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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Lyons: A Record of British Diplomacy,
+Vol. 2 of 2, by Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: Lord Lyons: A Record of British Diplomacy, Vol. 2 of 2
+
+Author: Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2013 [EBook #44143]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Brian Foley, Jane Robins and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ LORD LYONS
+
+ VOLUME II
+
+[Illustration: _Lord Lyons, at the age of 65._
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD.]
+
+
+
+
+ LORD LYONS
+
+ A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY
+
+ BY
+ LORD NEWTON
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+ VOLUME II
+
+ WITH PORTRAITS
+
+ LONDON
+ EDWARD ARNOLD
+ 1913
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ THE THIRD REPUBLIC
+
+ 1871-1873
+ PAGE
+
+ Thiers as Chief of the Executive--Negotiations respecting a new
+ Anglo-French Commercial Treaty--Return of the Princes--Embarrassment
+ caused by the Comte de Chambord--Question
+ of voting in the House of Lords--Thiers elected President--State
+ of parties in France--Irritation in Germany against Thiers--Diplomatic
+ incident at Constantinople--Signature of Anglo-French
+ Commercial Treaty--Death of the Emperor Napoleon--Lord
+ Odo Russell on Bismarck's policy--Fall of Thiers--Bismarck
+ and Arnim 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ MARSHAL MACMAHON'S PRESIDENCY
+
+ 1873-1875
+
+ MacMahon as President of the Republic--Franco-German
+ relations--Bismarck's confidences to Lord Odo Russell--Political
+ confusion in France--The war scare of 1875--Rumoured intention
+ of Khedive to sell his Suez Canal shares--Lord Odo Russell on
+ Bismarck's Foreign Policy--Purchase of Khedive's shares by H.M.
+ Government 47
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ THE EASTERN QUESTION
+
+ 1876-1878
+
+ The Powers and Turkey: England and the Andrassy Note--Gambetta
+ on French Politics--Simplicity of Marshal MacMahon--Political
+ consequences of French military re-organisation--Struggle
+ between the Marshal and Parliament--The Constantinople
+ Conference: Determination of Lord Derby to do nothing--Intrigues
+ of the Duc Décazes--Constitutional crisis in
+ France--Defeat of Marshal MacMahon: new Radical Ministry
+ formed under Dufaure with Waddington as Foreign Minister--Treaty
+ of San Stefano; nervousness of French Government--Determination
+ of H.M. Government to secure a Conference--Invitation
+ to Lord Lyons to be the British representative at
+ Berlin--Resignation of Lord Derby: appointment of Lord
+ Salisbury--Lord Salisbury's circular of April 1st, 1878--Inquiry
+ of Lord Salisbury respecting French desire for Tunis--The Anglo-Turkish
+ Convention--The Congress of Berlin--Reception in
+ France of the Anglo-Turkish Convention--Waddington and
+ Tunis--Sir H. Layard on the Treaty of Berlin 95
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ M. GRÉVY'S PRESIDENCY
+
+ 1878-1879
+
+ Paris Exhibition of 1878: desire of Queen Victoria to visit it
+ incognito--Tunis--Resignation of MacMahon: Election of
+ Grévy--Waddington Prime Minister: his difficulties--Anglo-French
+ policy in Egypt--Question of deposing the Khedive
+ Ismail--Differences between British and French Governments
+ with regard to Egypt--Deposition of the Khedive by the Sultan--Death
+ of the Prince Imperial: effect in France--Proposed
+ visit of Gambetta to England: his bias in favour of English
+ Conservatives--Resignation of Waddington: Freycinet Prime
+ Minister--Coolness between France and Russia 161
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ THE REVIVAL OF FRANCE
+
+ 1880-1881
+
+ Change of Government in England and reversal of Foreign Policy--The
+ French Embassy in London: Freycinet's model Ambassador--Personal
+ characteristics of Lord Lyons: _On ne lui connait
+ pas de vice_--The work at the Paris Embassy--The Eastern
+ Question: Mr. Goschen at Constantinople--The Dulcigno
+ Demonstration and the difficulties of the European Concert--Proposal
+ to seize Smyrna--Opportune surrender of the Sultan--H.M.
+ Government and the Pope: Mission of Mr. Errington,
+ M.P.--Gambetta on the European situation--French expedition
+ to Tunis--Ineffectual objections of H.M. Government--Establishment
+ of French Protectorate over Tunis--Irritation in England
+ and Italy--Distinction drawn between Tunis and Tripoli--Attempt
+ to negotiate a new Anglo-French Commercial
+ Treaty: Question of Retaliation 209
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ ARABI'S REBELLION
+
+ 1881-1882
+
+ Egypt: the _coup d'état_ of the Colonels: joint Anglo-French
+ action--Gambetta as Prime Minister--His desire to remain on good
+ terms with England--Egypt: the Dual Note--Gambetta in favour of
+ a more resolute joint policy--Fall of Gambetta after two months
+ of office--Ministry formed by Freycinet--French vacillation
+ with regard to Egypt--Decision of H.M. Government to employ
+ force--Bombardment of Alexandria--Decision of French Government
+ to take no part in expedition--Fall of Freycinet--Invitation to
+ Italy to join in expedition declined--Effect produced in France by
+ British military success in Egypt--French endeavour to re-establish
+ the Control in Egypt--Madagascar and Tonquin 258
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ ANGLOPHOBIA
+
+ 1883-1885
+
+ Death of Gambetta--General discontent in France--Change of
+ Government: Jules Ferry Prime Minister--Waddington appointed
+ Ambassador in London--Insult to King of Spain in
+ Paris--Growth of French ill-will towards English influence in
+ Egypt--Baron de Billing and General Gordon--Establishment
+ of French Protectorate over Tonquin--Egyptian Conference
+ in London--Renewed request to Lord Lyons to vote in House
+ of Lords--Anti-English combination with regard to Egypt--Jules
+ Ferry on the necessity of delivering a _coup foudroyant_ upon
+ China--French reverse in Tonquin: resignation of Jules Ferry--New
+ Government under Freycinet--Bismarck and the persons
+ whom he disliked--Funeral of Victor Hugo--Return of Lord
+ Salisbury to the Foreign Office--Anglophobia in Paris: scurrilities
+ of Rochefort 305
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ THE LAST YEAR'S WORK
+
+ 1886-1887
+
+ Lord Rosebery at the Foreign Office--His surprise at
+ ill-feeling shown by French Government--Proceedings of General
+ Boulanger--Princes' Exclusion Bill--Boulanger at the Review
+ of July 14th--Causes of his popularity--General Election
+ in England: Lord Salisbury Prime Minister--The Foreign
+ Office offered to Lord Lyons--Egyptian questions raised
+ by French Government--Apprehension in France of a German
+ attack--Embarrassment caused by Boulanger--Unofficial attempt
+ on behalf of French Government to establish better relations
+ with England--Application by Lord Lyons to be permitted to
+ resign--Pressed by Lord Salisbury to remain until end of the
+ year--Desire of French Government to get rid of Boulanger--Lord
+ Salisbury's complaints as to unfriendly action of the French
+ Government in various parts of the world--Resignation of Lord
+ Lyons--Created an Earl--His death 360
+
+
+ APPENDIX
+
+ Lord Lyons in Private Life. By MRS. WILFRID WARD 415
+
+ INDEX 429
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF PLATES IN VOL. II
+
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ LORD LYONS AT THE AGE OF 65 _Frontispiece_
+
+ WILLIAM HENRY WADDINGTON 169
+
+ GENERAL BOULANGER 370
+
+ THE BRITISH EMBASSY, PARIS 420
+ (_Photograph by F. Contet, Paris._)
+
+
+
+
+LORD LYONS
+
+A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE THIRD REPUBLIC
+
+(1871-1873)
+
+
+Strictly speaking, the existence of the National Assembly which had
+been summoned to ratify the Preliminaries of Peace, had now[1] come to
+an end, but under prevailing circumstances, it was more convenient to
+ignore Constitutional technicalities, and the Government proceeded to
+carry on the business of the country on the basis of a Republic. Thiers
+had been elected Chief of the Executive, and it was astonishing how
+rapidly his liking for a Republic increased since he had become the
+head of one. It was now part of his task to check the too reactionary
+tendencies of the Assembly and to preserve that form of government which
+was supposed to divide Frenchmen the least. The feeling against the
+Government of National Defence was as strong as ever, and the elections
+of some of the Orleans princes gave rise to inconvenient demonstrations
+on the part of their political supporters, who pressed for the repeal
+of the law disqualifying that family. Thiers realized plainly enough
+that the revival of this demand was premature, and would only add to
+the general confusion, and had therefore induced the princes to absent
+themselves from Bordeaux, but the question could no longer be avoided.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 6, 1871.
+
+ Thiers has been hard at work 'lobbying,' as the Americans
+ say, but could not come to any settlement with the Assembly,
+ and so begged them to postpone the question of the elections of
+ the Princes of Orleans till the day after to-morrow. One of the
+ plans proposed was that the provisional state of things should
+ be formally continued for two years, by conferring his present
+ powers on Thiers for that period. This would, it was hoped, keep
+ the Republicans quiet and allay the impatience of the monarchical
+ parties, by giving them a fixed time to look forward to. But this,
+ it seems, the majority in the Assembly would not promise to vote.
+ On the other hand, Thiers is said to be afraid of having the Duc
+ d'Aumale and perhaps Prince Napoleon also, speaking against him
+ in the Assembly, and attacking him and each other outside. Then
+ comes the doubt as to the extent to which the fusion between the
+ Comte de Chambord and the other Princes, or rather that between
+ their respective parties, really goes. Altogether nothing can be
+ less encouraging than the prospect. The Duc d'Aumale, as Lieutenant
+ Général du Royaume, to prepare the way for the Comte de Chambord,
+ is, for the moment, the favourite combination. In the meantime
+ Thiers has thrown a sop to the majority by putting an Orleanist
+ into the Home Office. The idea at Versailles yesterday was that
+ Thiers and the Assembly would come to a compromise on the basis
+ that the Orleans elections should be confirmed, but with a preamble
+ repeating that nothing done was to be held to prejudge the question
+ of the definitive government of France.
+
+When the question came up, Thiers yielded on the point of the admission
+of the Princes, and the majority were highly pleased at having extorted
+this concession. Lord Lyons, dining at Thiers's house at Versailles, a
+few days after the debate in the Assembly, met there the German General
+von Fabrice, the Prince de Joinville, the Duc d'Aumale, and the Duc de
+Chartres, and mentions the significant fact that M. and Madame Thiers
+and the rest of the company treated these Princes with even more than
+the usual respect shown to Royal personages. In private conversation
+Thiers expressed great confidence in soon getting the Germans out of the
+Paris forts, but both he and Jules Favre complained that Bismarck was a
+very bad creditor, and insisted upon having his first half-milliard by
+the end of the month: in fact, the Germans were so clamorous for payment
+that they hardly seemed to realize how anxious the French were to get
+rid of them, and that if the money was not immediately forthcoming, it
+was only because it was impossible to produce it.
+
+What was of more immediate concern to the British Government than either
+the payment of the indemnity or the future of the Orleans princes,
+was the prospect of a new Commercial Treaty. This was sufficiently
+unpromising. Lord Lyons had pointed out during the Empire period, that
+under a Constitutional _régime_ in France, we were not likely to enjoy
+such favourable commercial conditions as under personal government,
+and the more liberal the composition of a French Government, the
+more Protectionist appeared to be its policy. Thiers himself was an
+ardent Protectionist, quite unamenable to the blandishments of British
+Free Traders, who always appear to hold that man was made for Free
+Trade, instead of Free Trade for man, and the Finance Minister, Pouyer
+Quertier, entertained the same views as his chief. But, even if the
+Emperor were to come back, it was more than doubtful whether he would
+venture to maintain the existing Commercial Treaty as it stood, and
+there was every probability that the Bordeaux wine people and other
+so-called French Free Traders would turn Protectionist as soon as they
+realized that there was no prospect of British retaliation. What cut
+Lord Lyons (an orthodox Free Trader) to the heart, was that, just as the
+French manufacturers had got over the shock of the sudden introduction
+of Free Trade under the Empire and had adapted themselves to the new
+system, everything should be thrown back again. It was likely, indeed,
+that there would be some opposition to Thiers's Protectionist taxes,
+but he knew well enough that there were not a sufficient number of
+Free Traders in the Assembly, or in the country, to make any effective
+resistance to the Government. When approached on the subject, the French
+Ministers asserted that all they wanted was to increase the revenue,
+and that all they demanded from England was to be allowed to raise
+their tariff with this view only, whereas, in their hearts, they meant
+Protection pure and simple. Lord Lyons's personal view was that England
+would be better off if the Treaty was reduced to little more than a
+most favoured nation clause. 'The only element for negotiation with the
+school of political economy now predominant here,' he sadly remarked,
+'would be a threat of retaliation, and this we cannot use.' It will
+be found subsequently that this was the one predominant factor in all
+commercial negotiations between the two Governments.
+
+A long conversation with Thiers, who was pressing for a definite reply
+from Her Majesty's Government on the subject of a new Treaty showed
+that matters from the British point of view were as unsatisfactory
+as they well could be. Thiers, whose language respecting England was
+courteous and friendly, made it clear that Her Majesty's Government
+must choose between the proposed modifications in the tariff and the
+unconditional denunciation of the whole Treaty, and that if the Treaty
+were denounced, England must not expect, after its expiration, to be
+placed upon the footing of the most favoured nation. He considered that
+he had a right to denounce the Treaty at once, but had no wish to act
+in an unfriendly spirit, and had therefore refrained from doing so, and
+although he and his colleagues considered that the existing Treaty was
+disadvantageous and even disastrous to France, they had never promoted
+any agitation against it, and had confined themselves to proposing
+modifications of the tariff, which their financial necessities and the
+state of the French manufacturing interests rendered indispensable.
+Coal and iron, which were articles of the greatest importance to
+England, were not touched, and all that had, in fact, been asked for
+was a moderate increase on the duties on textile fabrics. As for the
+French Free Traders, whatever misleading views they might put forward in
+London, their influence upon the Assembly would be imperceptible, and it
+remained therefore for Her Majesty's Government to decide whether they
+would agree to the changes he had proposed to them, or would give up
+altogether the benefits which England derived from the Treaty.
+
+Thiers's real motive was disclosed later on, when, whilst asserting
+that he should always act in a friendly spirit towards England, he
+admitted that 'England was a much more formidable competitor in
+commerce than any other nation.' Concessions which might safely be
+made to other countries might very reasonably be withheld from her.
+For instance, privileges which might be safely granted to the Italian
+merchant navy might, if granted to Great Britain, produce a competition
+between English and French shipping very disadvantageous to France.
+It would also be certainly for the interest of France that she should
+furnish herself with colonial articles brought direct to her own ports
+rather than resort, as at present, to the depôts of such goods in
+Great Britain. Nothing could be further from his intentions than to be
+influenced by any spirit of retaliation, nor, if the Treaty should be
+denounced, would he, on that account, be less friendly to England in
+political matters; but it was evident that, in making his financial and
+commercial arrangements, the interests and necessities of France must
+be paramount. In conclusion he pressed for an immediate answer from Her
+Majesty's Government in order that the French Government might complete
+their plans, which were of urgent importance.
+
+To the impartial observer the opinions expressed by Thiers seem to be
+logical, natural, and reasonable, unless the principle of looking after
+one's own interests is unreasonable; but to the ardent devotees of Free
+Trade, they must have appeared in the light of impiety. Lord Lyons, in
+reporting the interview, remarked that 'nothing could have been more
+unsatisfactory than Thiers's language,' and added significantly that he
+himself had managed to keep his temper.
+
+Thiers did not get his definite answer, and the wrangle continued until
+in February, 1872, the French Government, with the general approval of
+the nation, gave notice of the termination of the Commercial Treaty of
+1860.
+
+The Bill abrogating the proscription of the French Royal families had
+been passed by the Assembly, and the elections of the Duc d'Aumale and
+the Prince de Joinville consequently declared valid, but these princes
+having established their rights, wisely remained in the background. Not
+so another illustrious Royalist, the Comte de Chambord. This prince, who
+was also included in the reversal of the disqualifying law, returned
+to France and issued a proclamation from the Château of Chambord in
+July which spread consternation in the Royalist camp. After explaining
+that his presence was only temporary and that he desired to create no
+embarrassment, he declared that he was prepared to govern on a broad
+basis of administrative decentralization, but that there were certain
+conditions to which he could not submit. If he were summoned to the
+throne he would accept, but he should retain his principles, and above
+all the White Flag which had been handed down to him by his ancestors.
+This announcement seemed, to say the least, premature, and the
+supporters of a Republic must have warmly congratulated themselves upon
+having to encounter an enemy who played so completely into their hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 11, 1871.
+
+ The Comte de Chambord seems to have upset the Legitimist
+ coach. The Legitimist Deputies have been obliged to repudiate
+ the White Flag, being sure that they could never be elected to a
+ new Chamber under that Banner, and of course fusion between the
+ Orleans Princes and their cousin is now out of the question.
+
+ Thiers said to me last night that he did not regard the
+ Comte de Chambord's declaration in favour of the White Flag as
+ irrevocable--and that it looked as if it had been made in a moment
+ of ill-temper. According to Thiers, both the Comte de Chambord and
+ the Comte de Paris eagerly desire to be kings--most people doubt,
+ however, whether the Comte de Chambord does really wish it. All
+ that has occurred tends to strengthen and prolong Thiers's hold on
+ power, and he is rejoicing accordingly. Indeed, there is hardly a
+ Frenchman who professes to doubt that Thiers's Government is the
+ only Government possible at the moment.
+
+ Gambetta is not considered by Thiers to be dangerous; he
+ declares that he will only maintain a constitutional or legal
+ opposition so long as the Government is Republican, and if he and
+ his supporters stick to this, Thiers will certainly have no great
+ cause to dread them. If Rouher had been elected he would have been
+ a formidable opponent, though he has been too much accustomed
+ to lead an applauding and acquiescing majority to be good at
+ speaking to a hostile audience. Thiers says that the rejection of
+ Rouher will be a good thing for his own health and repose, as he
+ should have found it very fatiguing to have to answer the great
+ Imperialist orator.
+
+ The hurry with which the new duties were rushed through
+ the Assembly on Saturday is disquieting. Thiers and Jules Favre
+ protest, however, that they are determined to do nothing irregular
+ regarding the Commercial Treaties. The Swiss Minister tells me his
+ Government is determined to insist upon the strict execution of
+ the Swiss Treaty, without admitting any alteration of the tariffs,
+ but then the Swiss Treaty does not expire for five or six years. I
+ take care to give no opinion as to what we shall or shall not do.
+ Thiers talked again last night of conferring with me soon about the
+ details of the changes. I am not very anxious that he should do so,
+ as confusion is much more likely than anything else to arise from
+ carrying on the discussion in both places at once.
+
+ Half my time is taken up with the affairs of the unfortunate
+ English prisoners. It is necessary to be cautious, for the French
+ Authorities are extremely touchy on the subject. There does not
+ appear to be any danger of their being executed, as fortunately
+ they are a very insignificant and unimportant set of insurgents,
+ if insurgents they were; but they are kept a long time without
+ examination, and some do run the risk of being shipped off to New
+ Caledonia.
+
+The Comte de Chambord, having effectually destroyed the chances of
+his own party for the time being, now disappeared from the scene, and
+nothing more was heard of him or his White Flag for a considerable
+period.
+
+The summer of 1871 did not pass without the old question of voting in
+the House of Lords cropping up again. In July, Lord Lyons received
+an intimation from the Liberal Whip that his vote was wanted on the
+following day, accompanied by a letter from Lord Granville in the same
+sense. He declined to come, on the same ground as formerly, viz. that
+he considered it advisable that a diplomatist should keep aloof from
+home politics, and also because he was extremely reluctant to give
+votes on questions of which he had little knowledge. The particular
+question involved was presumably a vote of censure on the Government in
+connection with the Army Purchase Bill, and he seems to have taken it
+for granted that Lord Granville would make no objection. A letter from
+the latter showed that he was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, July 17, 1871.
+
+ I cannot agree with the principle you lay down--Lord Stuart,
+ my father, the late Lord Cowley, and Lord Normanby when Ambassador
+ at Paris used to vote when specially summoned. So did Lord Cowley,
+ although he served under successive Governments. So did Lord
+ Westmoreland and others. I find no recommendation of your principle
+ in the report of the Committee of the House of Commons, and
+ although Lord Derby may have given evidence in favour of it, his
+ father gave practical proof in several instances that he entirely
+ disagreed with it.
+
+ A Foreign Government can hardly believe in the confidential
+ relations of this Government and her Ambassador, if the latter
+ being a Peer abstains from supporting them when a vote of want of
+ confidence, or one amounting to it, is proposed against them.
+
+ Clarendon brought before the Cabinet your disinclination to
+ vote on the question of the Irish Church. They unanimously decided
+ that we had a claim upon you, and you were good enough to consent,
+ stating the grounds you mention in your letter of yesterday.
+
+ It is of course too late for any practical result to our
+ controversy as regards to-night, but I hope you will consider
+ that I have a claim on you for the future, when your vote is of
+ importance. I shall never ask you unnecessarily to come over.
+
+An intimation of this kind from an official chief could not well be
+disregarded, but the reply to Lord Granville's letter is conclusive in
+its arguments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, July 27, 1871.
+
+ Your letter of the 17th about my voting in the House of Lords
+ goes farther than Lord Clarendon did on the previous occasion.
+ Lord Clarendon originally acquiesced in my not voting on the Irish
+ Church Bill, and when he subsequently begged me to come over,
+ unless I objected to the Bill, he founded his request principally
+ upon a strong opinion of Mr. Gladstone's that it was the duty of
+ a peer not to abstain from voting, and that every vote was of
+ consequence. On this ground he expressed a hope that I should come
+ over unless I was opposed to the Bill.
+
+ Of my predecessors, the only one who was in a position
+ resembling mine, was the present Lord Cowley; and certainly he will
+ always be a high authority with me.
+
+ I have been for more than thirty years, and I still am,
+ devoted to my own profession, and I am sure that if I can be of
+ any use in my generation, and do myself any credit, it must be
+ as a diplomatist. I have worked my way up in the regular course
+ of the profession, and have served under successive Governments,
+ both before and since I became a peer, without any reference to
+ home politics. In fact, I received my original appointment to the
+ service from Lord Palmerston; I was made paid attaché by Lord
+ Aberdeen; I was sent to Rome by Lord Russell; to Washington by Lord
+ Malmesbury; to Constantinople by Lord Russell; and finally to Paris
+ by Lord Derby. The appointment was given to me in the ordinary way
+ of advancement in my profession, and I was told afterwards by Lord
+ Clarendon that my being wholly unconnected with any party at home
+ had been considered to be a recommendation. I have myself always
+ thought that a regular diplomatist could only impair his efficiency
+ by taking part in home politics, and I have throughout acted upon
+ this conviction. During the thirteen years or thereabouts which
+ have elapsed since I succeeded to my father's peerage, I have given
+ only one vote in the House of Lords; the question, the Irish Church
+ vote, was one on which there really did seem to be a possibility
+ that the decision might turn upon one vote; and the question, as it
+ stood before the House, was hardly a party question.
