涨、找不着北,卑鄙程度也屡屡突破道德底线,但他却是一个心怀天下、体恤众生的圣人;而且他还是一个柔情万丈、天才横溢的诗人;最后他还是一个敏感、自卑、内心孤独的普通男人。
  • 遏浪微湖

    遏浪微湖

    微山湖畔,抗日的枪声与号角响彻云霄,运河两岸,武装斗争的烽火熊熊燃烧,以“刘和尚”为首的英雄的抗日武装和当地人民,勇敢的拿起镰刀、锄头、土枪和鱼叉,配合党领导的八路军、新四军,坚持游击战,同日寇进行殊死斗争,用鲜血和生命谱写出一部悲壮的抗战史诗!
  • The Light That Failed

    The Light That Failed

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。