+
+ In addition to all this, I must say that while I have a very
+ great reluctance to give blind votes, I do not wish to be diverted
+ from my diplomatic duties by having to attend to home questions;
+ also, I would rather give my whole energies to carrying out the
+ instructions of the Government abroad, without having continually
+ to consult my conscience about voting in the House of Lords.
+
+ I did not intend to have given you the trouble of reading
+ a long answer to your letter, but I have just received another
+ summons from Lord Bessborough. I hope, however, you will not press
+ me to come over to vote on Monday. You were at all events good
+ enough to say that you should never ask me to come unnecessarily;
+ but if, after considering my reasons, you insist upon my coming, I
+ must of course defer to your opinion and do what you desire.
+
+It is difficult to believe that Lord Granville, who was one of the
+most amiable and considerate of men, was acting otherwise than under
+pressure in thus endeavouring to utilize an Ambassador as a party hack.
+His arguments certainly do not bear much investigation. If a foreign
+government could not feel any confidence in an Ambassador who failed to
+support his party by a vote in Parliament, what confidence could they
+possibly feel in him if his party were out of office, and he continued
+at his post under the orders of political opponents? If the Clarendon
+Cabinet really decided that they had a claim upon diplomatists as party
+men it only showed that they were conspicuously wanting in judgment and
+a prey to that dementia which occasionally seizes upon British statesmen
+when a division is impending. That state of mind is intelligible when
+a division in the House of Commons is concerned, but what passes
+comprehension is that pressure should be put upon members of the House
+of Lords to vote, whose abstention is obviously desirable, whilst scores
+of obscure peers are left unmolested. One peer's vote was as good as
+another's in 1871, just as it is now; but in the division on the vote of
+censure on the Army Purchase Bill only 244 peers voted out of a House
+containing about double that number.
+
+Before long the question of the prolongation of Thiers's powers for a
+fixed period became the chief topic of interest. He was infinitely the
+most important personage in France, and a large number of members were
+desirous of placing him more or less in the position of a constitutional
+sovereign, and obliging him to take a Ministry from the majority in
+the Assembly. The majority in the Assembly not unnaturally thought
+that their ideas ought to prevail in the Government, and they resented
+being constantly threatened with the withdrawal of this indispensable
+man, an action which, it was thought, would amount to little short of a
+revolution. What they wanted, therefore, was to bestow a higher title
+upon him than Chief of the Executive Power, which would exclude him from
+coming in person to the Assembly; and it was only the difficulty of
+finding some one to take his place, and the desire to get the Germans
+out of the Paris forts that kept them quiet. Like many other eminent
+persons considered to be indispensable, Thiers now began to give out
+that he really desired to retire into private life, and that it was
+only the country which insisted upon his staying in office, while as a
+matter of fact, he was by no means as indifferent to power as he fancied
+himself to be. In the Chamber he damaged his reputation to some extent
+by displays of temper and threats of resignation, but there was never
+much doubt as to the prolongation of his powers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Aug. 25, 1871.
+
+ Thiers quitted the Tribune in a pet yesterday, and the whole
+ series of events in the Assembly has very much lowered his credit.
+ In the one thing in which he was thought to be pre-eminent, the
+ art of managing a deliberative body, he completely failed: and his
+ first threatening to resign, and then coming back and half giving
+ in, has very much damaged him. Nevertheless the general opinion
+ is that the prolongation of his powers will pass, upon his making
+ it a condition, as a vote of confidence, of his remaining. But it
+ is difficult to believe, even if it be passed by a considerable
+ majority, that things can go on smoothly between him and the
+ Assembly very long. If any party had a leader and courage, it might
+ do almost anything in France at this moment.
+
+ Arnim[2] is expected on Saturday. I knew him years ago at
+ Rome. I doubt his being a conciliatory negotiator. The French
+ believe that Bismarck is so anxious to obtain commercial advantages
+ for Alsace, that he will give them great things in return. He
+ is supposed to wish, in the first place, to conciliate his new
+ subjects; and, in the second, to divert for a time from Germany
+ the torrent of Alsatian manufactures which would pour in if the
+ outlets into France were stopped up. The French hope to get the
+ Paris forts evacuated in return for a continuance of the free
+ entrance of Alsatian goods into France until the 1st of January,
+ and they even speculate upon getting the Prussians to evacuate
+ Champagne, and content themselves with keeping the army, which was
+ to have occupied it, inside the German frontier, the French paying
+ the expenses, as if it were still in France. All this to be given
+ in return for a prolongation of commercial privileges for Alsace.
+ It would be ungenerous of 'most favoured nations' to claim similar
+ privileges.
+
+ Thiers was too full of the events of the afternoon in the
+ Assembly to talk about the Commercial Treaty. I don't believe he
+ has brought the Committee round to his duties on raw materials.
+
+At the end of August, the Assembly by a very large majority passed a
+bill conferring upon Thiers the title of President of the Republic and
+confirmed his powers for the duration of the existing Assembly, adopting
+at the same time a vote of confidence in him personally. The result
+of these proceedings was that the attempt to make a step towards the
+definite establishment of a Republic and to place Thiers as President
+for a term of years in a position independent of the Assembly, failed.
+The bill asserted what the Left had always denied, viz. the constituent
+power of the Assembly, and declared that the President was responsible
+to it. So far, it expressed the sentiments of the moderate men, and the
+minority was composed of extreme Legitimists and extreme Republicans. It
+also proved that Thiers was still held to be the indispensable man.
+
+The Assembly, which had adjourned after the passing of the
+above-mentioned bill, met again in December, and was supposed to be
+more Conservative than ever, owing to the fear created by Radical
+progress in the country. Thiers's Presidential Message did not afford
+much satisfaction to the extreme partisans on either side, and it was
+evident that he did not desire any prompt solution of the Constitutional
+question, preferring to leave himself free, and not to be forced into
+taking any premature decision. As for the Legitimist, Orleanist, and
+Moderate Republican groups, their vacillation tended only to the
+advantage of two parties, the Bonapartists and the Red Republicans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 26. 1871.
+
+ The New Year will open gloomily for France. The Germans appear
+ to be alarmed, or at all events irritated, by Thiers's military
+ boasts and military preparations. The boasts are certainly unwise,
+ and preparations or anything else which encourages the French
+ to expect to get off paying the three milliards are extremely
+ imprudent. The Germans mean to have their money and keep the
+ territory they have taken, and they say that they had better have
+ it out with France now that she is weak, than wait till she has
+ got strong again. The irritation of the French against the Germans
+ seems to grow, and the Germans are angry with the French for not
+ loving them, which after the conditions of peace, to say nothing of
+ the events of the war, seems somewhat unreasonable.
+
+ Thiers so far holds his own, and no party seems willing to
+ displace him, while no party agrees with him. The one thing in
+ which men of all parties seem to agree is in abusing Thiers, and
+ I must say that a good deal of the abuse is exceedingly unjust.
+ But with the members of the Assembly in this inflammable state of
+ feeling towards him, an unexpected spark may at any moment make
+ them flare up and turn him out almost before they are aware of
+ it. The general idea is that the Assembly would appoint the Duc
+ d'Aumale to succeed him; the acceptance of the Duc d'Aumale by
+ the country would depend upon the amount of vigour he showed in
+ putting down illegal opposition by force. There are members of the
+ Assembly who wish to declare that in case of Thiers's abdication
+ or dethronement, the President of the Assembly is to exercise the
+ Executive Power. This is with a view of bringing forward Grévy, who
+ is an honourable, moderate man, but an old thoroughbred Republican.
+ The immediate event people are looking forward to with interest
+ and anxiety is the election of a deputy for Paris on the 7th of
+ next month. No one will be surprised if a Red is returned, in
+ consequence of the men of order declining to vote. The Legitimists
+ and the Orleanists seem to be at daggers drawn again.
+
+ Arnim says that Bismarck's fierce despatch was partly intended
+ to strengthen Thiers's hands in resisting violence against the
+ Germans. If this is so, the ferocity went too far beyond the mark
+ to be successful, great as the provocation on the French side was.
+
+ I will write a mild disclaimer of the accuracy of Jules
+ Favre's accounts of his communications with me. There is no _malus
+ animus_, I think, in them. My Russian and Italian colleagues are
+ very much annoyed by the language he attributes to them.
+
+The fierce despatch referred was a harsh communication from Bismarck
+complaining of the recent acquittal of some Frenchmen who had
+assassinated German soldiers of the army of occupation.
+
+At the close of 1871, the Bonapartist Party, although scarcely
+represented in the Assembly, appeared to be that which caused the
+Government the most anxiety. That party had undoubtedly made progress
+in the country; it held out the hope of a vigorous and determined
+maintenance of public order, and a vast number of Frenchmen were so much
+out of heart, so wearied and disgusted by the results of the attempts
+at political liberty, and so much afraid of the triumph of the Commune,
+that they were prepared to sacrifice anything in order to be assured of
+peace and tranquillity. The peasants, shopkeepers, and even many of the
+workmen in the towns, sighed for the material prosperity of the Empire.
+They believed that the Emperor had been betrayed by his Ministers and
+Generals, and were willing to excuse his personal share even in the
+capitulation of Sedan. If more confidence could have been felt in his
+health and personal energy, the advocates of a restoration of the Empire
+would have been still more numerous. As it was, a great mass of the
+ignorant and the timid were in favour of it, and it was the opinion
+of so impartial an observer as the British Ambassador, that if a free
+vote could have been taken under universal suffrage a majority would
+probably have been obtained for the re-establishment upon the throne of
+Napoleon III. If the Imperialists could by any means have seized upon
+the executive Government and so directed the operations of a plébiscite,
+there was little doubt as to their securing the usual millions of votes
+under that process. With them, as with the other parties, the difficulty
+lay in bringing about such a crisis as would enable them to act, and the
+Emperor himself was disinclined to take any adventurous step.
+
+The Legitimists had the advantage of holding to a definite principle,
+but it was a principle which carried little weight in the country in
+general. Their chief, the Comte de Chambord, had shown himself to be so
+impracticable, that it really seemed doubtful whether he wished to mount
+the throne, and the party had more members in the existing Assembly than
+it was likely to obtain if a fresh general election took place; added
+to which it had quarrelled with the Orleanists, a union with whom was
+essential to the attainment of any practical end.
+
+The Orleanists were weakened by their dissensions with the Legitimists
+and discouraged by what they considered the want of energy and
+enterprise of the Princes of the family. The members of the Orleans
+party suffered from the want of a definite principle, and consisted
+chiefly of educated and enlightened men who held to Constitutional
+Monarchy and Parliamentary Government; in reality they were a
+fluctuating body willing to accept any Government giving a promise of
+order and political liberty.
+
+The moderate Republicans included in their ranks many honest and
+respected men, but they had to contend with the extreme unpopularity of
+the Government of National Defence in which they had formed the chief
+part, and although the existing Government was nominally based upon
+their principles, they did not appear to be gaining ground. The extreme
+Republicans endeavoured to make up by violence what they wanted in
+numerical strength, and as they saw no prospect of obtaining office in
+a regular manner, founded their hopes upon seizing power at a critical
+moment with the help of the Paris mob.
+
+Amidst this collection of parties stood Thiers's Government, supported
+heartily by none, but accepted by all. By skilful management, by
+yielding where resistance appeared hopeless, and by obtaining votes
+sometimes from one side of the Assembly, and sometimes from the other,
+Thiers had carried many points to which he attached importance, and
+had never yet found himself in a minority. His Government was avowedly
+a temporary expedient, resting upon a compromise between all parties,
+or rather upon the adjournment of all constitutional questions. To the
+monarchical parties which formed the majority of the Assembly, Thiers's
+apparent adoption of the Republican system rendered him especially
+obnoxious. On the other hand, the Republicans were dissatisfied because,
+the whole weight of the Government was not unscrupulously used for the
+purpose of establishing a Republic permanently, with or without the
+consent of the people.
+
+On the centralization of the administration, on military organization,
+on finance, and on other matters, Thiers's personal views were widely
+different from those generally prevalent in the Assembly, and there was
+plenty of censure and criticism of him in private; but no one party saw
+its way to ensuring its own triumph, and all were weighed down by the
+necessity of maintaining endurable relations with Germany. In forming
+such relations, Thiers had shown great skill and obtained considerable
+success in his arduous task. Bismarck, in imposing the hardest possible
+conditions of peace, had acted avowedly on the principle that it was
+hopeless to conciliate France, and that the only security for Germany
+lay in weakening her as much as possible. This policy having been
+carried out, the German public and the German press appeared to be quite
+surprised that France was slow to be reconciled to her conquerors,
+and even to doubt whether already France was not too strong for their
+safety. The apparent recovery of the French finances may well have
+surprised them disagreeably, but Thiers was not over careful to avoid
+increasing their distrust. His intention to create a larger army than
+France had ever maintained before, and his frequent praises of the army
+he already possessed, was not reassuring to them. It was, therefore,
+not altogether surprising that they should have felt some doubts as to
+the consequences of finding themselves confronted by an immense army,
+when they called upon France to pay the remaining three milliards in
+1874. Nevertheless the German Government had expressed its confidence in
+Thiers, and it would have been almost impossible for any new Government
+to have placed matters on as tolerable a footing.
+
+All things considered, therefore, it seemed not improbable that the
+existing Government might last for some time, although its life was
+somewhat precarious, since it was liable to be upset by commotions
+and conspiracies, and having no existence apart from Thiers, its
+duration was bound to depend on the health and strength of a man nearly
+seventy-four years old.
+
+In January, 1872, Thiers, in consequence of a dispute in the Chamber
+over the question of a tax on raw materials, tendered his resignation,
+but was persuaded with some difficulty to reconsider it. 'I have never
+known the French so depressed and so out of heart about their internal
+affairs,' wrote Lord Lyons. 'They don't believe Thiers can go on
+much longer, and they see nothing but confusion if he is turned out.
+The Legitimists and Orleanists are now trying for fusion. They are
+attempting to draw up a constitution on which they can all agree, and
+which, when drawn up, is to be offered to the Comte de Chambord, and if
+refused by him, then to the Comte de Paris. I hear they have not yet
+been able to come to an understanding on the first article. It all tends
+to raise the Bonapartists. Many people expect to hear any morning of a
+coup by which Thiers and the Assembly will be deposed, and an _appel au
+peuple_, made to end in a restoration of the Empire.' Probably it was
+the knowledge of a Bonapartist reaction in the country that led Thiers
+to make a singularly foolish complaint against an alleged military
+demonstration in England in favour of the ex-Emperor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 9, 1872.
+
+ M. Thiers said to me yesterday at Versailles that he had
+ been told that a general of the name of Wood had marched 6000 of
+ Her Majesty's troops to Chislehurst to be reviewed by the Emperor
+ Napoleon.
+
+ M. Thiers went on to say that no one could appreciate more
+ highly than he did the noble and generous hospitality which England
+ extended to political exiles, and that he had indeed profited by
+ it in his own person. He admired also the jealousy with which the
+ English nation regarded all attempts from abroad to interfere with
+ the free exercise of this hospitality. He should never complain
+ of due respect being shown to a Sovereign Family in adversity. But
+ he thought that there was some limit to be observed in the matter.
+ For instance, he himself, while on the best terms with the reigning
+ dynasty in Spain, still always treated the Queen Isabella, who was
+ in France, with great respect and deference. Nevertheless, when Her
+ Majesty had expressed a desire to go to live at Pau, he had felt it
+ to be his duty to ask her very courteously to select a residence at
+ a greater distance from the frontier of Spain. In this, as in all
+ matters, he felt that consideration for the exiles must be tempered
+ by a due respect for the recognized Government of their country.
+ Now if the Emperor Napoleon should choose to be present at a review
+ of British troops, there could be no objection to his being treated
+ with all the courtesy due to a head which had worn a crown. It was,
+ however, a different thing to march troops to his residence to hold
+ a review there in his honour.
+
+Thiers had not taken the trouble to substantiate his ridiculous
+complaint, and his action was an instance of the extreme gullibility
+of even the most intelligent French statesmen, where foreign countries
+are concerned, and so perturbed was the French Government at the idea
+of a Bonapartist restoration, that according to Captain Hotham, British
+Consul at Calais, two gunboats, the _Cuvier_ and _Faon_, were at that
+time actually employed in patrolling the coast between St. Malo and
+Dunkirk with a view to preventing a possible landing of the Emperor
+Napoleon. A little later, the Duc de Broglie, French Ambassador in
+London, made a tactless remonstrance to Lord Granville with regard to
+the presence of the Emperor and Empress at Buckingham Palace, on the
+occasion of a National Thanksgiving held to celebrate the recovery of
+the Prince of Wales from a dangerous illness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, March 1, 1872.
+
+ The Duc de Broglie told me to-day that he had been rather
+ surprised when he heard of the Emperor and Empress having been at
+ Buckingham Palace on so public an occasion as that of last Tuesday,
+ that I had not mentioned it to him on Monday afternoon, when we had
+ had a long conversation. It would have enabled him to write to M.
+ de Rémusat,[3] and thus have prevented any of the effect which a
+ sudden announcement in the papers might create in France.
+
+ I told him that I had not been consulted and did not know the
+ fact of the invitation when I saw him, and that if I had, I should
+ probably have mentioned it to him, although not a subject about
+ which I should have written.
+
+ I should have explained to him that it was an act of courtesy
+ of the Queen to those with whom she had been on friendly relations,
+ and that it was analogous to many acts of courtesy shown by the
+ Queen to the Orleanist Princes.
+
+ He laid stress on the publicity of the occasion, and on the
+ few opportunities which he, as Ambassador, had of seeing the Queen,
+ of which he made no complaint; but it made any attentions to the
+ Emperor on public occasions more marked. He was afraid that the
+ announcement would produce considerable effect, not upon statesmen,
+ but upon the press in France.
+
+ I repeated that the admission of the Emperor and Empress had
+ no political significance, but had been in pursuance with the
+ long-established habit of the Queen to show personal courtesy
+ to Foreign Princes with whom she had been formerly on friendly
+ relations.
+
+The fall of the Finance Minister, Pouyer Quertier, in the spring had
+given rise to hopes that the French commercial policy would become more
+liberal, but the letters quoted below show how powerless were the
+arguments of the British Government and how completely wasted upon the
+French Ministers were the lamentations of the British free traders,
+and their prognostications of ruin to those who were not sufficiently
+enlightened to adopt their policy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 5, 1872.
+
+ I suppose Pouyer Quertier is really out, but we see so many
+ changes from hour to hour in resolutions here, that I shall not
+ report it officially until his successor is gazetted. We cannot
+ have a more Protectionist successor; but, after all, no one is so
+ bigoted a Protectionist as Thiers himself.
+
+ Nevertheless the change of Minister will give a chance or an
+ excuse for a change of policy to some extent. I think that with a
+ view to this some stronger expression of displeasure, or rather
+ perhaps of regret than we have hitherto ventured upon, might have
+ a good effect. The new Minister and perhaps even Thiers himself
+ might be struck by a report from Broglie that you had put strongly
+ before him the impossibility, whatever efforts the Government might
+ make, of preventing public opinion in England becoming hostile to
+ France if the present commercial policy is persisted in. It is in
+ fact plain that there is no probability of France obtaining the
+ concessions from the Treaty Powers, on which Thiers professed to
+ reckon. The result already is that, whatever may have been the
+ intention, the Mercantile Marine Law is in practice a blow which
+ falls on England, and not on other European Powers. Unless the
+ French Government means to give us a real most favoured nation
+ clause, the result of denouncing our treaty will be to place us,
+ when it expires, at a special disadvantage as compared with other
+ nations. And what it now asks us to effect by negotiation, is to
+ hasten the moment at which it can accomplish this. It is quite idle
+ to talk of special friendship for us, when its measures practically
+ treat us much worse than they do the Germans. M. de Rémusat and
+ some other people are fond of saying that it is quite impossible
+ that France could bear to see two nations so friendly as Belgium
+ and England placed exceptionally in a position inferior to Germany.
+ But France seems to bear this with great equanimity so far as our
+ merchant navy is concerned.
+
+ The demand we have made to be exempted from the _surtaxes de
+ pavillon_ under our most favoured nation clause would give the
+ French Government a means of remedying the injustice _if it wished
+ to do so_. At any rate some strong expressions of discontent on
+ our part might increase the disinclination of the Assembly and
+ some members of the Government to insist on imposing the duties on
+ the raw materials. It would be very convenient if there were some
+ retaliatory measures to which we could resort, without injuring
+ ourselves or departing from our own Free Trade principles. The
+ French Government grossly abuses, in order to influence the
+ Assembly, our assurances of unimpaired good will, and reluctance
+ to retaliate; and so, in my opinion, is preparing the way for the
+ real diminution of good will which its success in carrying its
+ protectionist measures, to our special injury, must produce in the
+ end.
+
+ The present Government of France does not gain strength; far
+ from it. The Imperialists are gaining strength, as people become
+ more and more afraid of the Reds, and feel less and less confidence
+ in the power either of Thiers, or the Comte de Chambord, or the
+ Comte de Paris, to keep them down. The end will probably be brought
+ about by some accident when it is least expected. It would not be
+ wise to leave out of the calculation of possibilities, the chance
+ of Thiers's Government dragging on for some time yet, and it would
+ be very difficult to predict what will succeed it. At present the
+ Legitimists and Orleanists seem to have lost, and to be daily
+ losing prestige, and naturally enough, to be bringing down with
+ them the Assembly in which they are or were a majority.
+
+ Perhaps I ought to say that the despatch which I send you
+ to-day about the sojourn of our Royal Family in the South of
+ France applies exclusively to them. Everybody knows or ought to
+ know that affairs are uncertain in France, but I should not think
+ it necessary or proper to warn private people against coming to
+ France or staying there. The conspicuous position of members
+ of the Royal Family increase the risk of their being placed in
+ awkward circumstances, and circumstances which would be of little
+ consequence in the case of private people, would be very serious
+ and embarrassing if they affected members of the Royal Family of
+ England.
+
+The last passage referred to a stay at Nice contemplated by the Prince
+of Wales. In the event of any change of Government, it was always feared
+that disorders would take place in the southern towns of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 14, 1872.
+
+ The commercial disputes with the French Government which, as
+ you know, I always apprehended, are coming thick upon us. I foresaw
+ what was coming and begged Thiers, Rémusat and other members of
+ the Government over and over again to guard against vexations in
+ the execution of the Treaty while it lasted. I make little doubt,
+ notwithstanding, that all these violent and unfair proceedings are
+ prompted, not checked, from Paris.
+
+ The Spaniards have found out the only way to deal with the
+ Protectionist spirit here. The slightest hint at retaliation would
+ have such an effect in the Assembly as to stop the onward career of
+ illiberality. As things now are, the extortioners have the game in
+ their own hands. They levy what duty they please, and pay just as
+ much or as little attention as may suit them, to our remonstrances.
+ It is a very disagreeable affair for one who, like myself, is
+ really anxious that there should be good feeling between the two
+ countries. We are in a fix. On the one hand, we cannot, without
+ injuring ourselves and abandoning our principles, retaliate; and
+ on the other hand, while they feel sure we shall do no more than
+ remonstrate, the Protectionist officials will care very little.
+ If indeed the general opinion is to be relied upon, the present
+ Government and its chief may come down with a crash at any moment,
+ but I don't know whether a change would benefit us commercially.
+
+Lord Lyons, like Lord Granville and other English public men and
+officials of the day, was a Free Trader, as has already been stated.
+But it would be difficult for the most ardent Protectionist to make
+out a stronger case against the helplessness of a Free Trade policy
+when negotiating with a foreign Government than is disclosed in these
+letters, and there are any number of others all in the same strain. All
+the protestations of goodwill, of sympathy, and benefit to the human
+race, etc., were, and presumably are still, a pure waste of time when
+addressed to a country about to frame a tariff in accordance with its
+own interests, unless the threat of retaliation is used in order to
+retain some bargaining power, as apparently the Spaniards had already
+discovered.
+
+It has already been stated that Thiers's plans of military
+re-organization and his somewhat imprudent language had caused some
+agitation in Germany, and when the German Ambassador, Count Arnim,
+returned to his post at Paris in the spring of 1872, it was freely
+rumoured that he was the bearer of remarkably unpleasant communications.
+These apprehensions turned out to be exaggerated, and Thiers in
+conversation always assumed a lamb-like attitude of peace. He denied
+that the Germans had addressed any representations to him, said that all
+suspicions against him were grossly unjust, that it would be absolute
+madness for France to think of going to war, and that, for his part,
+the keystone of all his foreign policy was peace. As for his army
+reform schemes, he was a much misunderstood man. He was undoubtedly
+reorganizing the military forces of France, and it was his duty to place
+them upon a respectable footing, and so provide a guarantee for peace.
+It was, however, quite false to say that he was arming, for that term
+implied that he was making preparations for war, and that he was putting
+the army into a condition to pass at once from a state of peace to a
+state of war. He was doing nothing of the sort; on the contrary, his
+efforts were directed to obtaining the evacuation of the territory, by
+providing for the payment of the war indemnity to Germany, and it could
+hardly be supposed that if he were meditating a renewal of the contest,
+he would begin by making over three milliards to her.
+
+From Arnim's language, it appeared that the German public was irritated
+and alarmed at the perpetual harping of the French upon the word
+'Revenge,' and that the German military men (the _militaires_ who were
+always so convenient to Bismarck for purposes of argument) conceived
+that the best guarantee for peace would be to keep their soldiers as
+long as possible within a few days' march of Paris.
+
+The German fears were, no doubt, greatly exaggerated, but if they
+existed at all they were largely due to Thiers's own language, who,
+while not talking indeed of immediate revenge, was fond of boasting of
+the strength and efficiency of the French army, and even of affirming
+that it was at that very moment equal to cope with the Germans. That he
+was conscious of having created suspicion may be inferred from the fact
+that when the Prince of Wales passed through Paris on his way from Nice
+to Germany, he begged H.R.H. to use his influence at the Court of Berlin
+to impress upon the Emperor and all who were of importance there, that
+the French Government, and the President himself in particular, desired
+peace above all things, and were resolved to maintain it. A letter from
+the British Ambassador at Berlin throws some light upon the prevalent
+German feeling.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Mr. Odo Russell[4] to Lord Lyons._
+
+ British Embassy, Berlin, April 27, 1872.
+
+ Since your letter of the 9th inst. reached me feelings have
+ changed in Berlin.
+
+ Thiers's Army bill and Speech have irritated the Emperor,
+ Bismarck and indeed everybody.
+
+ The Generals tell the Emperor it would be better to fight
+ France before she is ready than after; but Bismarck, who scorns the
+ Generals, advises the Emperor to fight France _morally_ through
+ Rome and the Catholic alliances against United Germany.
+
+ Although he denies it, Bismarck probably caused those violent
+ articles against Thiers to appear in the English newspapers, and he
+ tells everybody that Thiers has lost his esteem and may lose his
+ support. The next grievance they are getting up against him is that
+ he is supposed to have made offers through Le Flô to Russia against
+ Germany.
+
+ In short, from having liked him and praised him and wished for
+ him, they are now tired of him and think him a traitor because he
+ tries to reform the French Army on too large a scale!
+
+ Gontaut[5] does not appear to do anything beyond play the
+ agreeable, which he does perfectly, and every one likes him. But
+ it is said that _Agents_, financial Agents I presume, are employed
+ by Thiers to communicate through Jewish Bankers here indirectly
+ with Bismarck. Through these agents Thiers is supposed to propose
+ arrangements for an early payment of the 3 milliards and an early
+ withdrawal of the German troops of occupation,--the payment
+ to be effected by foreign loans and the guarantee of European
+ Bankers,--in paper not in gold. Bismarck has not yet pronounced
+ definitely, but the Emperor William won't hear of shortening the
+ occupation of France. Indeed, he regrets he cannot by Treaty leave
+ his soldiers longer still as a guarantee of peace while he lives,
+ for he is most anxious to die at peace with all the world.
+
+ So that nothing is done and nothing will be done before Arnim
+ returns to Paris. He has no sailing orders yet and seems well
+ amused here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Mr. Odo Russell._
+
+ Paris, May 7, 1872.
+
+ Many thanks for your interesting letter.
+
+ Arnim's account of public opinion at Berlin entirely confirms
+ that which you give, only he says Bismarck would be personally
+ willing to come to an arrangement with France for payment of the
+ milliards and the evacuation of the territory, but that he will not
+ run any risk of injuring his own position by opposing either Moltke
+ or public opinion on this point.
+
+ I don't think the Germans need the least fear the French
+ attacking them for many years to come. The notion of coming now
+ to destroy France utterly, in order to prevent her ever in the
+ dim future being able to revenge herself, seems simply atrocious.
+ The French are so foolish in their boasts, and the Germans so
+ thin-skinned, that I am afraid of mischief.
+
+ I should doubt Bismarck's being wise in setting himself in
+ open hostility to the Vatican. The favour of the Holy See is seldom
+ of any practical use, so far as obtaining acts in its favour, to a
+ Protestant or even to a Roman Catholic Government; but the simple
+ fact of being notoriously in antagonism to it, brings a vast amount
+ of opposition and ill-will on a Government that has Catholic
+ subjects. The fear of this country's being able at this moment
+ to work the Catholic element in Germany or elsewhere against the
+ German Emperor appears to me to be chimerical.
+
+ I wish the Germans would get their milliards as fast as they
+ can, and go: then Europe might settle down, and they need not be
+ alarmed about French vengeance, or grudge the French the poor
+ consolation of talking about it.
+
+ Arnim was a good deal struck by the decline in Thiers's
+ vigour, since he took leave of him before his journey to Rome, but
+ he saw Thiers some days ago, when the little President was at his
+ worst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Mr. Odo Russell to Lord Lyons._
+
+ British Embassy, Berlin, May 11, 1872.
+
+ I have nothing new to say about the relations of France and
+ Germany, but my friends here seem so alarmed at the idea that
+ France cannot pay the much longed for three milliards, that if
+ Thiers really does pay them, all the rest will be forgiven and
+ forgotten, and the withdrawal of the German troops will then be
+ impatiently called for. Like yourself I write the impressions of
+ the moment and am not answerable for future changes of public
+ opinion. Clearly the thing to be desired for the peace of the world
+ is the payment by France and the withdrawal by Germany, after which
+ a normal state of things can be hoped for--not before.
+
+ The Pope, to my mind, has made a mistake in declining to
+ receive Hohenlohe. He ought to have accepted and in return sent a
+ Nuncio to Berlin, thereby selling Bismarck, and controlling his
+ German Bishops and the Döllinger movement.
+
+ Bismarck is going away on leave to Varzin. He is so irritable
+ and nervous that he can do no good here at present, and rest is
+ essential to him.
+
+ Your letter of the 7th is most useful to me, many thanks for
+ it. I shall not fail to keep you as well informed as I can.
+
+In reality, the Germans made little difficulty about the arrangements
+for the payment of the indemnity and evacuation of French territory, and
+early in July Thiers was able to state confidently that he felt certain
+of being able to pay the whole of the indemnity by March, 1874, and
+that he had only obtained an additional year's grace in order to guard
+against accidents.
+
+A curious incident which occurred in July, 1872, showed how, if
+sufficient ingenuity be employed, a trivial personal question may
+be turned to important political use. The Comte de Vogué, French
+Ambassador at Constantinople, who possessed little or no diplomatic
+experience, before proceeding on leave from his post, had an audience
+of the Sultan. The Sultan received him standing, and began to talk,
+when Vogué interrupted His Majesty, and begged to be allowed to sit
+down, as other Ambassadors had been accustomed to do, according to him,
+on similar occasions. What the Sultan actually did at the moment was
+not disclosed, but he took dire offence, and telegrams began to pour
+in upon the Turkish Ambassador at Paris desiring him to represent to
+the French Government that if Vogué came back his position would be
+very unpleasant--intimating in fact that his return to Constantinople
+must be prevented. The French Foreign Minister, however, refused this
+satisfaction to the Sultan, and the Turkish Ambassador in his perplexity
+sought the advice of Lord Lyons, who preached conciliation, and urged
+that, at all events, no steps ought to be taken until Vogué had arrived
+at Paris, and was able to give his version of the incident. The French,
+naturally enough, were at that moment peculiarly susceptible on all
+such matters, and more reluctant to make a concession than if they
+were still on their former pinnacle of grandeur at Constantinople,
+although Vogué was clearly in the wrong, for Lord Lyons admitted that
+he had himself never been asked to sit. The importance of the incident
+consisted in the fact that it gave an opportunity of cultivating the
+goodwill of Russia, as the traditional enemy of Turkey. No Frenchman
+had ever lost sight of the hope that some day or other an ally against
+Germany might be found in Russia, and there were not wanting signs of a
+reciprocal feeling on the part of the latter. It had, for instance, been
+the subject of much remark, that the Russian Ambassador at Paris, Prince
+Orloff, had recently been making immense efforts to become popular
+with all classes of the French: Legitimists, Orleanists, Imperialists,
+Republicans, and especially newspaper writers of all shades of politics.
+As it was well known that neither Prince nor Princess Orloff were really
+fond of society, these efforts were almost overdone, but nevertheless
+they met with a hearty response everywhere, from Thiers downwards,
+for all Frenchmen were eagerly hoping for a quarrel between Russia
+and Germany, and were ready to throw themselves into the arms of the
+former in that hope. Russia, on her side, was clearly not unwilling to
+cultivate a friendship which cost nothing, and might conceivably be of
+considerable profit.
+
+On November 5 the new Anglo-French Commercial Treaty was signed,
+indignant British Free Traders striving to console themselves with the
+thought that France would soon discover the error of her ways and cease
+to lag behind the rest of the civilized world in her economic heresy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 12, 1872.
+
+ I saw Thiers on Friday after I wrote to you on that day; and
+ I dined with him on Saturday. He looked remarkably well, and was
+ in high spirits and in great good humour, as he ought to be, with
+ us. He spoke, as indeed he always does, as if he felt quite sure
+ that he should have his own way with the Assembly in all things.
+ As regards the organic measures, he talked as if the fight would
+ be entirely with the Right; but both sections of the Left have
+ declared against organic changes to be made by this Assembly. I
+ suppose, however, Thiers is pretty sure to get his own powers
+ prolonged for four years certain, and this is what he cares about.
+
+ I do not, however, find in my Austrian, German, and Russian
+ colleagues so unqualified an acquiescence in Thiers remaining
+ in power as they professed before I went away. It is said that
+ the three Emperors at Berlin were alarmed at the prospect of the
+ definitive establishment of any Republic, and still more so at
+ the apparent tendency of M. Thiers's policy to leave the country
+ to drift into a Red Republic, whenever he quitted the scene.
+ However this may be, there is certainly a change in the language
+ of their Representatives here, not very marked, but nevertheless
+ quite perceptible. Orloff in particular talks as if an immediate
+ Imperialist restoration were not only desirable but probable. If he
+ really thinks it probable, he is almost alone in the opinion.
+
+ The Prince de Joinville, who came to see me yesterday,
+ said that he had been a great deal about in the country, and
+ that he found everywhere an absolute indifference to persons
+ and dynasties, and a simple cry for any Government which would
+ efficiently protect property. He thought that Thiers would be
+ supported for this reason, but that whatever institutions might
+ be nominally established, they would last only as long as Thiers
+ himself did, and that afterwards everything would be in question,
+ and the country probably divide itself into two great parties,
+ Conservatives and Reds, between whom there would be a fierce
+ struggle notwithstanding the great numerical superiority of the
+ former.
+
+In the absence of exciting internal topics, the year closed with a
+slight sensation provided by Gramont, who, it might have been supposed,
+would have preferred not to court further notoriety. Count Beust had
+recently asserted that he had warned France against expecting help
+from Austria in the event of a war with Prussia. Gramont replied
+by publishing a letter in which the following statement occurred.
+'L'Autriche considère la cause de la France comme la sienne, et
+contribuera au succès de ses armes dans les limites du possible.'
+This quotation was supposed to be taken from a letter from Beust to
+Metternich, dated July 20, 1870 (the day after the declaration of war),
+and left by Metternich with Gramont, who took a copy and returned the
+original. Metternich was believed to have shown the letter also to the
+Emperor Napoleon and to Ollivier. The letter was represented as going on
+to say that the neutrality proclaimed by Austria was merely a blind to
+conceal her armaments, and that she was only waiting till the advance of
+winter rendered it impossible for Russia to concentrate her forces.
+
+It was generally believed that there was plenty of evidence that an
+offensive and defensive alliance was in course of negotiation between
+France and Austria in 1869, though no treaty was signed, and the record
+appears to have consisted in letters exchanged between the two Emperors,
+but as Gramont had nothing more than a copy of a letter from Beust to
+Metternich his evidence was legally defective, whatever its moral
+value, and it was questionable whether as an ex-Minister he had any
+right to disclose such secrets.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 31, 1872.
+
+ Gramont's further revelations confirm what I told you in my
+ letter of the 24th. The question is becoming tiresome. I conceive
+ there is no doubt that Beust at Vienna, and Metternich here,
+ fanned the flame of French discontent after Sadowa, with a view
+ to avenging themselves when Austria and France should be ready,
+ and circumstances favourable. I think also that Gramont came back
+ from Vienna full of Beust's warlike ideas, and very well inclined
+ to carry them out. What exchange of letters may have taken place
+ between the two Emperors, or what record of any kind there may be
+ of engagements between the two countries to help one another, it is
+ more difficult to say.
+
+ The assertion is that after war had been declared, Austria
+ engaged to move on the 15th September. Others say that she also
+ required that France should have an army in Baden.
+
+ This is not inconsistent with her having dissuaded France from
+ war in July, 1870, when she knew positively it would be premature
+ for herself, and probably had some suspicion that France was also
+ not really prepared.
+
+Early in January, 1873, the Emperor Napoleon died at Chiselhurst. The
+view of Thiers was that this event would render the Bonapartists, for
+the time, more turbulent and less dangerous. He believed that the
+Emperor's personal influence had been used to quiet the impatience
+of his followers, while, on the other hand, his death removed the
+only member of the family who was popular enough in France to be a
+formidable candidate. Thiers's childish susceptibility with regard to
+the Bonapartists showed itself in his expressed hope that the Emperor's
+death would be followed by the disappearance of the public sympathy in
+England with the family in its misfortunes.
+
+The opinions of Thiers seem to have been generally prevalent. The
+Emperor was remarkably kind and courteous to all who approached him; he
+was a firm friend; not, as a rule, an implacable enemy, and he inspired
+no small number of people with a warm attachment to him personally. He
+was also generally popular, and the glittering prosperity of the early
+part of his reign was attributed by a large part of the common people
+to his own genius and merits, while they were prone to consider that
+its disastrous close was due to treason. No other member of the family
+excited feelings of the same kind, and in France a cause was always so
+largely identified with an individual that there was no doubt that the
+hold of the Imperialists upon the country was largely weakened by the
+loss of their chief.
+
+It is perhaps worth noting that Lord Lyons, although it was notoriously
+difficult to extract any such opinions from him, did in after years
+admit reluctantly to me, that although he liked Napoleon III.
+personally, he had always put a low estimate upon his capacity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Jan. 31, 1873.
+
+ I cannot say that the political atmosphere grows clearer. The
+ Right are in their hearts as anxious as ever to depose Thiers.
+ They believe as firmly as ever that if he makes the new elections,
+ he will have a Chamber, not only of Republicans, but of very
+ advanced Republicans. They see that all their little endeavours to
+ restrain him and to establish ministerial responsibility will have
+ no political effect. The death of the Emperor has not strengthened
+ Thiers's position with regard to the Right. On the contrary,
+ they are less disposed to bear with him since the removal of the
+ candidate for the Throne of whom they were most afraid, and from
+ whom they justly thought that Thiers would make every effort to
+ shield them. They are consequently, even more than they usually
+ are, employed in casting about for something to put in Thiers's
+ place. The Fusion is again 'almost' made, and MacMahon is again
+ talked of as ready to take the Government during the transition
+ from the Republic to the King.
+
+ Orloff, the Russian Ambassador, propounded to me to-day a plan
+ of his own for preventing conflicts between Russia and England
+ in Central Asia. So far as I understood it, it was that England
+ and Russia should enter into a strict alliance, should encourage
+ and protect, by force of arms, commerce between their Asiatic
+ Dominions, and unite them at once by a railroad. He said there
+ was a Russian company already formed which desired to connect the
+ Russian railway system with the Anglo-Indian railways. He told me
+ that Brünnow was always writing that war between England and Russia
+ was imminent and that England was preparing for it. If Brünnow's
+ vaticinations are believed, they may perhaps have a not unwholesome
+ effect upon the Russian Government.
+
+Prince Orloff seems to have had in contemplation that Trans-Persian
+Railway which has met with the approval of the Russian and British
+Governments at the present day. The Russian advance in Central Asia
+in 1872 and 1873 had been the subject of various perfectly futile
+representations on the part of Her Majesty's Government, but Baron
+Brünnow must have been a singularly credulous diplomatist if he really
+believed that we were making preparations for a war with Russia or any
+one else.
+
+If Orloff with prophetic insight foresaw a Trans-Persian Railway, Thiers
+might be acclaimed as being the first person to suggest the project of
+the Triple Entente between England, France, and Russia. Strangely enough
+it was the affairs of Spain that put this notion into his head, the idea
+prevalent in France being that Germany was bent on making that country a
+dangerous neighbour to France, and bestowing a Hohenzollern prince upon
+her as sovereign. The prospect of an 'Iberic Union,' which was being
+discussed at the time, was considered to be exceptionally threatening to
+France, and Thiers had had quite enough of united states on the French
+frontier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 4, 1873.
+
+ M. Thiers spoke to me last night very confidentially about
+ Spain and Portugal. The Spanish question was, he said, becoming so
+ serious that it could hardly be considered an internal question.
+ Among other things, the independence of Portugal was at stake. Now,
+ in his opinion, the best chance of avoiding a collision between the
+ Powers of Europe would be that England, France, and Russia should
+ come to an understanding on the subject. He did not think that
+ there would be any difficulty in effecting such an understanding;
+ and indeed he had reason to believe that Russia was at this moment
+ particularly well disposed to act in concert with England. He was
+ far from being so absurd as to propose a new Holy Alliance; indeed,
+ he desired to avoid all show and ostentation--indeed all publicity.
+ He simply wished that, without any parade, the three Powers he had
+ named should concert measures in order to avert events which might
+ imperil the peace of Europe. After some further conversation, he
+ observed that it would be impossible to avert a collision, if the
+ Peninsula were formed into one Iberic state with a Hohenzollern for
+ a monarch.
+
+ I did not invite M. Thiers to state more definitely in what
+ form he proposed that the understanding between France, Russia, and
+ England should be effected, or what combined action he proposed
+ they should adopt. I thought indeed that it would be very dangerous
+ for France to enter into any sort of an alliance with Foreign
+ Powers against Germany at this moment, and that the smallest result
+ might be to delay the evacuation of French territory. Nor indeed
+ did I know that there was any evidence that Germany was actively
+ pursuing designs in Spain in such a way and to such a degree,
+ as would render it proper or advantageous to try the hazardous
+ experiment of undertaking to settle a European question without
+ her, not to say in spite of her.
+
+ I consequently only listened to what M. Thiers said. He
+ concluded by telling me to treat his idea as most strictly
+ confidential and to confide it only to your ear in a whisper.
+
+ As regards the state of Spain, M. Thiers said that he believed
+ the Federal Party was after all the party of order; that at all
+ events it was predominant in all the outer circumference of
+ Spain; that the Unitarians existed only in Madrid and the central
+ provinces, and that the North was Carlist or Federal. This being
+ the case, his advice to the Government of Madrid had been to make
+ concessions to the Federals. He did not think that, if properly
+ managed, their pretensions would go much beyond what was called in
+ France 'decentralisation administrative.'
+
+ The view of the Federals being the party of order in Spain
+ was new to me, but M. Thiers was beset by a host of deputies and I
+ could not continue the conversation.
+
+A letter from Lord Odo Russell[6] to Lord Lyons admirably defines
+the attitude of Germany, and is an exceptionally lucid summary of
+Bismarckian policy in general.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ British Embassy, Berlin, March 14, 1873.
+
+ Thanks for yours of the 4th instant.
+
+ As regards Spain, Thiers, and Bismarck I cannot add anything
+ more definite or more precise. Bismarck and the Emperor William
+ are so far satisfied that the Republic will make room for the
+ Alphonsists so that they can afford to wait and look on.
+
+ What Bismarck intends for Spain later, no one can guess, but
+ clearly nothing favourable or agreeable to France.
+
+ The two great objects of Bismarck's policy are:
+
+ (1) The supremacy of Germany in Europe and of the German race
+ in the world.
+
+ (2) The neutralization of the influence and power of the Latin
+ race in France and elsewhere.
+
+ To obtain these objects he will go any lengths while he lives,
+ so that we must be prepared for surprises in the future.
+
+ A change has come over the Emperor and his military advisers
+ in regard to the evacuation of French territory, as you have seen
+ by his speech on opening the German Parliament.
+
+ His Majesty is now prepared to withdraw his garrison as soon
+ as the fifth and last milliard shall have been paid by Paris and
+ received at Berlin.
+
+ So that if it is true that Thiers proposes to pay the fifth
+ milliard in monthly instalments of 250,000,000 fs. beginning from
+ the 1st of June, the evacuation might be expected in October and
+ France be relieved of her nightmare.
+
+ This I look upon as a most desirable object. It appears to
+ me that the re-establishment of the future balance of power in
+ Europe on a general peace footing, is _the_ thing Diplomacy should
+ work for, and that nothing can be done so long as the Germans have
+ not got their French gold, and the French got rid of their German
+ soldiers.
+
+ The Germans, as you know, look upon the war of revenge as
+ unavoidable and are making immense preparations for it.
+
+ Germany is in reality a great camp ready to break up for any
+ war at a week's notice with a million of men.
+
+ We are out of favour with the Germans for preferring the old
+ French alliance to a new German one, as our commercial policy is
+ said to prove, and this impression has been lately confirmed by
+ Thiers's _exposé des motifs_.
+
+ Thiers is again out of favour at Berlin, because the Russian
+ Government has warned the German Government that Thiers is working
+ to draw Russia into the Anglo-French Alliance contrary to their
+ wishes. I believe myself that the alliance or understanding between
+ Russia and Germany, Gortschakoff and Bismarck is real, intimate, and
+ sincere; and that they have agreed to preserve Austria so long as
+ she obeys and serves them, but woe to Austria if ever she attempts
+ to be independent!
+
+ Then the German and Slav elements she is composed of, will be
+ made to gravitate towards their natural centres, leaving Hungary
+ and her dependencies as a semi-oriental vassal of Germany and
+ Russia. However, those are things of the future, at present I can
+ think of nothing but the crisis at home and the deep regret I feel
+ at losing my kind benefactor Lord Granville as a chief. My only
+ consolation is that he will the sooner return to power as our
+ Premier, for he is clearly the man of the future.
+
+ I hope you will write again occasionally.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord O. Russell._
+
+ Paris, April 8, 1873.
+
+ Many thanks for your most interesting letter of the 14th. I
+ entirely agree with you that the one object of diplomacy should be
+ to re-establish the balance of power in Europe on a peace footing.
+ The payment of the indemnity and the departure of the German troops
+ from France are of course necessary to the commencement of anything
+ like a normal state of things. The French all more or less brood
+ over the hope of vengeance, and the Germans give them credit for
+ being even more bent upon revenge than they really are. So Germany
+ keeps up an enormous army, and France strains every nerve to raise
+ one; and what can diplomatists do?
+
+ In Germany they seem to attach a great deal more than due
+ importance to the Commercial Treaty, as a sign of a tendency
+ towards a renewal of the Anglo-French Alliance. But then the
+ Germans have always been more angry with us for not helping to blot
+ France out of Europe than the French have been with us for not
+ helping them out of the scrape they got into by their own fault.
+ Germans and French are to my mind alike unreasonable, but we only
+ suffer the ordinary fate of neutrals.
+
+ Thiers professes to have no thought of forming any alliance at
+ present; and to consider that it would be absurd of France to try
+ for more at this moment than to ward off great questions, and live
+ as harmoniously as she can with all Foreign Powers, without showing
+ a preference to any. This is no doubt the wise and sensible policy.
+ Thiers certainly acts upon it so far as England is concerned. Does
+ he also act upon it as regards Russia? I cannot say. I think there
+ is a little coquetry between him and the Russians.
+
+Lord Granville appears to have sent through the Duchesse de Galliera
+a private message warning Thiers of the dangers of his advances to
+Russia; but the latter asserted that although the French Ambassador at
+St. Petersburg had been directed to maintain the most cordial relations
+with the Russian Government, matters had not gone further than that, and
+that he had made no communications which he should object to Germany
+knowing of. Thiers's tenure of power was, however, destined shortly to
+come to an end. On May 24, the veteran who had rendered such invaluable
+services to the country was defeated by a combination of opponents, and
+Marshal MacMahon became President of the Republic in his stead. The
+change of Government was received quietly by the country; the elaborate
+precautions which had been taken in case of disorder proved superfluous,
+and the funds rose on the assumption that the Marshal was to prove to
+be the new saviour of society. MacMahon, who had reluctantly accepted
+the honour thrust upon him, was generally regarded as a French General
+Monk, but which of the three pretenders was to be his Charles the Second
+remained a matter of complete uncertainty. The fickle crowd hastened to
+prostrate itself before the rising sun, and the first reception held by
+the new President at Versailles constituted a veritable triumph; swarms
+of people of all sorts attending, particularly those members of smart
+society who had long deserted the salons of the Préfecture. Amongst the
+throng were particularly noticeable the Duc d'Aumale and his brothers,
+wearing uniform and the red ribands which they had never been known to
+display before. All looked smooth and tranquil, as it usually did at
+the beginning; but the Government so far had not done anything beyond
+changing Prefects and Procureurs. The political situation, for the time
+being, might be summed up in the phrase that the French preferred to
+have at their head a man _qui monte à cheval_, rather than a man _qui
+monte à la tribune_.
+
+Although the dismissal of Thiers savoured of ingratitude, it was not
+altogether unfortunate for him that he had quitted office at that
+particular moment, for little doubt was felt that, with or without any
+error of policy on his own part, the country was gradually drifting
+towards communism. At any rate, he could compare with just pride the
+state in which he left France to the state in which he found her.
+Although the last German soldier had not yet left French soil, the
+credit of the liberation of the country was due to him, and by his
+financial operations, successful beyond all expectations, he had not
+only paid off four milliards, but provided the funds for discharging
+the fifth, and so admirably conducted the negotiations that the German
+Government was willing to withdraw the rest of the occupying force.
+
+The fall of Thiers caused searchings of heart at Berlin, and a
+conversation with Count Arnim, the German Ambassador at Paris, in June
+showed that the German Government regarded MacMahon with anything but
+favour. Arnim stated that displeasure had been felt at Berlin, both
+at language held by the Marshal before his appointment, and at his
+neglect in his former position to act with proper courtesy towards the
+Emperor's Ambassador in France. The German Government did not doubt that
+the remainder of the indemnity would be paid, but Thiers indulged less
+than other Frenchmen in hostile feelings towards Germany, and he and a
+few of the people about him seemed to be the only Frenchmen who could
+bring themselves to act with propriety and civility in their relations
+with Germans. In fact, Thiers's foreign policy had been wise and
+conciliatory, but as for his internal policy, he, Count Arnim, avowed
+that he entirely concurred in the opinion that it would have thrown the
+country in a short time into the hands of the Red Republicans.
+
+The unfortunate Arnim was apparently at this time unconscious of his
+impending doom, although, as the following interesting letter from Lord
+Odo Russell to Lord Lyons shows, his fate had been sealed months before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _British Embassy, Berlin, Jan. 18, 1873._
+
+ What I have to say to-day grieves me to the soul, because it
+ goes against my excellent friend and landlord Harry Arnim.
+
+ Said friend, it is said, could not resist the temptation of
+ turning an honest penny in the great War Indemnity Loan at Paris,
+ and the Jew Banker he employed, called Hanseman, let it out to
+ Bismarck, who could not understand how Arnim was rich enough to buy
+ estates in Silesia and houses in Berlin.
+
+ Now Bismarck, who is tired of Arnim, and thinks him a rising
+ rival, will make use of this discovery with the Emperor whenever he
+ wants to upset Arnim and send a new man to Paris.
+
+ He thinks him a rising rival because Arnim went to Baden
+ last autumn and advised the Emperor, behind Bismarck's back, to
+ go in for an Orleanist Monarchy and drop Thiers, in opposition to
+ Bismarck's policy, who wishes to drop all Pretenders and uphold
+ Thiers as long as he lives.
+
+ Besides which Arnim hinted at a readiness to take office at
+ home if Bismarck came to grief.
+
+ The Emperor is fond of Arnim and listened with complacency and
+ told Bismarck when he returned from Varzin,--Bismarck has vowed
+ revenge! I have not written all this home because it would serve
+ no purpose yet,--but it may be useful to you as a peep behind the
+ curtain. Meanwhile Bismarck has appointed one of his _secret_
+ agents as Commercial Secretary to the Paris Embassy to watch Arnim.
+ His name is Lindau and as he is a very able man and an old friend
+ of mine, I have given him a letter to you. He might become useful
+ some day.
+
+ Let me add _in confidence_ that he corresponds privately and
+ secretly with Bismarck behind Arnim's back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It will be observed that the views expressed by Arnim to Lord Lyons in
+June are not altogether consistent with those attributed to him in the
+above letter, but Lord Odo Russell's opinion that his implacable chief
+would crush him at the first opportunity was only too well justified
+before long.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: June, 1871.]
+
+[Footnote 2: German Ambassador at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Foreign Minister in succession to M. Jules Favre.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Subsequently Lord Ampthill.]
+
+[Footnote 5: French Ambassador at Berlin.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Formerly Mr. Odo Russell.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+MARSHAL MACMAHON'S PRESIDENCY
+
+(1873-1875)
+
+
+The new French Government had been received with great favour by
+the upper classes, while the remainder of the population remained
+indifferent, but the Marshal was credited with the wish to place the
+Comte de Chambord on the throne, and the language of his entourage was
+strongly Legitimist, auguries being drawn from a frequent remark of the
+Maréchale, who was supposed to dislike her position: _nous ne sommes pas
+à notre place!_
+
+As the confused political situation began to clear, it became evident
+that everything depended upon the Comte de Chambord himself, and if he
+could be brought to adopt anything like a reasonable attitude, it was
+generally felt that there would be a large majority in his favour in the
+Assembly. The historic White Flag manifesto issued from Salzburg at the
+end of October effectually ruined the Legitimist cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 31, 1873.
+
+ The Royalists were counting up new adhesions and expecting a
+ letter from the Comte de Chambord which was to be read from the
+ tribune at the last moment and rally the waiters upon Providence
+ and the waverers to them, when, to their utter consternation,
+ the actual letter arrived, and fell like a shell with a violent
+ explosion in the midst of them.
+
+ I don't know what they are to do. All plans for making the
+ Comte de Paris or the Duc d'Aumale Regent will be voted against
+ by the present Legitimists, unless the Comte de Chambord approves
+ them. It is very doubtful whether any explanation could do away
+ with the impression the letter will have produced throughout the
+ country, which was already averse from the idea of the Legitimist
+ King.
+
+ The maintenance of MacMahon and the present Ministry seems the
+ best mode of postponing trouble, but it cannot do much more than
+ postpone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 3, 1873.
+
+ If the Chamber met to-morrow, I suppose it would vote the
+ prolongation of MacMahon's powers; and though no one can answer
+ for what a day or an hour may bring forth, I suppose this is what
+ must be done. It is said that the Marshal himself insists upon a
+ term of six years, if not ten. This is rather hard to understand,
+ if, as I believed, he really wished to be out of the thing, and I
+ doubt its adding practically to the stability of his Government.
+ On the other hand, the Conservatives want to have the prolongation
+ voted in such a way as to make it apparent that MacMahon is _their_
+ President. It would not suit them that he should be elected
+ unanimously, or nearly so, as he perhaps might be. This would put
+ him, they think, in a position too like that which Thiers held. The
+ preposterous notion of making a Lieutenant General of the Kingdom
+ to govern in the name of a King of full age and in possession of
+ all his faculties, who would undoubtedly repudiate and denounce
+ his representative, has been put an end to by the refusal of the
+ Princes of Orleans, one and all, it is affirmed, to accept the post.
+
+ Thiers told me the day before yesterday that he did not
+ intend to oppose the Government this session, and that we might
+ count on a quiet winter. We shall see.
+
+ The Legitimists are furious with their King, as well they
+ may be. How long this may last, one cannot say, but the numbers
+ of those who adore him _quand même_, as a sort of fetish, have
+ certainly fallen off.
+
+MacMahon had been as much disappointed with the Chambord manifesto as
+the ultra-Legitimists themselves, and had looked forward to retiring
+from a position which he found distasteful; but as no king was
+available, and he was looked upon as the only guarantee for order,
+obviously the best course was to secure the prolongation of his powers
+for as long a period as possible. After many long and stormy discussions
+MacMahon was declared President of the Republic for seven years, and a
+committee of thirty was appointed to consider the Constitutional Laws.
+This result was so far satisfactory to the Right, that it enabled them
+to retire from the dangerous position in which they were placed by
+the attempt to put the Comte de Chambord on the throne, but it failed
+to establish a durable Government, and the whole period of MacMahon's
+Presidency was marked by a ceaseless struggle with his Republican
+opponents, which only terminated with his fall four years later.
+
+The anxieties of French Ministers were, however, not confined to
+internal difficulties. Although the fact was concealed as much as
+possible, the anti-Ultramontane campaign of Bismarck created serious
+alarm in the beginning of 1874, and in that year may be said to have
+originated the long series of panics, well or ill founded, which have
+prevailed in France ever since. MacMahon in conversation did not scruple
+to express his fear of a country which, according to him, could
+place 800,000 men on the Rhine in less than seventeen days, and made
+the interesting confession that the French military authorities had
+never credited the famous reports of Colonel Stoffel[7] as to Prussian
+military efficiency. The Foreign Minister, the Duc Décazes, expressed
+the strongest apprehensions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 17, 1874.
+
+ The fall of France has never, I think, been brought so
+ forcibly home to me, as when I listened yesterday to the humble
+ deprecation which Décazes was obliged to make with regard to
+ Bismarck's threats, in the same room in which I had so often heard
+ the high language with which the Imperial Minister used to speak of
+ the affairs of Europe. One can only hope that Odo may be right in
+ thinking that Bismarck's menaces may subside, when he has carried
+ his Army Bill at home. But may not his eagerness in his contest
+ with the Ultramontanes continue and carry him on to language and
+ even to measures against France from which it may be difficult for
+ him to draw back? and of course there is a limit to the submission
+ of the French Government, however disastrous it may know the
+ consequences of resistance to be. It is difficult to persecute
+ any religion in these days, but it is impossible for the French
+ Government to set itself in violent opposition to the predominant
+ religion in France. I do not know what means we may have of getting
+ pacific and moderate counsels listened to at Berlin, but I do
+ not think the weakness of France a sufficient safeguard to other
+ countries against the perils of the present state of things to the
+ peace of Europe. It may be very easy to bully and to crush France,
+ but will it be possible to do this without raising a storm in other
+ quarters?
+
+What Bismarck wanted was that the French Government should attack the
+French bishops; and in order to conciliate him, a circular was issued
+by the Minister of the Interior remonstrating with them on the nature
+of the language in which their pastoral addresses were couched. The
+well-known clerical newspaper the _Univers_ was suppressed, and although
+every effort was made to disguise the various acts of subserviency
+resorted to, it was perfectly well known to what cause they were due,
+and it was not surprising that the French writhed under the necessity
+of submitting to such dictation. In view of the military weakness
+of France, however, it was useless to think of resistance, the Duc
+d'Aumale, who commanded the most vulnerable district, having reported
+confidentially that there were neither fortresses nor an army which
+would have any chance of repelling a German invasion; added to which,
+owing to considerations of economy, the conscription was six months in
+arrear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Odo Russell._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 3, 1874.
+
+ The French want above all things to keep the peace, or, to put
+ it otherwise, to escape being attacked by Germany in their present
+ defenceless state. What, in your opinion, should they do? Of course
+ the temptation to the unprincipled war party in Germany to attack
+ them while they are unable to defend themselves, is very great;
+ and that party must know that a war this year would be much less
+ hazardous than one next year, and so on, as each year passes.
+
+ The next question I want your advice upon is what, if
+ anything, can other Powers, and particularly England, do to help to
+ preserve peace? This is a question peculiarly within your province,
+ as the one thing to be considered in answering it, is the effect
+ that anything we do may have at Berlin.
+
+ I am not very hopeful, but I think the chances of peace will
+ be very much increased if we can tide over this year 1874.
+
+ I can see no consolation for a fresh war. I suppose Bismarck
+ would be ready to buy the neutrality of Russia with Constantinople,
+ and that France will give Russia _anything_ even for a little help.
+
+ The Emperor Alexander has told General Le Flô[8] at St.
+ Petersburg that there will not be war. Do you attach much
+ importance to this?
+
+ You will call this a _questionnaire_ rather than a letter, but
+ if you have anything to catechise me upon in return, I will answer
+ to the best of my ability.
+
+ The Lyttons' are, as you may suppose, a very great pleasure to
+ me, and they have had a great success here.
+
+No one was better fitted than Lord Odo Russell, who was a _persona
+grata_ with Bismarck, to answer these queries. The Emperor Alexander had
+been very emphatic in assuring General Le Flô on several occasions that
+there would be no war, but Lord Odo was in all probability quite correct
+in his opinion that this was no real safeguard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Odo Russell to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Berlin, Feb. 20, 1874.
+
+ I was glad after a long interval to see your handwriting
+ again, and doubly glad to find you inclined to renew our
+ correspondence. You ask: _Firstly_, What in my opinion should the
+ French do to escape being attacked by Germany in their present
+ defenceless state?
+
+ In my opinion nothing can save them _if_ Bismarck is
+ determined to fight them again; but then, is it France or is it
+ Austria he is preparing to annihilate? In Bismarck's opinion,
+ France, to avoid a conflict with him, should gag her press,
+ imprison her bishops, quarrel with Rome, refrain from making
+ an army or from seeking alliances with other Powers all out of
+ deference to Germany.
+
+ _Secondly._ What can other Powers, and particularly England,
+ do to help to preserve peace?
+
+ A Coalition is impossible; advice or interference adds to
+ Bismarck's excuses for going to war, so the only course Governments
+ can follow is to let him do as he pleases and submit to the
+ consequences, until he dies.
+
+ _Thirdly._ Do I attach any importance to the Emperor of
+ Russia's pacific assurances?
+
+ None whatever, because Bismarck is prepared to buy his
+ co-operation with anything he pleases in the East.
+
+ Bismarck is now master of the situation at home and abroad.
+ The Emperor, the Ministers, the Army, the Press, and the National
+ majority in Parliament are instruments in his hands, whilst abroad
+ he can so bribe the great Powers as to prevent a coalition and make
+ them subservient to his policy. Now, his policy, as you know, is
+ to mediatize the minor States of Germany and to annex the German
+ Provinces of Austria, so as to make one great centralized Power
+ of the German-speaking portions of Europe. To accomplish this he
+ may require another war, but it may be with Austria and not with
+ France, which he now puts forward to keep up the war spirit of the
+ Germans and to remind Europe of his powers. Besides which he has to
+ pass the unpopular Army Bill and War Budget which he failed in last
+ summer.
+
+ His anti-Roman policy will serve him to pick a quarrel with
+ any Power he pleases by declaring that he has discovered an
+ anti-German conspiracy among the clergy of the country he wishes to
+ fight.
+
+ Such is the situation, but it does not follow that we shall
+ have war before another year or two are over or more, nor need we
+ have war _if_ Bismarck can carry out his plans without it.
+
+ At present the tone of Bismarck and Bülow is quite pacific,
+ and I notice a great desire for the co-operation of England in
+ maintaining the peace of Europe generally.
+
+Lord Lyons's own opinions were in exact agreement with Lord Odo
+Russell's, and the general uncertainty as to Bismarck's intentions
+continued to preoccupy both the French and the English Governments,
+although the Emperor of Russia persisted in assuring General Le Flô that
+there would be no war, and it was assumed in some quarters that the
+German Emperor disapproved of the Bismarckian policy.
+
+The general election in England at the beginning of 1874, resulting in
+the return of the Conservative party to power, placed Lord Derby again
+at the Foreign Office in the room of Lord Granville, and the long letter
+which follows was presumably intended to enlighten him on the subject of
+French politics generally. It is, at all events, a concise review of the
+situation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Feb. 24, 1874.
+
+ I thank you cordially for your letter of yesterday, and I
+ resume with very peculiar satisfaction my diplomatic correspondence
+ with you. I wish the subject of it was as pleasant to me as is the
+ fact of its renewal; but I cannot help being more than usually
+ anxious about the prospects of Europe and of France in particular.
+ This spring and summer are the especially critical seasons for
+ France. She will be for a long time to come far too weak to indulge
+ in aggression, except indeed as a secondary ally of some stronger
+ Power, but even next year, she will not be in the absolutely
+ helpless condition which is at this moment so strong a temptation
+ to national hatreds, and to the military thirst for gold and glory
+ which prevails with a party in Germany. I am afraid the peace of
+ Europe depends entirely upon the view Bismarck may take of the
+ easiest means of bringing all German-speaking nations under one
+ rule. The wolf can always find reasons for quarrelling with the
+ lamb, and as Bismarck himself told Odo Russell, he has had a good
+ deal of experience of this kind of thing. The French lamb will not
+ be skittish, and indeed will hardly venture to bleat, for some
+ time. For my own part, I am constantly on the watch to forestall
+ questions which may make difficulties between France and any other
+ country; for if Bismarck wants war, it would suit him to be able to
+ appear to be only taking his part in a quarrel already made.
+
+ Italy is the most dangerous neighbour from this point of
+ view, and the presence of the _Orénoque_ at Civita Vecchia is the
+ ticklish point. It is a very delicate matter to touch; for if the
+ question came very prominently into notice, it might raise one of
+ the storms in the press of all countries, which are so often the
+ precursors of evil times. The ship is supposed to be at Civita
+ Vecchia to give the Pope the means of leaving Italy, if he wishes
+ to do so; and I suppose the Vatican might relieve the French of
+ embarrassment by saying that she is not wanted. In fact, if the
+ Italian Government intended to prevent the Pope's going away, they
+ would of course stop him before he got to Civita Vecchia, and if
+ they abstained (as would no doubt be the case) from interfering
+ with his movements, he could get a ship to depart in, whenever he
+ pleased.
+
+ I do not know that there is any ill-feeling in Switzerland
+ towards France, but the Ultramontane disputes give Bismarck a lever
+ to work with.
+
+ I believe the French Government have completely drawn in their
+ horns about the Armenian Patriarch question and the Protectorate of
+ the Latin Christians in the East, since Bismarck appeared on the
+ field at Constantinople.
+
+ In looking out for small beginnings of troubles, I have
+ thought of Tunis. I suppose we may lay aside all apprehension of
+ attempts of France to change the frontier or to bring the Regency
+ into more complete dependency upon her, at the present moment. I
+ find by a despatch from Mr. Wood, that the German commodore, in his
+ conversation with the Bey, insisted particularly upon the interests
+ of German subjects being put upon as good a footing as those of the
+ subjects of any other country.
+
+ I think Décazes takes the humiliating position in which
+ France, and he as her Foreign Minister, are placed, with more
+ equanimity and temper than most Frenchmen would; and so long as
+ the present, or any other Government, not absolutely unreasonable,
+ is at the head of affairs, France will be prudent in her foreign
+ relations.
+
+ Of Marshal MacMahon's seven years' lease of power, only three
+ months have elapsed; a time too short to give much foundation for
+ conjecture as to its probable duration. Both he himself and his
+ Ministers take opportunities of declaring that its continuance
+ is above discussion, and that they will maintain it against all
+ comers. There are two things against it. First, the extreme
+ difficulty of giving it anything like the appearance of permanence
+ and stability which would rally to it that great majority of
+ Frenchmen who are ready at all times to worship the powers that
+ be, if only they look as if they were likely to continue to be.
+ Secondly, there is the character of the Marshal himself. He is
+ honest and a brave soldier, but he does not take such a part in
+ affairs as would increase his personal prestige. The danger,
+ in fact, is that by degrees he may come to be looked upon as a
+ _nullité!_
+
+ The Imperialists are agitating themselves and spending money,
+ as if they were meditating an immediate coup. The wiser heads
+ counsel patience, but the old horses, who sorely miss the pampering
+ they had under the Empire, are getting very hungry, and are afraid
+ that they themselves may die before the grass has grown.
+
+ The fear of an Imperialist attempt has in some degree brought
+ back to the Government the support of the Legitimists, and in fact
+ the Comte de Chambord has quarrelled with his own party. The Fusion
+ has put an end to the Orleanist Party, as a party for placing
+ the Comte de Paris on the throne; but the question of appointing
+ the Duc d'Aumale Vice-President, in order to have some one ready
+ to succeed MacMahon in case of need, is seriously considered. I
+ suppose, however, that MacMahon would look upon this as destructive
+ of the arrangements between him and the Assembly. And then the
+ whole system depends upon the maintenance by hook or by crook of
+ a majority, which has not yet ceased to melt away, as seats become
+ vacant and new elections take place.
+
+The Duc de Bisaccia, the new French Ambassador in London, even at his
+first interview with Lord Derby, did not scruple to avow that he felt
+quite certain that the Republican form of government would not last, and
+he went on to assert that Bismarck's head had been turned by success,
+and that he aimed at nothing less than the conquest of Europe, being
+quite indifferent either to the views of his Imperial Master, or of the
+Crown Prince. Whatever the prospects of the Republic, the prospects of
+Bisaccia's own party (Legitimist) were indisputably gloomy, for the
+prevailing sentiment in France at the time was hostility to the White
+Flag and to the clerical and aristocratic influences of which it was
+held to be the emblem. The great majority of the people were Republican,
+and the most numerous party after the Republican was the Imperial, but
+the Presidency of Marshal MacMahon was acquiesced in, for the moment,
+by all parties, because it was believed to be capable of preserving
+order, because it left the question of the definitive government of the
+country still undecided, and because no party saw its way to securing
+the pre-dominence of its own ideas.
+
+The existing state of things was accounted for by the history of the
+establishment of the seven-years Presidency.
+
+When the Orleans Princes tendered their allegiance to the Comte de
+Chambord in the previous autumn, the fusion, so long talked of, was
+complete, and it was supposed that a Parliamentary Monarchy with the
+Tricolour Flag, might be established under the legitimate head of
+the Bourbons; but the Comte de Chambord struck a fatal blow to these
+hopes by his celebrated letter, and the Conservatives felt that there
+was no time to be lost in setting up a Government having some sort of
+stability. The plan which they adopted was that of conferring power
+upon Marshal MacMahon for a fixed and long period. Had a short period
+been proposed, it would have been agreed to almost unanimously; but
+this was not their object. They wished it to be apparent to the country
+that the Marshal was specially the President of the Conservative
+majority: they asked for a term of ten years: obtained seven, and
+secured from the Marshal a declaration of adherence to their views. The
+slight modification of the Ministry which ensued, resulted in placing
+the Government more completely in the hands of the party pledged to a
+monarchical form of Government, and the Ministry thus reconstituted, set
+itself to the task of resisting the progress of Radicalism and Communism
+in the country.
+
+But the suspicion of favouring the White Flag clung to the Government,
+and although the latter, following the example of the Empire, had
+installed their partisans in office, as mayors, etc., by thousands
+throughout the country, the candidates supported by the Government had,
+in almost every instance, found themselves at the bottom of the poll
+when elections took place; and the results showed that a large accession
+of votes had been received by the Republican and Imperialist parties. Of
+these the former had gained most, but the latter possessed a backing in
+the country which was inadequately represented by their numbers in the
+Assembly.
+
+It should, however, be added that there did not appear on any side a
+disposition to embarrass the Government by factious or bitter opposition
+with regard to the three departments, Finance, War, and Foreign Affairs,
+in which the practical interests of the country were most deeply
+involved. The financial policy of M. Magne[9] was generally supported;
+and with regard to votes for the Army and Navy, the Government had
+rather to resist a pressure to increase the expenditure on these heads,
+than to urge the necessity of considerable supplies.
+
+In the conduct of foreign affairs, the defenceless state of France had
+made the avoidance of an attack from Germany the one overwhelming care
+of the Government. To effect this object, to give Germany no pretext for
+a quarrel, and to make submission to the behests of Bismarck as little
+galling and in appearance as little humiliating as possible, had been
+the constant occupation of the Foreign Minister. In this effort he was
+seconded by the Assembly, and indeed every one in and out of that body,
+except a few clerical and Legitimist bigots, felt it to be a patriotic
+duty to abstain from embarrassing the Government in its relations with
+foreign Powers. Another reassuring feature in the situation was, that
+there were no symptoms of attempts to resist by force the authority of
+the Assembly, as no party seemed likely to venture to oppose by force
+a Government which disposed of the army; and the army in 1874 showed
+no prediction for any particular candidate for the throne sufficiently
+strong to overcome its habitual obedience to the Constitutional
+Government, whatever that Government might be.
+
+As an instance of the dictation practised by Bismarck towards France in
+foreign affairs, it may be mentioned that in January, 1874,[10] Count
+Arnim formally announced to the Duc Décazes that the German Government
+would not tolerate the assumption by France of the suzerainty of Tunis,
+or of a Protectorate over that country. To this Décazes humbly replied
+that there had never been the least question of anything of the kind--a
+statement which can scarcely be described as accurate.
+
+Whether Bismarck entertained any designs with regard to Tunis is not
+known, but it was in this year that Germany began to show some signs
+of interest in the Philippines and other places supposed to be of
+some colonial value. The following extract from a letter written on
+the subject by the late Lord Lytton, who was at the time Secretary
+of Embassy at Paris, is a striking instance of rare and remarkable
+political prescience.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lytton to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 27, 1874.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Odo's impression (communicated to you) that Bismarck does
+ not want colonies rather surprises me. It seems to me a perfectly
+ natural and quite inevitable ambition on the part of a Power so
+ strong as Germany not to remain an inland state a moment longer
+ than it can help, but to get to the sea, and to extend its seaboard
+ in all possible directions. Is there any case on record of an
+ inland state suddenly attaining to the military supremacy of Europe
+ without endeavouring by means of its military strength and prestige
+ to develop its maritime power? But you can't be a Maritime Power
+ without colonies, for if you have ships you must have places to
+ send them to, work for them to do, and a marine Exercier-Platz
+ for training seamen. That is why I have always thought that the
+ English school of politicians which advocates getting rid of our
+ colonies as profitless encumbrances, ought (to be consistent) to
+ advocate the simultaneous suppression of our navy. Lord Derby says
+ that though Germany may probably cherish such an ambition, she
+ will have as much seaboard as she can practically want as long
+ as she retains possession of the Duchies. But that is not a very
+ convenient commercial seaboard, and I confess I can't help doubting
+ the absence of all desire for more and better outlets to the
+ sea, so long as her military power and prestige remain unbroken.
+ Anyhow, there seems to be now a pretty general instinct throughout
+ Europe, and even in America, that a policy of maritime and colonial
+ development must be the natural result of Germany's present
+ position: and such instincts, being those of self-preservation, are
+ generally, I think, what Dizzy calls 'unerring' ones.
+
+A letter from Lord Odo Russell written about this period throws a
+curious light upon Bismarck's imaginary grievances, and the difficulties
+which he was prepared to raise upon the slightest provocation. Probably
+no Minister of modern times ever uttered so many complaints, threatened
+so often to resign, and yet wielded such absolute power.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, Nov. 9, 1874.
+
+ I found Prince Bismarck in one of his confidential moods
+ the other day, and he indulged me in a long talk about his own
+ interests, past, present, and prospective.
+
+ Among many other things, he said that his life had been
+ strangely divided into phases or periods of twelve years each.
+
+ Born in 1815, he had left home when he was twelve years old to
+ begin his studies. At 24 he inherited his small patrimony and his
+ father's debts, and entered upon the life and duties of a country
+ gentleman. At 36 (1851) his diplomatic career began, and he was
+ sent to Frankfort, Vienna, St. Petersburg and Paris. At 48 (1863)
+ he was recalled to form the present Administration, which in twelve
+ years had carried on three wars and made the German Empire. He was
+ now 60 and worn out with the responsibilities and anxieties of
+ office, and he was resolved to enter upon a new phase (of 12 years
+ he hoped) by resigning and retiring into private life--a resolution
+ he begged I would keep to myself for the present.
+
+ I said I could well understand his wish for rest, but I did
+ not believe the Emperor or the country would allow him to indulge
+ in it, as he was well enough and strong enough to govern Germany
+ for many years to come.
+
+ He replied that he felt quite strong enough to govern Germany,
+ but not to be governed himself any longer by the Emperor, whose
+ obstinacy and narrow mindedness were more than he could bear.
+
+ I said I had often heard him complain of his Court duties
+ before, but it appeared to me that he always carried his points,
+ and that after some resistance the Emperor gave way in the end and
+ followed his advice.
+
+ He replied that it was that very struggle with his Imperial
+ Master that had worn him out and that he no longer felt strong
+ enough to carry on after sixty. He then related to me a series of
+ very curious anecdotes illustrating his struggles with the Crown,
+ and what he called the want of confidence and ingratitude of the
+ Emperor.
+
+ I asked him whether anything had lately occurred calculated to
+ increase his wish for rest.
+
+ He said that his present difference with the Emperor related
+ to the new army organization. The Emperor and his generals thought
+ the sole object of the German Empire was to turn the nation into an
+ army for the greater glory of the House of Hohenzollern; whilst he
+ held that there must be some limit to the heavy strain of military
+ obligations the Crown was ever anxious to impose on the people.
+
+ I asked whether he was alluding to the Landsturm Bill, which
+ placed every German from the age of 16 to 42 at the disposal of the
+ War Department.
+
+ He replied that he did not exactly allude to that, but there
+ were other measures in contemplation, elaborated in the Emperor's
+ military Cabinet, he could not give his sanction to, and which
+ would consequently lead to another painful struggle. He considered
+ that his great task had been completed in 1870 to 1872, and that he
+ could now retire and leave the internal organization of Germany to
+ other hands. The Crown Prince, he thought, might possibly govern
+ on more Constitutional principles than his father, who, born
+ in the last century, had not yet been able to realize what the
+ duties of a Constitutional Sovereign were, and thought himself as
+ King of Prussia above the Constitution, as the Emperor Sigismund
+ thought himself above grammar when he wrote bad Latin. A danger
+ to which the Crown Prince would be exposed as Sovereign was his
+ love for intrigue and backstairs influence--'some one or other
+ always concealed behind the door or curtain.' The Prince was not as
+ straightforward as he appeared, and he suffered from the weakness
+ of obstinacy and the obstinacy of weakness due to unbounded conceit
+ and self-confidence--but at the same time he meant well.
+
+ After a good deal more talk about his family, his property,
+ and his longing for country life and pursuits, we parted.
+
+ Without attaching undue importance to Prince Bismarck's
+ oft-repeated threat of resignation, I do not suppose he would go
+ out of his way to tell me and others so, without intention. My
+ impression is that he wants to obtain something or other from the
+ Emperor which he can make conditional on remaining in office, well
+ knowing that His Majesty cannot do without him. Besides which,
+ his retirement from office would have the appearance of a defeat,
+ consequent on his failure to coerce the Pope and his legions. He is
+ not the man to admit a defeat while he lives. Time will show what
+ more he wants to satisfy his gigantic ambition.
+
+The fear of war with Germany had died away temporarily in the summer,
+and the various political parties in France were free to continue their
+struggles and to reduce the situation to almost unexampled confusion.
+The motives of the Comte de Chambord and his followers were too remote
+for ordinary human understanding, and their object appeared to be to
+bring about a crisis and a dissolution of the Assembly on the most
+disadvantageous terms to themselves. Moderate Republicans were looking
+to the Duc d'Aumale as a safeguard against the Imperialists on the one
+hand, and the Reds on the other. Republicans of various shades, and the
+Reds in particular, were coquetting with Prince Napoleon, and he with
+them. Most men and most parties appeared to have particular objects,
+which they hated with a hatred more intense than their love for the
+object of their affections. Thiers, it was believed, would have rather
+seen anything, even a restoration of the Empire, than have the Duc de
+Broglie and the Orleanists in power. Notwithstanding the fusion, the
+Legitimists would have probably preferred Gambetta (or some one still
+more extreme) than an Orleans Prince--and so on.
+
+'I cannot make head or tail of French internal politics,' Lord Derby
+wrote, at the end of the year, 'and presume that most Frenchmen are in
+the same condition. It looks as if nobody could see their way till the
+present Assembly is dissolved and a new one elected.'
+
+The beginning of the new year was signalized in Paris by the appearance
+of the Lord Mayor of London, who had been invited to attend the opening
+of the new Opera House. That functionary has always been invested in
+French popular opinion with semi-fabulous attributes, and he seems to
+have risen to the level of the occasion. 'The Lord Mayor,' wrote the
+unimpressionable Lord Lyons, 'is astonishing the Parisians with his
+sword, mace, trumpeters, and State coaches. So far, however, I think the
+disposition here is to be pleased with it all, and I keep no countenance
+and do what I have to do with becoming gravity.' A little later,
+however, he was constrained to add:--
+
+ I am afraid the Lord Mayor's head has been turned by the
+ fuss which was made with him here, for he seems to have made a
+ very foolish speech on his return to England. Strange to say the
+ Parisians continued to be amused and pleased with his pomps and
+ vanities to the end, although the narrow limits between the sublime
+ and the ridiculous were always on the point of being over passed.
+ I abstained from going to the banquets given to him, or by him,
+ except a private dinner at the Elysée; but I had him to dinner
+ here, and, I think, sent him away pleased with the Embassy, which
+ it is always as well to do, and if so, I have reaped the reward of
+ my diplomatic command over my risible muscles.
+
+It was not perhaps surprising that the Lord Mayor should have been
+thrown off his intellectual balance, for the honours accorded to him
+far surpassed those paid to ordinary mortals and resembled rather those
+habitually reserved for crowned heads. When he visited the opera the
+ex-Imperial box was reserved for his use; the audience rose at his
+entry, and the orchestra played the English National Anthem. Twice he
+dined with the President of the Republic; the Prefect of the Seine gave
+a banquet in his honour; so did the authorities at Boulogne; and to
+crown all, the Tribunal of Commerce struck a medal in commemoration of
+his visit.
+
+The one thing that was fairly clear in French politics, besides
+abhorrence of the White Flag, was the gradual progress of Bonapartism
+which was beginning to frighten Conservatives as well as Republicans,
+and the Bonapartists themselves were inclined to regret having helped
+to turn Thiers out of office, because the army was becoming more and
+more anti-Republican, and it would be much easier to turn it against a
+civilian than against its natural head, a Marshal of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Jan. 26, 1875.
+
+ Bonapartism is still in the ascendant, and certainly the
+ Assembly is doing everything to give weight to the assertion that
+ France is unfit for Parliamentary Government. No one believes in
+ a moderate Republic, as a self-supporting institution unconnected
+ with some particular individual. The 'Conservative Republic'
+ was devised for M. Thiers. The Septennate Republic, if it be a
+ Republic, would be scouted if MacMahon were not at the head of
+ it. The Comte de Chambord is impossible. The Orleanists have cast
+ in their lot with his, and besides, the Government they represent
+ being constitutional or Parliamentary, is exactly what is most
+ out of favour, with the exception of the White Flag. As I have
+ said all along, the dispute is between a very advanced Republic
+ and the Empire, and _confugiendum est ad imperium_ is becoming
+ more and more the cry of those who dread Communism. Those who have
+ personal reasons for fearing the Empire are already taking their
+ precautions. Friends of the Orleans Princes are believed to have
+ seriously conferred (not with the knowledge or consent of the
+ Princes themselves, so far as I have heard) with the Bonaparte
+ leaders, in order to ascertain what the Orleans family would
+ have to expect if the Prince Imperial returned. At any rate the
+ Bonapartist papers have been insinuating that they would be allowed
+ to stay in France and keep their property; and these insinuations
+ are of course intended to relieve tender Orleanist consciences of
+ scruples in coming round to the Imperial cause.
+
+ The officers in the army are becoming more and more averse
+ from all idea of a permanent Republic. They would willingly wait to
+ the end of MacMahon's time, but they are beginning to talk of the
+ possibility of his being so much disgusted by the way in which he
+ is worried by the Assembly, as to throw the Presidency up.
+
+ In short France is at this moment in a fear of Bonapartism.
+ It may, and very probably will, subside this time, but it differs
+ from most intermittent fevers in this, that the attacks recur at
+ shorter and shorter intervals, and increase instead of diminish in
+ intensity.
+
+Fear of the Imperialists drove Conservatives into voting with Gambetta
+and other advanced Republicans; a ministerial crisis took place; the
+Assembly gave contradictory decisions and generally discredited itself,
+and the confusion grew so great that it seemed impossible to unravel it.
+
+ 'I have spent three afternoons at Versailles,' wrote Lord
+ Lyons on February 26th, 'and have seen a Constitution made there.
+ I have seen also such a confusion of parties and principles as I
+ hope never to witness again. I found Décazes, Broglie, and a great
+ number of Right Centre deputies at the MacMahons' last evening.
+ They all, and particularly Décazes, looked to me very unhappy,
+ and indeed they did not affect to be at all satisfied with the
+ occurrences in the Assembly. Like the horse in the fable who
+ invited the man to get on his back, the Right Centre have let the
+ Left get on their backs to attack Bonapartism, and don't know how
+ to shake them off again.'
+
+The ceaseless struggles between the various political parties in France,
+which were of little interest to the outside world, were temporarily
+interrupted in the spring of 1875 by the war scare which so greatly
+agitated Europe at the time, but which subsequently became an almost
+annual phenomenon. Unfortunately, Lord Lyons was in England during
+the greater portion of this critical period, and there are wanting,
+consequently, documents which might have thrown light upon what has
+always been a somewhat mysterious episode, but it would appear that the
+symptoms of alarm on the part of the French first showed themselves
+about March 11. On that day the Duc Décazes drew the attention of the
+British Ambassador to three incidents which ought to engage the serious
+attention of those Governments who were desirous of maintaining peace
+in Europe. These were the threatening representation made by the German
+Minister at Brussels to the Belgian Government respecting the language
+and conduct of the Ultramontane Party in that country; the pointed
+communication to the French Government of this representation; and the
+prohibition of the export of horses from Germany. Prince Bismarck,
+said Décazes, seemed to become more and more inclined to revive old
+grievances and to require of foreign countries the exercise of an
+unreasonable and impossible control over the prelates and even over
+the lay members of the Roman Catholic Church, and as for the decree
+forbidding the export of horses, it was so inexplicable that it could
+only add to uneasiness. It might be easy for England, and for some other
+nations, to regard these things calmly, but to France they constituted
+a serious and immediate peril. In spite of the steps taken during the
+past year to conciliate Germany on the subject of the Bishop's charges,
+the German Government had never officially intimated that it considered
+the question to be closed, and Count Arnim had used the significant
+expression to him, that it was only closed 'so far as any question
+between you and us can ever be looked upon as closed.' He believed that
+it was only owing to the influence of other Powers, and of England in
+particular, that the danger had been averted in 1874; and he now hoped
+that the same influence would be exerted in the same way. Décazes added
+a somewhat surprising piece of information which had been imparted to
+him in January, 1874, by Prince Orloff, the Russian Ambassador, viz.
+that in that month an order to occupy Nancy had absolutely been issued
+by the German Government to its troops, and that there were strong
+grounds for believing that this order has been rescinded chiefly owing
+to influence exerted at Berlin by Russia. So far as is known, there is
+no corroboration of this story, and it would appear that Prince Orloff
+was so anxious to convince France of the goodwill of Russia that he
+thought it advisable to drag England into the question, but it was not
+surprising that France should be sensitively alive to the danger she
+incurred, if Bismarck, irritated by his Ultramontane difficulties,
+should choose to throw the blame upon the Roman Catholics of other
+countries, or should resort to quarrels with foreign nations as a means
+of diverting public opinion in Germany from inconvenient questions at
+home.
+
+Prince Hohenlohe, the new German Ambassador, who also saw Lord Lyons on
+the same day, volunteered no opinion upon the representation to Belgium
+which had excited so much perturbation, but remarked with regard to the
+exportation of horses that the 'agriculturists might have been alarmed
+by the prospect of a drain of horses for foreign countries. He had no
+reason to suppose that purchases of horses had been made in Germany by
+the French Government for military purposes; but he had heard that a
+considerable number had lately been brought there for the Paris fiacres.'
+
+It will not have escaped notice that the German Government--or rather
+Bismarck--was fortunate in always having excellent reasons available,
+either for not complying with inconvenient requests, or for explaining
+away disquieting symptoms; thus, in 1870, the insuperable difficulty to
+disarmament was the King of Prussia; during the peace negotiations, all
+harsh conditions were due to _les militaires_, and in 1875 the German
+agriculturists and the Paris cabs were responsible for any uneasiness
+that might be felt temporarily.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, March 16, 1875.
+
+ I saw Décazes last night and found him in a greater state of
+ alarm about the intentions of Germany than anything specific he
+ told me seemed to warrant. The retirement of Bismarck to Varzin
+ will not reassure the French, because they remember that he was
+ there when the war broke out in 1870.
+
+ There is observable here, and not least among the Russians, a
+ sort of impression that there is to be a movement of some kind in
+ the East.
+
+ In short, there is a great deal of vague uneasiness and fear
+ that peace is in danger.
+
+ The German Embassy here has certainly been taking great pains
+ to put it about that the prohibition to export horses has been
+ decreed solely from economical, and not from military motives.
+ That Embassy keeps up very close relations with the _Times_
+ correspondent[11] here, and his subordinates. Of course the trouble
+ it has taken has increased instead of allaying alarm. Décazes
+ constantly harps on the string of the influence of England at
+ Berlin, and the consolation it affords him to feel sure that it is
+ exercised quietly on the side of peace. The position is a painful
+ one. Without particular friendships and alliances, France is
+ absolutely at the mercy of Germany, and if she tries to form such
+ friendships and alliances, she may bring the wrath of the great
+ Chancellor down upon her instantly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, March 16, 1875.
+
+ I do not know and cannot conjecture the cause of Décazes's
+ anxiety. Nothing has passed or is passing in any part of Europe to
+ justify alarm as to an early disturbance of general peace. But I
+ hear of a similar feeling of uneasiness at Berlin; and the Russian
+ Government is credited with designs as to the nature of which no
+ two persons agree. Until we hear more, I shall be inclined to set
+ down all these rumours of wars to the time of year, and to the
+ absence of any exciting questions (so far as foreign relations are
+ concerned) to occupy men's minds.
+
+ I may tell you confidentially that Bismarck has given us
+ through Odo Russell a serious warning against the unfriendly
+ feelings of the Russian Government towards England. He may be only
+ trying to stir up jealousy, a game which he often plays, or he may
+ be sincere. I take his hint as one not to be slighted, yet not
+ infallibly trusted. Gortschakoff is no doubt much disgusted about
+ the Conference; the Czar also to some extent; and probably they
+ both feel that they had miscalculated the effect of the Russian
+ marriage on English policy. But beyond this I know no cause of
+ quarrel. Dead calm for the moment. I cannot conceive any reason why
+ you should not take your leave when you wish it. Paris is always
+ within reach if anything new turns up.
+
+It is obvious from the above that neither Lord Derby nor Lord Lyons felt
+any very serious apprehensions, and the latter was permitted to go home
+on leave at the beginning of April. On April 10, Lord Odo Russell wrote
+to Lord Derby:--
+
+ Bismarck is at his old tricks again--alarming the Germans
+ through the officious Press, and intimating that the French are
+ going to attack them, and that Austria and Italy are conspiring
+ in favour of the Pope, etc. Now he has succeeded in making the
+ Emperor and the Crown Prince believe that France is meditating an
+ invasion of Germany through Belgium! And, not knowing any better,
+ they are in despair and have ordered the War Department to make
+ ready for defence. This crisis will blow over like so many others,
+ but Bismarck's sensational policy is very wearisome at times. Half
+ the Diplomatic Body have been here since yesterday to tell me that
+ war was imminent, and when I seek to calm their nerves and disprove
+ their anticipations, they think that I am thoroughly bamboozled by
+ Bismarck.
+
+In the middle of April there appeared in the _Berlin Post_ the
+celebrated article entitled: 'Is War in Sight?' and as it was well known
+that such articles were not written except under official inspiration,
+something akin to a real panic took place, more especially when other
+German papers began to write in a similar strain. Letters from Mr.
+Adams, who had been left as Chargé d'Affaires at Paris, show the
+pitiable condition of terror to which the French Government was reduced,
+and the efforts made by Décazes to obtain British support. Décazes urged
+that England ought to take an active part in protesting against the
+new theory that one nation was justified in falling upon another for
+no other reason than that the latter might possibly prove troublesome
+in the future. He said that he had protested to the German Ambassador
+against the attitude of the German Government, after all the assurances
+that it had received from the French Government, and added that if war
+took place in August, as he feared, he should advise MacMahon to retire
+with his army beyond the Loire without firing a shot and wait there
+'until the justice of Europe should speak out in favour of France.' The
+idea of openly identifying England with the French cause did not commend
+itself apparently to Mr. Disraeli.
+
+ 'I had a rather long conversation about French politics with
+ Mr. Disraeli,' Lord Lyons wrote to Mr. Adams on April 21st, 'and I
+ found him thoroughly well up in the subject. He wishes to encourage
+ confidence and goodwill on the part of France towards England,
+ but sees the danger to France herself of any such appearance of a
+ special and separate understanding as would arouse the jealousy of
+ Bismarck.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'With a little variation in the illustrations, Décazes's
+ language to you was just what he used to me before I left Paris.
+ Germany can, I suppose, overrun France whenever she pleases, a
+ fortnight after she determines to do so; and no one can tell how
+ suddenly she may come to this determination. Whether Décazes is
+ wise in perpetually crying "wolf" I cannot say. He is naturally
+ anxious to keep Europe on the alert, but I am not sure that the
+ repetition of these cries does not produce the contrary effect.'
+
+During the second half of April the tension began to diminish, but Lord
+Odo Russell, who was certainly no alarmist, felt convinced that, so long
+as Bismarck remained in office, the peace of Europe was in jeopardy,
+for his power had now become absolute, and neither the Emperor nor the
+Crown Prince were capable of withstanding him. Writing on April 24, he
+remarks: 'The prospect of another war fills me with horror and disgust,
+and if Bismarck lives a few years longer I do not see how it can be
+prevented. The Emperor's powers of resistance are over; he does what
+Bismarck wishes, and the Crown Prince, peace-loving as he is, has not
+sufficient independence of character to resist Bismarck's all-powerful
+mind and will.'
+
+A few days later the Belgian Minister at Berlin reported to Lord Odo
+Russell an alarming communication made to him by Count Moltke.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, May 1, 1875.
+
+ Since writing to you to-day, at this late hour my Belgian
+ colleague Baron Nothomb has called to tell me that he had a long
+ conversation with Moltke yesterday fully confirming what is said
+ in my despatch. Moltke added that, much as he hated war, he did
+ not see how Germany could avoid it _next year_, unless the Great
+ Powers 'coalesced' to persuade France to reduce her armaments to a
+ reasonable peace establishment.
+
+ Then Nothomb told me that Bismarck had sent Bülow to him with
+ the following confidential message: 'Tell your King to get his army
+ ready for defence, because Belgium may be invaded by France sooner
+ than we expect.'
+
+ This message Nothomb writes to Brussels to-day. He is under
+ an impression that in the event of war, Bismarck intends to occupy
+ Belgium, as Frederick the Great occupied Saxony when he suspected
+ Maria Theresa of wanting to take her revenge for the loss of
+ Silesia. This is curious, and you will probably hear more about it
+ from Brussels. I write in haste for the Messenger.
+
+The evident desire of Bismarck to fasten a quarrel upon France aroused
+the indignation of Lord Derby, who realized that the intervention of
+Russia was the best method of preventing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord O. Russell._
+
+ Foreign Office, May 3, 1875.
+
+ You seem reassured as to the immediate prospect, and the panic
+ in Paris has subsided, but great uneasiness remains. Lumley[12]
+ writes to me that the state of things seems to him most critical,
+ and the language which you report as held by Moltke is unpleasant
+ enough. Münster[13] has not called for the last few days: when last
+ I saw him, his language about French armaments tallied exactly
+ with that which you and others report as being held by German
+ representatives throughout Europe.
+
+ Is there no hope of Russian interference to maintain peace?
+ It cannot be the interest of Russia to have France destroyed and
+ Germany omnipotent. If the Czar were to say that a new war must not
+ take place, and that he would not allow it, Bismarck would hardly
+ undertake to fight Russia and France combined. I see little other
+ prospect of averting mischief, and if it begins, where is it to end?
+
+ Even here, and notwithstanding the sympathy felt in the
+ main for the Protestant German Empire, the outrageous injustice
+ of picking a quarrel with France, because she does not choose to
+ remain disarmed, would produce its effect. There would be a great
+ revulsion of feeling; not unlike that which took place when the
+ first Napoleon had begun to show his real character and objects.
+ The English public knows little about foreign concerns, but it does
+ understand that hitting a man when he is down is not fair play, and
+ I think in the rest of Europe fear and jealousy of the predominant
+ Power would give France many adherents.
+
+ I do what I can to point this out in a quiet and friendly way;
+ but without being sanguine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ May 4. The conversation about Belgium in the House of Lords
+ last night led to no result. I think I see a growing feeling,
+ indicated by the language of the press, that the German demands are
+ not necessarily unreasonable, and that we should at least hear more
+ of the case before pronouncing judgment.
+
+ To judge by the reports which Nothomb sends to his own
+ Government, he has been thoroughly frightened, and is ready to
+ advise unconditional acceptance of German proposals. Is he disposed
+ to be an alarmist? Or has Bismarck established a personal hold over
+ him?
+
+ We are quiet at this office, busy in Parliament; the Session
+ threatens to be long, but it will not be eventful.
+
+On May 6, Lord Odo Russell reported that Count Schouvaloff, the Russian
+Ambassador in London, had just arrived at Berlin from St. Petersburg,
+and was the bearer of important tidings.
+
+ The good news he brought respecting our relations with Russia
+ filled me with delight after the dark allusions made to me here
+ at Court and by the Chancellor during the winter. As regards
+ Germany and the war rumours, Count Schouvaloff gave me the most
+ satisfactory and welcome news that the Emperor of Russia is coming
+ to Berlin on Monday next, will insist on the maintenance of peace
+ in Europe, even at the cost of a rupture with Germany, and that he
+ can reckon on the support of Austria in doing so.
+
+ How Bismarck will meet the humiliating blow of being told by
+ his allies, Russia and Austria, that he must keep the peace with
+ France, when he has proclaimed to the world that France is ready to
+ take her revenge, it is difficult to foretell. But we must not be
+ surprised if it hastens on the outburst it is intended to prevent.
+ I hope not, and do not expect it, but I shall not be surprised if
+ it does, because Austria has really joined Russia. She has become
+ an obstacle in the way of German development, which Bismarck will
+ try to remove.
+
+It had, of course, been the object of Bismarck to sow dissension between
+England and Russia, and he had taken elaborate pains to convince
+the British Government that Russia was animated by the most hostile
+feelings. Consequently the extremely frank and friendly sentiments
+expressed by Count Schouvaloff were in the nature of an agreeable
+surprise, but the effusion of the Russian Envoy was so great that he
+seems to have slightly overdone the part.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, May 8, 1875.
+
+ I did not report Schouvaloff's conversation because he was
+ going to tell you all he had to say in great detail as soon as he
+ reached London. His frankness is fascinating, but on reflection it
+ does not inspire absolute confidence. I feel at first inclined to
+ believe all he says; but when I think it over, it appears too good
+ to be true.
+
+ If all he represents himself to have said to Bismarck about
+ the power of Russia to coerce Germany under certain circumstances
+ be strictly true, Bismarck would scarcely want him to succeed
+ Gortschakoff, as he does, if he did not feel that he could make a
+ tool of him (Schouvaloff).
+
+ According to Schouvaloff, the Czar and Gortschakoff are
+ to tell Bismarck next week that a new war must not take place,
+ and that if he does not submit and agree, Russia, with the
+ concurrence of Austria, is prepared to side with France to render
+ war impossible. In all probability, their conferences will end
+ in mutual assurances of peace and good will, and we shall hear
+ no more of war rumours and French armaments until those of
+ Germany are ready; and as Bismarck is a match both for the Czar
+ and Gortschakoff, I shall not be surprised to hear that he has
+ persuaded them to let him have his own way in the end. But this is
+ mere conjecture; we shall know more about it all a week hence.
+
+ The whole of Bismarck's policy now tends to produce a
+ coalition of the peaceful Powers against Germany, and his Church
+ policy, to produce dissensions in Germany and arrest the progress
+ of unification. It is therefore evident that he seeks a conflict
+ for purposes of his own.
+
+ I may be wrong, but I cannot but think that he wants to
+ mediatize the smaller German Powers and weaken Austria so as to
+ render her alliance useless to Russia, France, and Italy.
+
+ If I understand Schouvaloff correctly, Bismarck endeavoured to
+ set Russia against us, as he attempted to set us against Russia,
+ and he seemed to expect that Bismarck would make Gortschakoff
+ various offers in return for Russian co-operation or neutrality.
+ Indeed, he insinuated that he thought Bismarck a little out of his
+ mind at times.
+
+ The importance of the Czar's language and attitude at Berlin
+ is so great that I look forward with anxious interest to the
+ results of next week's conferences. For my part I have been careful
+ to hold the language you tell me you hold at home on these matters
+ in a friendly spirit to Germany and in the interest of European
+ Peace.
+
+On the same date (May 8), the Emperor Alexander and Prince Gortschakoff
+started on the journey to Berlin from which so much was anticipated,
+and the British Government addressed a despatch to Lord Odo Russell
+which was also circulated at Paris, Vienna, St. Petersburg, and
+Rome, instructing him to use all his power to put an end to the
+misunderstanding which had arisen between France and Germany. It is
+worthy of note that when this despatch was communicated to the Austrian
+Government, that Government alone declined to instruct their Ambassador
+at Berlin in the sense desired, on the ground that it would irritate
+Bismarck.
+
+The Emperor Alexander and Gortschakoff arrived at Berlin on May 10,
+and the question of peace or war must have been decided with extreme
+rapidity, for Lord Odo Russell dined with Bismarck on that night, and
+the latter took the opportunity to express his thanks 'for the very
+friendly offer, which he highly appreciated, as a proof of good will
+and confidence on the part of Her Majesty's Government.' At the same
+time he expressed some naïve surprise at the offer, maintaining that
+all his efforts tended in the direction of peace; that the war rumours
+were the work of the stockjobbers and the press, and that France and
+Germany were on excellent terms! Under the circumstances, it is highly
+creditable to Lord Odo Russell that he received this communication with
+becoming gravity.
+
+Gortschakoff who made his appearance after the dinner professed great
+satisfaction at Bismarck's language; but in conversation with Lord
+Odo Russell on the following day (May 11), Bismarck spoke with much
+irritation of Gortschakoff's intervention, which he attributed to senile
+vanity, and stated that he had refused Gortschakoff's request for a
+categorical promise not to go to war, because such a promise would have
+implied the existence of an intention which he repudiated.
+
+On May 12, Gortschakoff sent a telegram to St. Petersburg which gave
+dire offence: _La paix est assurée:_ and the Emperor of Russia requested
+Lord Odo to inform Her Majesty's Government that he felt certain of the
+maintenance of peace. Bismarck, secretly furious at the frustration of
+his plans, outwardly betrayed no ill-humour and put a good face upon his
+failure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, May 15, 1875.
+
+ Although Bismarck is as civil, confidential, and amiable
+ to me as ever, I fancy that he must be frantic at our combined
+ action with Russia in favour of peace, which took him by surprise.
+ However that matters little, and he will get over it, as he wishes
+ to keep well with us. But he will seek an opportunity of paying
+ out Gortschakoff for having come the Peacemaker and Dictator over
+ Germany again.
+
+ For my part, I was delighted at the course pursued by Her
+ Majesty's Government and at the instructions you sent me, which I
+ feel sure will do good, both at home and abroad.
+
+ The old Emperor William, whose bodily health is wonderful, but
+ whose mental powers are declining, will have been surprised and
+ grieved at the Queen writing to the Czar instead of to himself.
+ Bismarck thinks it is due to an intrigue of the Empress Augusta
+ to spite him. His hatred and abuse of the Empress is a perfect
+ mania. The Crown Prince sent for me to talk the incident over. He
+ asked many questions, but was himself reserved, beyond deploring
+ Bismarck's nervous state and policy which had been the cause of
+ such useless alarm. He asked whether I saw any likely successor to
+ Bismarck if his health broke down. I said plenty would be found
+ in Germany when there was a demand for them, which Bismarck's
+ popularity at present excluded. The Prince, though reserved, was
+ very cordial and very anxious for information.
+
+ Your conversation with Schouvaloff is word for word what he
+ said to me. I note one mistake on his part. He spoke with certainty
+ of Austrian co-operation, which failed us at the last moment.
+
+ I was much impressed by the warmth and eloquence of the
+ Czar's utterances of friendship for England. He seemed really
+ to feel deeply what he said, and to wish with all his heart for
+ an alliance with us. Gortschakoff was less ardent: it is not in
+ his nature; but he was persuasive and consistent in his friendly
+ assurances. Schouvaloff's attitude and language will show whether
+ my impressions are correct or not.
+
+ Münster's assurances to you in regard to the German army are
+ quite correct, I believe; only it is better prepared for war than
+ any other army in the world, and at ten days' notice. But when
+ Bismarck tells him to lament the alarm he has created himself, and
+ to ascribe it to Ultramontane influences in the press, Münster must
+ feel rather ashamed of his master.
+
+ We may certainly reckon on peace for this year. Next year
+ peace must depend on the state of Bismarck's combinations for
+ the completion of his task--the unification of Germany--Russia
+ permitting. He left for Varzin this morning, which will do him
+ good; but he returns on the 27th instant to receive the King and
+ Queen of Sweden who stay three days in Berlin.
+
+ I did not mention in my official report that the Czar asked
+ me to tell him frankly, if I was at liberty to do so, whether I
+ thought Bismarck had designs on Austria. I told him what the wishes
+ of the National Party were, and what they expected of Bismarck
+ their leader, and that I believed he contemplated weakening Austria
+ to strengthen Germany. The Czar thanked me and said that although
+ suspicion had been suggested to him from many sides, he could not
+ get himself to believe in so much perfidy.
+
+Such then in brief is the story of the great war scare of 1875, a tale
+which has been told by many writers with embellishments suggested by
+either Anglophil or Russophil proclivities. Which of the two countries,
+England or Russia, contributed most towards the preservation of peace
+will probably always remain a subject of discussion, but Bismarck at
+all events never forgave Gortschakoff his vainglorious telegram, and
+he used afterwards to maintain that, whereas the English had 'behaved
+like gentlemen,' the conduct of the Russian Government came under a
+distinctly opposite category. It is a remarkable fact that in spite
+of the indisputable evidence furnished not only by the foregoing
+correspondence, but from other sources, Bismarck subsequently had the
+hardihood to assert that the war scare of 1875 was a myth invented
+partly by Décazes for stockjobbing purposes and partly by the
+Ultramontane press--even the English press being according to his
+assertions under Ultramontane influence. In the authoritative work
+'Bismarck: his Reflections and Reminiscences' it is lightly dismissed
+as an elaborate fiction. 'So far was I from entertaining any such idea
+at the time, or afterwards, that I would rather have resigned than
+lent a hand in picking a quarrel which would have had no other motive
+than preventing France from recovering her breath and her strength.'
+Busch, in his better-known narrative, is also discreetly reticent on
+the subject, and the only reference to it occurs in some notes dictated
+to him by Bismarck in 1879. 'As far back as 1874 the threads of the
+Gortschakoff-Jomini policy are to be found in the foreign press--oglings
+and advances towards an intimacy between Russia and France of _la
+revanche_. The rejection of these addresses is due rather to France
+than to Russia. This policy does not appear to have originated with the
+Emperor Alexander. It culminated in the period 1875-77, when the rumour
+was circulated that Gortschakoff had saved France from us, and when he
+began one of his circular despatches with the words, _Maintenant la
+paix est assurée_. You remember Blowitz's report in the _Times_. Read
+it again and mention the matter. His account was correct, except when
+he spoke of an anti-French military party in Prussia. No such party
+existed.'
+
+It is instructive to compare with these passages the statements made in
+the 'Memoirs and Letters of Sir Robert Morier.'
+
+The crisis was definitely passed when Lord Lyons returned to Paris,
+and he found the French overflowing with gratitude for the exertions
+of Her Majesty's Government in favour of peace. Both Marshal MacMahon
+and the Duc Décazes were profuse in their expressions, and the latter,
+in particular, said that he attached immense importance to the fact
+that the same sentiments in favour of peace had been expressed
+simultaneously at Berlin by England and Russia. At the same time, while
+much encouraged at the thought that the danger of an attack from Germany
+had been averted, he affirmed very positively that he should not on
+this account relax his endeavours to avoid giving umbrage to the German
+Government. On its being pointed out to him that it was obvious that
+the vast and increasing sums which figured in the Budget of the French
+War Department had produced in Germany a very general impression that
+France was preparing for an immediate retaliatory war, he gave the
+somewhat unconvincing assurance that a vote for clothing the reserve
+would be struck out, but would be replaced by a supplementary vote
+introduced in the winter, when a vote for clothing might seem 'natural
+and unimportant.' According to Décazes, both the Emperor of Russia and
+Gortschakoff had, on more than one occasion, used language which showed
+that they viewed with satisfaction the efforts of France to restore her
+military power, and he endeavoured to impress upon the Ambassador that
+Holland first, and then Belgium, were next to France most in danger from
+German ambition. Finally, he pointed out with great satisfaction that
+Russia had not lent an ear to the offers which had, he presumed, been
+made to her at Berlin, to forward any ambitious views she might have in
+the East, and he said that he considered this particularly important,
+because it removed the only obstacle which might have interfered
+with a cordial co-operation, on the part of the British and Russian
+Governments, for the preservation of the peace of Europe. Whether any
+such offers were made or refused is not known, but as the next few years
+were to show, Décazes's conclusion was about as faulty a one as could
+well be imagined.
+
+ 'As regards public opinion in this country,' said Lord Lyons.
+ 'I find no diminution of the conviction that at the present moment
+ a war with Germany would be fatal to France, and that very many
+ years must elapse before France will be able to undertake such
+ a war with any prospect of success. All Frenchmen are earnestly
+ desirous that their army should be as speedily as possible placed
+ upon such a footing as to give them some security against attack,
+ and some influence in the world--but few look forward to there
+ being a time when they can contend with Germany, unless they have a
+ powerful ally to fight beside them in the field.
+
+ 'In the meantime I must confess that the gratitude towards
+ England, which I hear expressed by men of all parties, far exceeds
+ anything that I could have expected. On the one hand it shows
+ perhaps the greatness of the terror from which the French have just
+ been relieved; but on the other, it is, I think, an indication of a
+ sincere disposition to accept heartily and ungrudgingly any proof
+ of good will from England.'
+
+The insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which broke out in the
+summer of 1875, and the Turkish bankruptcy which followed a little
+later, provided the French with fresh cause for apprehension, as it
+was realized that the Eastern Question was once again reopened, and
+that any differences that might arise between England and Russia would
+be to the disadvantage of France. The French, who now saw the hand of
+Bismarck in everything, believed that he had a plan of sending the
+Austrian army into the Herzegovina, and the Russian army into some other
+part of Turkey, with a view to sending the German army into France, and
+much as the Government would have liked to have done something for the
+French bondholders, and at the same time to have recovered some of the
+influence formerly enjoyed at Constantinople, it was afraid to take any
+action which might irritate the omnipotent chancellor. Perhaps this
+was just as well, as far as England was concerned. The project of a
+European Conference at Constantinople, which had been already mooted,
+did not appear in any way to be conducive to British interests. Austria
+and Russia were not in agreement as to the policy to be pursued. The
+former had every reason to fear a Slav development on the frontier.
+On the other hand, the Emperor of Russia could not, even if he wished
+it, afford to disregard the feeling of the Russians in favour of
+their fellows in race and in religion. Both Andrassy and Gortschakoff
+foreseeing that neither could obtain a solution entirely acceptable to
+opinion in his own country, desired apparently to throw a part of the
+responsibility on a European Conference. But in such a Conference Russia
+would be supreme. France and Germany would bid against each other for
+her favour. Austria would be afraid to set herself against her, and if
+England had any different views, she would always be outvoted.
+
+Attention was shortly, however, diverted to another quarter. On November
+17, Lord Derby learnt that it was absolutely necessary for the Khedive
+to procure between three and four millions sterling before the end of
+the month, and that he was preparing to sell his Suez Canal Shares.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ 10, Downing Street, Whitehall, Nov. 17, 1875.
+
+ I am not quite easy in my mind about a story I hear, to the
+ effect that the Khedive is negotiating with a French Company for
+ the sale of his interest in the Suez Canal. If the telegram has not
+ been sent to you officially, I will enclose it. Now his bias has
+ always hitherto been against the pretensions of Lesseps, and he has
+ been of use to us in keeping that rather irrepressible gentleman in
+ order. If he withdraws from the concern, and a French Company takes
+ his place in it, our position will be very unfavourably altered.
+ Have you heard anything of the negotiations in question? I really
+ think the matter very serious, and it is one of which the English
+ public will fully understand the importance.
+
+ I think I am not violating any confidence in enclosing to you
+ for your personal use only an extract from Odo Russell's letter to
+ me received on Monday which seems to throw light on the situation.
+ I can add to it nothing in the way of comment.
+
+ Your information as to the position of the French Government
+ is satisfactory. It looks as if the worst of their troubles were
+ over.
+
+ P.S.--Since I began this note I have received further details,
+ which I send you, and, I may add in strict confidence that we are
+ prepared ourselves to take over the Viceroy's interest, if it
+ cannot be kept out of French hands by other means.
+
+ I find Lord Odo's letter is with the Prime Minister, so the
+ extract I promised must wait till next messenger.
+
+The result of Lord Lyons's inquiries, which had to be made very
+discreetly, so as not to create suspicion, was the discovery that the
+Khedive was actively negotiating with a French Company, but it was
+believed that he wanted to mortgage, and not to sell the shares. Lord
+Derby's next letter to Lord Lyons shows how reluctantly he took action.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Nov. 19, 1875.
+
+ From General Stanton's[14] telegrams it appears that the
+ Khedive has no intention of selling his interest in the Suez Canal,
+ though he may be obliged to mortgage it for a time. He has promised
+ to give us notice, if, from any cause, he should change his mind,
+ and to give us the option of purchase.
+
+ I sincerely hope we may not be driven to that expedient. The
+ acquisition would be a bad one financially, and the affair might
+ involve us in disagreeable correspondence both with France and
+ the Porte. But there is a strong feeling here about not letting
+ the Canal go still more exclusively into French hands, and as we
+ contribute nearly four-fifths of the traffic, it cannot be said
+ that this jealousy is unreasonable. There are intrigues of all
+ sorts going on at Cairo, but I think we may reckon on the Khedive
+ being true to us, if not tempted too strongly. I rely on you to
+ tell me all you hear on the subject.
+
+The memorandum of Lord Odo Russell referred to by Lord Derby is a lucid
+exposition of the European situation at the time and of Bismarck's
+attitude with regard to the other Powers, more especially Russia.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Berlin, Nov. 12, 1875.
+
+ Bülow is loquacious and straightforward on most subjects; but
+ his reticence on Oriental affairs is remarkable. I have repeatedly
+ tried the experiment of talking over what the newspapers say, to
+ draw him out, but he becomes silent and embarrassed, and seeks to
+ change the subject, and when questioned, replies that he has not
+ lately received any information from Constantinople.
+
+ I have in consequence tried to find out through confidential
+ sources what it all means, and putting two and two together, I
+ make out that Bismarck feels uncertain of Russia, and does not
+ wish to be committed too soon. Since Gortschakoff assumed the post
+ of peacemaker between France and Germany, Bismarck has failed to
+ re-establish confidential relations with Russia. In regard to
+ Oriental affairs, Gortschakoff, instead of being satisfied to act
+ with his German and Austrian allies exclusively, has sought to
+ keep up an equally balanced understanding with England, France and
+ Italy: from which Bismarck suspects that Gortschakoff does not mean
+ to let him have his own way and wishes to control Germany through
+ the united action and agreement of the other European Powers. This
+ does not suit his book, and above all, he fears that Russia wishes
+ to keep on good terms with England and France; which would, in his
+ opinion, neutralize the exclusive action of the three Northern
+ Powers, over which he hoped to establish his own influence to the
+ exclusion of all other Governments. By lending his assistance to
+ Russia in the East, he calculated on Russian neutrality in regard
+ to his own plans, as was the case during the late war with France.
+
+ The joint action of Russia and England last May, in the
+ interest of peace, took him by surprise, destroyed his fondest
+ calculations, and left him isolated and disappointed to reflect
+ on the possibility of a peace coalition against Germany, which he
+ could not break up without the certainty of Russian neutrality
+ or assistance. He feels that Gortschakoff has abandoned him for
+ the time being, that he has lost the confidence of the Emperor
+ Alexander, and that while they live, there is but little hope of
+ a change of policy in Russia, favourable to his plans--viz. the
+ breaking up of Austria and the neutralization of the minor German
+ sovereignties.
+
+ Bismarck reckoned much on his friend Schouvaloff, but
+ Schouvaloff turned traitor last May, and is less German in England
+ than he was in Russia, which Bismarck cynically attributed to the
+ influence of wine and women.
+
+ Now Bismarck, I am told, affects honest indignation at the
+ manner in which Russia is deceiving and misleading Austria in
+ regard to Turkey; but in what that consists, I do not yet clearly
+ understand.
+
+ When he returns to Berlin he may possibly speak to me on these
+ subjects, and I should be glad to know whether there is anything in
+ particular which you may wish me to say, or not to say.
+
+ On the whole the present situation of affairs seems to me
+ favourable to the maintenance of peace.
+
+ Of course we must be prepared for an occupation of some
+ portions of European Turkey by Austria and Russia, but that need
+ not necessarily lead to war.
+
+ I have also endeavoured to find out what the views of
+ the National Party in regard to the East really are, and I
+ find that the breaking up of European Turkey would be received
+ with satisfaction, for the Turk has no friends in Germany. The
+ German provinces of Austria are looked upon as the natural and
+ inevitable inheritance, sooner or later, of the German Empire,
+ for which Austria might be compensated in Turkey, with or without
+ Constantinople. Some people talk wildly of giving Constantinople
+ to Greece, as less likely to be objected to by the Western Powers.
+ But even Russia might take possession of Constantinople without
+ objection on the part of Germany. Anything calculated to break the
+ influence of France in the East, which is still thought to be too
+ great, would be popular in Germany, and more especially if the
+ interests of the Latin Church could be injured by it.
+
+ England may have Egypt if she likes. Germany will graciously
+ not object.
+
+ Since May it has become manifest that Russia has the power
+ to hamper the movements of Germany and arrest her progress
+ effectually, and that Germany can undertake nothing new without
+ the passive consent of Russia. This power must be so intolerable
+ to Bismarck that he is sure to exercise all his skill in drawing
+ Russia out of the combined arms of the Great Powers, back into
+ his own exclusive embrace. This, a difference between Russia and
+ Austria about Turkey, might enable him to achieve.
+
+ Bismarck's endeavours last winter to make us suspicious of
+ Russia, and _vice versâ_, are now fully explained. His failure must
+ add to the general irritation he suffers from.
+
+ The situation will become clearer when he returns to Berlin in
+ the course of the winter.
+
+Lord Odo Russell's view of the situation tallied with what Gortschakoff
+had said to Décazes, Thiers, and other people at Vevey, earlier in the
+year. The preservation of peace seemed, therefore, to rest largely on
+Russia, and it was unfortunate that the Eastern Question presented
+itself in a form which certainly favoured Bismarck's efforts to create
+differences between Russia and Austria, and between Russia and England.
+
+Further inquiries in Paris with regard to the Khedive's action seemed to
+confirm the view that he was seeking to mortgage the shares, but to whom
+they were to be mortgaged was unknown. On November 27, there arrived
+through Lord Tenterden, Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office, the
+intelligence that Her Majesty's Government had bought the shares.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Tenterden to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, Nov. 25, 1875.
+
+ Lord Derby is ill and at home. I am not sure therefore whether
+ he is writing to you to-night to tell you about the Suez Canal.
+ General Stanton telegraphed that Lesseps (supposed to be backed
+ by French Government) was offering four millions sterling (fr.
+ 100,000,000) for the Khedive's shares, but that the Khedive would
+ sell them to England for the same sum. Thereupon he was instructed
+ to offer this amount, and the Khedive accepted this morning. The
+ contract was signed to-day, as we have just heard by telegram.
+ Messrs. Rothschild advance the money on the security of the shares,
+ £1,000,000 in December, and the rest by instalments, the Khedive
+ to pay 5 per cent. on the shares while they remain without bearing
+ interest (the interest being hypothecated for the next twenty
+ years).
+
+ Her Majesty's Government are to apply to Parliament to take
+ the bargain off the Rothschilds' hands.
+
+ Practically, therefore, subject to Parliament's assent, Her
+ Majesty's Government have bought the shares.
+
+ I am writing in the greatest hurry but the above is a correct
+ outline of the case.
+
+ I suppose the French will make an ugly face.
+
+ P.S. It has all been kept very secret so far, so pray be
+ supposed to be ignorant till Lord Derby tells you.
+
+The action of Her Majesty's Government was taken none too soon, for
+as Lord Lyons reported, the shares very nearly fell into the hands of
+the French. On November 26 the purchase of the shares was publicly
+announced, and on the following day Lord Derby had an interview with the
+French Ambassador on the subject.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, Nov. 27, 1875.
+
+ I have seen d'Harcourt. He came to hear what I could tell him
+ about the Suez affair, and I told him the whole story exactly as it
+ is.
+
+ He says that there will be some soreness in France, and I am
+ afraid he is right. You know the facts, and I need not therefore
+ repeat them. The points which I dwelt on were these:
+
+ We did not wish that the Khedive would sell, nor was there on
+ our part the slightest desire to alter the _status quo_. But we
+ could not help his selling, and as he had decided on doing so, we
+ took the only effectual steps to prevent the possibility of the
+ shares falling into hands whose possession of them might not be
+ favourable to our interests. The suddenness of the whole affair was
+ not our doing. If we had delayed, other purchasers would have come
+ forward. We had to take the opportunity as it offered itself or
+ lose it altogether.
+
+ It is not in the power of the British Government to act
+ as Continental Governments can, through third parties--banks,
+ financial companies, and the like. What we do, we must do openly,
+ and in our own names, so that Parliament may judge of the whole
+ transaction. This I said in answer to a remark made by d'Harcourt,
+ that the act would have had less political significance if done
+ through some company, or otherwise, and not directly in the name of
+ the State.
+
+ We hold even now a minority of the canal shares. The question
+ for us is not one of establishing an exclusive interest, but of
+ preventing an exclusive interest from being established as against
+ us.
+
+ I have always expressed my opinion that the best arrangement
+ for all the world would be the placing of the Canal under an
+ International Commission, like that of the Danube; and I think so
+ still. I knew, I said, that the French Government were not prepared
+ to entertain any such idea, and I therefore did not put it forward;
+ but if France and other Governments altered their way of thinking,
+ I did not think any difficulties would be made by England.
+
+ M. d'Harcourt expressed some fear, or at least thought that
+ some would be felt, lest the Khedive should be unable to pay his
+ promised £200,000 a year, and we in consequence should use some
+ means to coerce him, which would practically establish England in
+ authority in Egypt. I assured him that nothing was further from our
+ thoughts. We wanted the passage through Egypt as free for ourselves
+ as for the rest of the world, and we wanted nothing more.
+
+The purchase of the Suez Canal shares has always been surrounded
+with much glamour and mystery, but in reality it seems to have been
+a perfectly straightforward and business-like proceeding, to which
+no reasonable objection could be taken. So far from being a profound
+political _coup_ long calculated in advance, the action of Her
+Majesty's Government was totally unpremeditated, and as far as Lord
+Derby was concerned, it was undertaken with reluctance, and under the
+conviction that England was making a bad bargain. So little confidence
+did Lord Derby feel, and so averse was he from incurring any further
+responsibility in Egypt, that he unhesitatingly declined a new
+proposal of the Khedive that he should sell to the British Government
+his contingent interest in the profits of the Suez Canal above five
+per cent., and informed the French of the fact. The British public,
+which warmly approved the transaction, seems to have been a better
+judge of the Foreign Secretary's action than he was himself. The four
+millions' worth of shares acquired by the British Government represented
+nine-twentieths of the entire amount, and it is interesting to compare
+these figures with the estimate put upon the value of the Canal by
+Lesseps. On July 11, 1874, the latter called upon Lord Lyons and said
+that two persons from England had sounded him about the sale of the
+Canal; one a member of the English branch of the Rothschild family, and
+the other a Baron Emile d'Erlanger, a well-known banker living in Paris.
+
+ The Rothschild was no doubt Nathaniel,[15] M.P. for Aylesbury,
+ who was here in the beginning of June. Lesseps said that on being
+ pressed by him to state a sum, for which the Canal might be
+ purchased, he had said a milliard (£40,000,000) and he declared
+ that although this sum had startled even a Rothschild, it was only
+ a fair one. His object with me seemed to be to give the impression
+ that the shareholders would not sell the Canal for any sum.[16]
+
+Although the French could hardly be expected to approve of the action
+of the British Government, which, if it had occurred some years earlier,
+would have caused a storm of indignation, they were, under existing
+circumstances, forced to accept it with tolerable equanimity, as it was
+of no use to add a coolness with England to their other difficulties;
+and, in addition, they gained a great deal by the rise which took place
+in Canal shares and Egyptian securities. Lesseps professed himself to
+be delighted and Bismarck sent a message to say that the policy adopted
+by Her Majesty's Government had met with the support of the German
+Government.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: French Military Attaché at Berlin before the war of 1870.]
+
+[Footnote 8: French Ambassador at St. Petersburg.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Finance Minister.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Lord Lyons to Lord Granville, Jan. 16, 1874.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Blowitz.]
+
+[Footnote 12: British Minister at Brussels.]
+
+[Footnote 13: German Ambassador at London.]
+
+[Footnote 14: British Consul-General at Cairo.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Now Lord Rothschild.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Lord Lyons to Lord Derby, July 11, 1874.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE EASTERN QUESTION
+
+(1876-1878)
+
+
+In January, 1876, the gradual spread of the insurrection in Turkey
+led to the concoction by the three Imperial Powers of the so-called
+'Andrassy Note,' and the great question was whether England would
+consent to take part in its presentation, in view of her traditional
+attitude towards Turkey. Lord Derby, in a letter to Lord Lyons, stated
+that Bismarck was very anxious that we should do so, and explained that
+although 'one can trust none of these Governments, it is as well to give
+them credit for acting honestly until the reverse is proved,' and he was
+therefore in favour of such a course himself. In a letter[17] addressed
+to Mr. Disraeli, asking for his views on the subject, Lord Derby
+remarked that: "It is too late to stand on the dignity and independence
+of the Sultan; a Sovereign who can neither keep the peace at home, nor
+pay his debts, must expect to submit to some disagreeable consequences."
+Lord Lyons, on being consulted, concurred with Lord Derby's views.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 14, 1876.
+
+ I hardly see how England is to avoid supporting the Andrassy
+ Note. If we stand aloof we shall stand alone. If our secession
+ produces no effect and the Turks still accept, we shall be in
+ the same foolish position France was in 1840; with this serious
+ inconvenience, that if the Andrassy plan fails in pacifying the
+ Herzegovina, we shall be blamed for the failure, as having caused
+ it by breaking up the unanimity of Europe. If the Turks do not
+ accept, they will be ready enough to throw the responsibility upon
+ us, and to call upon us to get them out of the scrape into which
+ they will get with the other Powers. I think that by consenting we
+ should leave the Powers least excuse for attacking Turkey, or at
+ all events, least excuse for pushing on without consulting us. I
+ should not be for qualifying our support too much, for, if we do,
+ the failure of the plan, which is in my opinion more than probable,
+ will still be attributed to us, and a support, given as it were
+ against our will, and restricted to the least possible amount, will
+ be treated very much as opposition. I say all this because you ask
+ me to tell you what I think: but there are two important elements
+ for forming an opinion which I lack. I mean a knowledge of public
+ opinion in England, and a knowledge of the real feelings of the
+ three Empires towards each other.
+
+ The despatch from Odo Russell looks as if Bismarck was
+ preparing for the possibility of a quarrel with Russia. Ever since
+ 1870 he has been very naturally trying to turn every opportunity
+ of dividing England from France to account. But since you joined
+ Russia in insisting upon peace last year, and still more since
+ the purchase of the Suez Canal shares, he has no doubt formed a
+ higher opinion of England, and conceived the idea that she still
+ has the will and the means to play a foremost part in European
+ politics. Like everybody else, he feels sure that if there is a
+ quarrel between Russia and Germany, France will side with Russia.
+ In order to prevent his enemy being all powerful at sea, he must
+ have the English fleet not merely neutral, but on his side. The
+ only advantage he can offer to England is support on the Eastern
+ Question, and it is on this question that he would have the best
+ chance of embroiling her with Russia. What part he means Austria to
+ play, I find it more difficult to guess. That he intends some day,
+ and by some means, to annex German Austria to the German Empire I
+ make no doubt, but I suppose he is in no hurry to add so large a
+ Roman Catholic and Southern population to the electors of the Diet
+ of the Empire.
+
+ The worst service we could render France at present would
+ be to set up a separate understanding with her in opposition to
+ Germany.
+
+The French Government was desperately anxious that England should not
+separate herself from the other Powers, partly from fear that such
+action would cause European complications, and partly because it was
+particularly desirous of getting credit with Russia for having brought
+English opinion round to Russian views. Her Majesty's Government finally
+decided to join in the Andrassy Note, although it would appear from Lord
+Derby's language, that the Cabinet were not unanimous on the question.
+
+Meanwhile French internal politics remained in the same confused and
+unsatisfactory state which had prevailed for so long. The divisions
+amongst the Conservatives had made Monarchical Government in any form
+impossible, and yet they refused to acquiesce, even temporarily, in the
+moderate form of Republic which had been established, and seemed bent
+upon doing all they could to exchange their King Log for a King Stork
+in the shape of a Red Republic. The elections which took place in the
+beginning of the year 1876 resulted in large Republican majorities both
+in the Senate and in the Chamber, and in the case of the former, this
+result was singularly unfortunate for Marshal MacMahon, as it deprived
+him of the power of forcing a dissolution. A letter from Lord Lyons to
+the Prince of Wales, who was on his way back from India, summarizes the
+French internal situation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, March 7, 1876.
+
+ I cannot give your Royal Highness a very satisfactory
+ account of French politics, although I do not take so gloomy a
+ view of them as many Frenchmen do. The large number of advanced
+ Republicans in the new Chamber of Deputies, the not inconsiderable
+ number of Ultra-Radicals, and the complete defeat of the Moderate
+ Conservatives in the Elections not unnaturally frighten the upper
+ classes of Frenchmen. But in fact so many of the members are quite
+ new men, that one cannot foresee how parties will group themselves.
+ The Chambers meet to-morrow, and in about a month's time it will
+ be possible to form an opinion as to how things are likely to go.
+ So long as Marshal MacMahon is at the head of the State and of the
+ army, there can be no fear of any serious disturbance of material
+ order; and if he is at the same time firm and conciliatory with the
+ new Chamber, and willing to take a Ministry from the more moderate
+ members of the majority, he will very probably be rewarded by
+ finding how tame demagogues can become in office. I understand the
+ Marshal insists upon having Ministers of War and Foreign Affairs
+ whom he knows and in whom he has confidence, but that he is willing
+ to let the other Departments be filled by men taken in the ordinary
+ way from the majority.
+
+ So far we have not this year been disturbed, as we were
+ last spring, by rumours of war, and agriculture and commerce are
+ flourishing in France, and the revenue goes on increasing.
+
+ Of the Egyptian Financial Question Your Royal Highness
+ will learn all particulars on the spot. Neither that, nor the
+ Herzegovina question are settled at this moment, but we must hope
+ that they are on the eve of being settled.
+
+One of the new features in the French political situation was the
+recovery by Gambetta of his former influence, and as he was now a person
+of considerable influence, Sheffield was utilized for the purpose of
+eliciting his views. The late Mr. George Sheffield, who acted as Lord
+Lyons's private secretary for over twenty years, was a well-known
+figure in the political and social world of Paris, and included in
+his acquaintance most people both there and in London who were worth
+knowing. Not only did he enjoy much personal popularity, but as he was
+known to be completely in Lord Lyons's confidence, he was the recipient
+of much confidential information, and generally believed to be a model
+of discretion. One of his peculiarities was that, in spite of much
+practice, he spoke very imperfect French with an atrocious accent, but
+this circumstance never appeared to prejudice him in any way, and it
+may incidentally be noted that the possession of what is called a good
+French accent is a much overrated accomplishment in France itself.
+Frenchmen rarely wish to listen; they desire to talk themselves and
+to be listened to; to them, as a rule, a foreigner is a foreigner and
+nothing more, and whether he speaks French well or ill, they seldom
+notice and rarely care.
+
+Gambetta, having secured a listener in the person of Sheffield, was no
+doubt delighted to expound his views on the situation. First of all,
+speaking on the subject of Bonapartist successes at the elections, he
+said that Bonapartism would die out as soon as it was realized that a
+moderate Republic was firmly established. He expressed great delight at
+the fall of Thiers (Thiers had once described him as a _fou furieux_),
+and said that under him no real self-acting Republic could ever have
+been formed, that it would have fallen to pieces at his death, and
+indeed that the best thing Thiers could do for the Republic would be to
+die. For Marshal MacMahon's entourage he had a great dislike, but for
+the Marshal himself much respect, and he aspired to be Prime Minister
+under him--a post to which he considered that he was fully entitled,
+but which the Décazes, Broglie, the Marshal's secretaries and the
+Maréchale and her friends would do their best to prevent him obtaining.
+He professed confidence in being able to keep the extreme Radicals in
+order; said that the Red Flag was as obnoxious to him as the White Flag;
+that he was not inclined to grant a general amnesty to the Communists,
+and that he would not agree to the re-establishment of the National
+Guard. He also professed himself to be in favour of Free Trade, and
+asserted that the commercial Treaty concluded by Napoleon III. accounted
+for many of the Bonapartist successes.
+
+Gambetta's aspiration of serving under the Marshal was never fulfilled,
+the above-mentioned entourage being presumably too strong for him; but
+the upper classes in France continued to look forward to the future
+with undiminished apprehension. French capital, reversing the present
+process, began to pour steadily into England, and it was stated that the
+rich Radicals were not the last in sending their money abroad.
+
+ 'Marshal MacMahon's position,' wrote Lord Lyons at the end
+ of March, 'does not improve. He has so little political knowledge
+ or ability that, as events have shown, he exercises little or no
+ personal influence in politics. There is also a jealousy springing
+ up with regard to Emmanuel d'Harcourt and other people about him
+ who are supposed to direct his political conduct. The officers
+ now at the head of the army would follow the Marshal very far in
+ any Conservative direction, but it may be questioned whether they
+ would submit patiently to being placed under a Radical Minister
+ of War--Gambetta for instance. It is the Marshal's political
+ intelligence that is doubted. No one has a word to say against his
+ disinterestedness, his honour, or his courage.'
+
+Marshal MacMahon, a simple and amiable soldier, who knew nothing about
+politics, was credited with an overwhelming admiration for the capacity
+of his private secretary, Emmanuel d'Harcourt. Upon one occasion, the
+question of applying for the extradition of a criminal who had fled to
+America was being discussed in his presence. 'Well,' said the Marshal,
+'we must telegraph at once to San Francisco.' 'Pardon, M. le Maréchal,'
+interposed d'Harcourt, 'Washington, not San Francisco, is the capital of
+the United States.' The Marshal was so astounded at the profundity of
+his private secretary's knowledge that he was only able to ejaculate:
+'_Ce diable d'Harcourt! il sait tout!_'
+
+Many stories were told of his engaging simplicity of character, of
+which the following will serve as an instance. Upon one occasion he was
+inspecting a military academy, and was informed that there was present
+a young Arab chieftain of distinguished lineage to whom it would be
+desirable to address some words of encouragement. The young man was
+brought up, whereupon the following brief colloquy ensued:--
+
+ Marshal: '_Ah! c'est vous qui êtes le nègre?_'
+
+ Arab Chief: '_Oui, M. le Maréchal._'
+
+ Marshal: '_Eh bien, mon garçon, continuez!_'
+
+By a curious combination of circumstances, Marshal MacMahon, with his
+inadequate political and intellectual equipment, was still able for some
+time to fill the place of a constitutional sovereign, and virtually the
+French were living under a constitutional Monarchy, with an Executive
+possessing large powers, rather than under a Republic. This state of
+things, however, could not last for long, and it seemed as if the choice
+lay between the youthful Prince Imperial and the establishment of a
+really Radical Republic.
+
+In one respect the French had every reason to congratulate themselves,
+namely, upon the re-organization of their army, and some of the
+political consequences which were likely to result from this increased
+and increasing military strength are pointed out in the following letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Sept. 26, 1876.
+
+ As soon as General Conolly finishes his visits to the Autumn
+ Manoeuvres and makes his reports, it may perhaps be desirable for
+ me to send you some observations on the political consequences of
+ the great progress the French Army is making. All the officers of
+ Foreign Armies and the English officers especially who have been
+ out with the French troops this autumn, seem to agree in regarding
+ the improvement as being undoubted and very considerable. In short,
+ it may not unreasonably be expected that in about three years from
+ this time, the French Army will be in such a state, that France
+ will count for as much or nearly as much, in the balance of power
+ in Europe, as she did before 1870.
+
+ The different phases of public opinion since the peace of
+ 1871 may be described as follows. At first, rage and mortification
+ produced a wild and unreasoning cry for revenge. This was followed
+ by a depression almost amounting to despair. In this state of
+ things the rumours of an intended attack by Germany in 1875
+ produced nearly a panic. Since that time hope and confidence have
+ gradually returned. The general sentiment now is that France is
+ safely 'biding her time.'
+
+ Under the influence of this sentiment, the French acquiesce
+ patiently in the present apparent eclipse of French power; they
+ disapprove of any attempt on the part of the Government to put
+ itself prominently forward in European politics; they desire to
+ preserve peace and tranquillity in Europe at almost any price; they
+ wish to disarm suspicion, and to be allowed three or four years
+ more to recruit their strength. Their policy consequently is to
+ adjourn as far as possible all questions.
+
+ Their ultimate object in all they do, is to recover their lost
+ Provinces; but however confident they may be of recovering in a
+ few years their old position in the world, I do not believe that
+ they contemplate, as the immediate result, an attack upon Germany.
+ I do not think that they at all foresee a time at which they could
+ run the risk of making such an attack singlehanded. What they do
+ intend, is to put forward with vigour their own views with regard
+ to the numerous questions they now leave more or less in abeyance,
+ and to contract if possible foreign alliances on equal terms.
+
+ One of the questions with regard to which they will be
+ disposed to change their tone very considerably will be that of
+ Egypt.
+
+ Another may possibly be that of the Newfoundland Fisheries, if
+ we do not succeed in effecting some sort of settlement of it in the
+ meantime.
+
+ A third may be the extension of their possessions in Cochin
+ China, and of their protectorate of Annam.
+
+ With regard to alliances, that which they will first seek
+ will no doubt be the alliance of Russia, and in a case of great
+ emergency, they would make great sacrifices of Western interests to
+ obtain it.
+
+ They will desire to keep on good terms with England, so far
+ at all events as to avoid throwing her into the arms of Germany,
+ but as they are not likely to conceive hopes of obtaining effectual
+ assistance from England towards recovering Alsace and Lorraine,
+ they will not be so eager for an English as a Russian alliance.
+
+ Another contingency to be kept in view is that a new President
+ or a new Dynasty, desirous of consolidating themselves by a little
+ military glory, may be led to direct an attack upon whatever
+ quarter it may be easiest to do so.
+
+ I will not however go on with mere speculations of this kind.
+ Of the truth of the conclusions to which I have come, I entertain
+ very little doubt. In two or three years France will not be in the
+ same accommodating frame of mind in which she is now, and will
+ have very much more powerful means than she has now of enforcing
+ attention to her wishes. All questions therefore in which the
+ influence of France is hostile, should be settled as quickly as
+ possible. The restoration of the strength of France may be found
+ useful in redressing the balance of power, but, anyhow, it should
+ be taken into account in all political calculations.
+
+It was not long before these anticipations were justified, but for the
+present, relations between England and France remained on a friendly
+footing, no doubt much to Bismarck's displeasure, who, at this period,
+was continually urging us to take Egypt and not to do anything else.
+As a matter of fact, if we had seized Egypt in 1876, it would not have
+had the immediate effect of embroiling us with France. On the contrary,
+all those who had a pecuniary interest in Egypt thought that they would
+gain by our taking possession of the county, while the great majority
+of Frenchmen looked upon the thing as inevitable, and thought it better
+to put a good face upon the matter. Any contradiction of the supposed
+English designs upon Egypt, however sincere and positive, met with no
+credence at all.
+
+There is an instructive extract on the subject, contained in a letter of
+Lord Derby of December 6, 1876.
+
+ It is evidently useless to say that we don't want Egypt and
+ don't intend to take it: we must leave our friends to be convinced
+ by the event. I have no doubt that everybody out of France would
+ be glad that we should seize the country. Russia would like it, as
+ making us an accomplice in her plans. Germany would like it still
+ more, as ensuring our being on uncomfortable terms with France
+ for some years to come. Italy would see in it a precedent and a
+ justification for seizing Tunis; Spain, the same, in regard to
+ Morocco. But you may be assured that we have no such designs and
+ are not going to run into adventures of this kind.
+
+There can be no possible doubt as to Lord Derby's sincerity; indeed,
+he was so constitutionally averse from an adventurous foreign policy,
+that a year or two later, Lord Salisbury said of his ex-colleague
+that he could never have brought himself to annex the Isle of Man. It
+is interesting to note that, in the above forecast of international
+brigandage, Tunis and not Tripoli was allotted to Italy, the designs of
+France in the former direction not apparently being suspected.
+
+Before the end of 1876 the experiment of trying to work the institutions
+of a Constitutional Monarchy in France under an elective chief
+magistrate had very nearly come to a deadlock. The Left were determined
+to get real power into their hands and not to allow themselves to be
+thwarted by the conservative tendencies of the Marshal and his personal
+friends. On the one hand, the Marshal stoutly maintained that he would
+have Ministers of his own choice in the Departments of War and Foreign
+Affairs, whereas the Left, so long as they had a majority in the
+Chamber of Deputies, were, under Constitutional Government, clearly
+entitled to decide the matter. But the question was complicated, because
+the Marshal, as well as the Ministers, was in a position to resort
+to resignation of office, and a severe Ministerial crisis ensued.
+Ultimately, the Marshal succeeded in keeping his Minister of War and
+his Minister for Foreign Affairs, but he was forced to accept, as Prime
+Minister, M. Jules Simon. The latter, although an able and conciliatory
+man, had been a member of the Revolutionary Government of National
+Defence, and having been forced to yield so far to his opponents, it
+seemed not improbable that the Marshal before long would be obliged to
+have recourse to Gambetta himself. Gambetta, as has been shown, had
+lately become much more moderate in his views, but in the opinion of
+many people he still represented the Red Spectre, and it was believed
+that his assumption of office would mean Communism, Socialism, equal
+division of property, judges appointed by election for short periods,
+the prohibition of marriage, and the suppression of religion. The
+desire of the Bonapartists was that the Government should fall into
+the hands of the extreme Left, in the hope that the people, from fear
+of the above contingencies, would clamour for the Empire; but what
+was more remarkable was, that many Orleanists as well as moderate and
+timid Conservatives wished to drive the Marshal to a dissolution in
+the hope of a reaction. There could have been no better proof of their
+short-sightedness and incapacity, for the mass of the electors were not
+in the least likely to make fine distinctions, and if really afraid of
+the Republic would certainly vote for nothing short of the Empire.
+
+The Conference which had assembled at Constantinople in the autumn in
+the hope of settling the Eastern Question, with Lord Salisbury as one of
+the British representatives, broke up in January, 1877, and it became
+clear that war between Russia and Turkey was unavoidable. Lord Derby,
+who was the reverse of sanguine by temperament, had never entertained
+any hopes of its success, and was quite determined that, whatever
+happened, there should be no British intervention. 'I am amused,' he
+wrote to Lord Odo Russell,[18] 'by your description of the Russo-German
+suspicions entertained against us; these fellows make us act as they
+would act in our place. They can neither deal straightforwardly
+themselves, nor give anybody else credit for doing so.
+
+'If you are asked what steps England is going to take next, your true
+answer should be "none." We shall wait, say little, and pledge ourselves
+to nothing.'
+
+The break up of the Conference filled the French with alarm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 5, 1877.
+
+ It is believed here that Bismarck is determined to produce at
+ least such a scare as he did two years ago, if not to do more. The
+ idea provokes some anger, but more fear. Nevertheless, the danger
+ is greater now than it was last time; for although France is very
+ far from being ready for even a defensive war, she does feel so
+ much stronger than she did in 1875, as not to be willing to bear
+ quite as much from Germany as she would have borne then.
+
+ The impressions prevalent here are:
+
+ That Bismarck is very much disappointed by the result of the
+ Constantinople Conference, which he had hoped would have ended by
+ setting all Europe by the ears.
+
+ That he is very much irritated by the cordiality which existed
+ between the English, French, and Russian Plenipotentiaries, and by
+ the considerable part taken by Chaudordy in the proceedings.
+
+ That he is very much annoyed by the number of Socialist votes
+ given in the recent German elections, and is eager to destroy Paris
+ as the hotbed of socialism.
+
+ That he wants a cry to make the Germans pay their taxes
+ willingly.
+
+ That he looks with an evil eye upon the material prosperity of
+ France.
+
+ That he considers the Exhibition of 1878 as a sort of defiance
+ of Germany, and is ready to go great lengths to prevent its taking
+ place.
+
+ These are French views, not mine; but I do agree with the
+ conclusion which the greater and the wiser part of the French
+ nation draw from them: namely that it behoves France to be more
+ than ever prudent and cautious, and more than ever careful not to
+ give Germany any pretext for a quarrel.
+
+ France is certainly not at all likely to oppose Russia in
+ anything that country may undertake in the East; but she is still
+ less likely to give her any military assistance there. She might
+ not be able to resist the bait, if Russia held it out, of an
+ offensive and defensive alliance against Germany, but in that
+ case she would more than ever want her own forces on this side of
+ Germany. This contingency, however, is too improbable to be worth
+ considering.
+
+ It is quite true that France has a large force on her Eastern
+ Frontier, and that she is hard at work there, but considering the
+ difficulty of guarding that frontier, such as it has been left by
+ the Treaty of 1871, her objects may well be supposed to be purely
+ defensive.
+
+ Lord Salisbury is to arrive this evening and to go on to
+ London without stopping.
+
+It is interesting to note that Lord Salisbury, while at Constantinople,
+formed a very poor opinion of the capacity of Sultan Abdul Hamid--an
+opinion which he must have had occasion to revise later on. 'Salisbury
+reports ill of the new Sultan; calls him a poor weak creature, from whom
+no help is to be expected. But his judgment is the result of a single
+interview.' So wrote Lord Derby to Lord Odo Russell.
+
+The French representative, Chaudordy, had been very active; his zeal
+had alarmed his own countrymen, and was supposed to have aroused
+the indignation of Bismarck, but one of the singular features of
+the Constantinople Conference seems to have been the action of the
+representatives of the small Powers such as Spain, Belgium, and Holland,
+who did their utmost, and not entirely without effect, to spirit the
+Turks up to resistance. In March there was much coming and going at
+Paris on the part of Ignatieff and Schouvaloff, who were thought to be
+endeavouring to secure what Russia wanted without war, and the former
+proceeded on a special mission to London, but the negotiations with the
+Turks broke down, and war was declared before the end of April. Letters
+from Lord Derby describing the state of feeling in England dwell upon
+the action of Gladstone, who, according to Schouvaloff, 'was much more
+Russian than the Russian Government,' and whose language was, 'only
+suited to a Panslavonic Society.'
+
+The outbreak of the war between Russia and Turkey was extremely
+distasteful to the French for various reasons. They were convinced that
+it had been instigated by Bismarck, and that it would result in the
+overwhelming preponderance of Germany on the continent, and were equally
+convinced that it would lead to a great extension of English influence
+in the Mediterranean including an occupation of Egypt; consequently,
+Décazes, who was anything but a straightforward politician, and anxious
+beyond everything to hunt with the Russian hounds, and run with the
+English hare, was constantly expressing fears that if an English
+force was sent to the East, the opportunity would at once be seized
+by Bismarck for falling upon France. A congenial opportunity for this
+intriguer arose over the question whether Egypt should be called upon to
+render pecuniary and military assistance to Turkey, and an unsuccessful
+attempt was made to persuade the Khedive that if he refused to comply,
+he would be protected. By these means Décazes would have secured the
+treble advantage of making himself agreeable to Russia, of pleasing the
+French bondholders, and, to a certain degree, of thwarting England in
+Egypt. Unluckily for him, the scheme miscarried; but in spite of ardent
+professions of neutrality, he contrived to render services to Russia
+which were of some considerable service.
+
+He used his influence to obtain a loan for her in Paris; his agents in
+Egypt supported the Russian threats to blockade the Suez Canal, and
+the effect of the Franco-Russian understanding was to force Germany to
+make greater sacrifices in order to retain the friendship of Russia by
+furthering Russian policy in the East. One of the methods by which the
+Germans sought to ingratiate themselves with Russia took the remarkable
+form of insisting (as the British Ambassador at Constantinople pointed
+out) that Russian subjects who remained in Turkey during the war, should
+not only be entitled to remain there undisturbed, but permitted to enjoy
+all the privileges of the capitulations, this being apparently the
+German conception of neutrality.
+
+The double game which Décazes was playing was not, however, popular in
+France. It was felt that his intrigues with Russia tended to throw
+England into the arms of Germany, and his enemies asserted that he
+was too fond of speculation to be a thoroughly satisfactory Minister.
+However, an internal political crisis of an exceptionally important
+nature in May diverted French attention from all foreign questions for
+the time being.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, May 16, 1877.
+
+ The Marshal has been getting more and more uncomfortable about
+ M. Jules Simon's giving way in the Chamber of Deputies to the more
+ advanced Left, and now, as you will have learnt from my telegrams,
+ he has turned him out. It is believed that if matters came to
+ extremities, the Marshal will bring out a thoroughly reactionary
+ Ministry which he has _in petto_. The Duc de Broglie, Prime
+ Minister, General Ducrot, Minister of War, and so on. This would
+ necessitate a dissolution, for which the consent of the Senate
+ would be necessary. But it is very doubtful whether the country is
+ ripe for anything of the kind, and whether the result might not be
+ the return of a still more radical Chamber than the present; and
+ then either the Marshal must retire and hand the Government over to
+ Gambetta or some one still more advanced in opinion, or make a real
+ _coup d'état_ by means of the army.
+
+ However he will no doubt try to form a Ministry rather more
+ Conservative than the last and still able to get on somehow with
+ the present Chamber of Deputies; but this will be difficult.
+
+ One of the Marshal's grounds of dissatisfaction with M. Jules
+ Simon was that he would not, or could not, get from the Chamber
+ powers which would enable the Government to restrain the press from
+ attacking Germany in the dangerous manner in which it has written
+ against that country lately.
+
+The action of the Marshal in turning out Jules Simon, who was supported
+by a majority in a recently elected Chamber, and replacing him by the
+Duc de Broglie, who was extremely unpopular, might well be described
+as a very strong measure. Décazes, who was supposed to be in the plot,
+remained in office, and there was therefore not much probability of a
+change in foreign policy; but it was evident that there were now only
+two real parties in France--the Republicans and the Bonapartists. The
+possible restoration of the Empire filled with dismay Lord Derby, who
+considered that the last six years had witnessed a great purification
+both of public and private life in France, and that if the French were
+going back to a 'Government of adventurers, adventuresses, and priests,'
+it would be a grave misfortune for Europe; and he was most anxious to
+let it be known that there was no sympathy in England for Bonapartist
+intrigues.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, May 18, 1877.
+
+ There are of course among the Right, many who, wisely or
+ unwisely, rejoice that Marshal MacMahon has broken with the Left,
+ but there is hardly any one who does not think the moment ill
+ chosen, the reasons assigned insufficient, and the mode adopted
+ unskilful. Décazes is represented, or misrepresented, as having
+ been at the bottom of the whole thing.
+
+ He came up to me last night, and asked if I had not something
+ to say to him about the sentiments he had expressed to me with
+ regard to the dangers to English interests in Western Europe. He
+ also expressed anxiety to know how the question of the wine duties
+ was getting on in England. He is, I suppose, anxious to have
+ something to show that he is successful in cultivating intimate
+ relations with England.
+
+ While he seems so desirous of frightening us about Holland,
+ he shows no inclination to admit that we have any interests at
+ all in the East. In fact his plan seems to be to involve us in a
+ quarrel with Germany, while he keeps safely aloof: to curry favour
+ with Russia by taking to himself the credit of keeping our forces
+ out of the East; to prevent any increase of our power in the
+ Mediterranean, and to be well with us, but, if possible, better
+ still with Russia. Still, on the whole, I am glad he remains in.
+ I should not have been sorry to have Broglie himself as Minister
+ for Foreign Affairs, but we might have a much more embarrassing
+ Minister than Décazes, and he is easy going and conciliatory in
+ most matters. Only we must not be surprised if he repeats to
+ Russia, and Russia repeats to Germany, anything likely to impair
+ our relations with Germany.
+
+ The other Ministers would almost seem to have been chosen
+ for the express purpose of defying the majority of the Chamber.
+ Broglie, of whom I have a high opinion, is especially unpopular.
+ I suppose the notion has been to put as far as possible
+ representatives of all shades of the Right into the Cabinet, in
+ order to be able to form a coalition strong enough to obtain a vote
+ in the Senate for dissolution. It is not certain that such a vote
+ could be carried, the Conservative majority in the Senate being
+ only 2 or 3 on ordinary occasions.
+
+Décazes took advantage of the occasion actually to suggest a secret
+alliance with England for the protection of Holland and Belgium, and
+stated that if it were ever signed, he should communicate to no single
+person except the Marshal himself. It is hardly credible that he could
+have been in earnest in making this suggestion, for not only are Foreign
+Secretaries not in the habit of making secret treaties unknown to their
+chiefs and colleagues, but Lord Derby was the last person who would be
+likely to enter into an enterprise of this description. In the meanwhile
+Bismarck, as an impartial friend, was warning Lord Odo Russell that
+Décazes was only waiting for an opportunity to throw England over, in
+order to prove his devotion to Russia, and there was little doubt as to
+which alliance he would prefer if he could have his choice.
+
+Exercising his right, Marshal MacMahon prorogued the Chambers, and it
+being foreseen that there would be a general election in the autumn, his
+Government set to work at once in preparing for the fight by getting
+rid of as many Republican functionaries as possible, in accordance with
+well-established custom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, May 25, 1877.
+
+ Neither the private history of the dismissal of Jules Simon,
+ nor the attitude of the successful party, is calculated to give one
+ good hope for the future.
+
+ The Marshal is supposed to have been mainly influenced by M.
+ de St. Paul, a Bonapartist and intimate friend of his, of whom
+ he sees a great deal; by Monsignor Dupanloup, Bishop of Orleans;
+ by the aides-de-camp and people about him, and (it is whispered)
+ by Madame la Maréchale. Fourtou may have been in the plot, but I
+ believe Broglie was taken by surprise. Décazes wanted to get rid
+ of Jules Simon and Martel, but to put temporarily in their places
+ some members of the Left, who would have got on for a time with
+ the Chamber. Jules Simon had proved a complete failure as Prime
+ Minister; he had neither the confidence of the Marshal nor even
+ that of the Cabinet, and he had lost all influence in the Chamber.
+ He would very soon have fallen of himself if he had been left alone.
+
+ The language of the Right tends to accredit the supposition
+ which will be most fatal to them in the country. They speak and
+ act as if the question was one between the aristocracy and the
+ canaille. In fact they wound the sentiment of equality which is
+ the strongest political and social sentiment in France, and
+ consequently the present crisis is beginning to be looked upon as
+ the last struggle of the old society against the new.
+
+ As regards the great question as to what is to be done when
+ the Marshal finds himself finally defeated by the Chamber, the
+ party now triumphant talk of the use of military force. The Marshal
+ has often declared to his friends that nothing shall induce him to
+ resort to an extralegal use of force, but the wilder spirits of the
+ party say that if the Marshal will not use the army, a general will
+ be found with less scruple, and they hint at Ducrot. But this would
+ be falling into the most fatal of all systems, that of military
+ _pronunciamentos_. The Marshal himself might do a great deal with
+ the army, and would probably keep it together, but it does not
+ by any means follow that any one general seizing power in Paris
+ would be submitted to by the rest. It is believed that even now,
+ General Berthaut, the Minister of War, was with difficulty induced
+ to remain in office, and yielded only to the Marshal's special
+ request, on condition that he should be relieved in the autumn.
+
+ It is however to be hoped that all this talk about military
+ _coups d'état_ is simply talk; and that we shall get out of this
+ difficulty quietly at last. In the meantime the upper ten thousand
+ in Paris are indulging themselves in all sorts of illusions, and
+ the Paris shopkeepers are dreaming of the restoration of a Court
+ and of a great expenditure on luxuries.
+
+The Chambers met again in June, and although the country was perfectly
+quiet, the scenes which took place in the Chamber of Deputies were a
+sufficient indication of the fury with which the politicians regarded
+each other. The violent and disorderly conduct was chiefly on the side
+of the Right, there being a certain number of Bonapartists who provoked
+disturbances with the object of discrediting Parliamentary Government as
+much as possible.
+
+On the other hand even the moderate men on the Left began to talk
+of revolutionary measures to be adopted when they got back into
+power again, such as the suspension of the irremovability of judges,
+the impeachment of Ministers, and the dissolution of religious
+congregations. On June 22, the dissolution was voted by the Senate
+by a majority of twenty. It was decided that the elections should be
+held in three months' time, and both parties made their preparations
+for an uncompromising fight, Marshal MacMahon beginning the campaign
+with an order of the day to the army which smacked disagreeably of a
+_coup d'état_, not to say a _pronunciamento_. Subsequently, having been
+assured of the support of the Comte de Chambord--a somewhat questionable
+advantage--he proceeded on an electoral tour in the South.
+
+The general election took place in October, and resulted in the crushing
+defeat of the Marshal and his Ministers in spite of the labours of
+prefects, magistrates, mayors, policemen, and priests, who had all been
+temporarily converted into electioneering agents. The exasperation of
+parties reached an almost unprecedented point, and Décazes admitted
+that the country was in a state of moral civil war. The partisans of
+the Government talked of a second dissolution, of proclaiming a state
+of siege during the new elections and conducting them with even more
+administrative vigour than the last. The Republicans announced their
+determination to annul the elections of all the official candidates and
+to impeach the Ministers and even the Marshal himself, if he did not
+retire or name a Ministry having their confidence. As for the Marshal
+himself, he found little support at this crisis from the monarchical
+parties, except on the part of the Orleanists, who saw that he must
+be kept in at all hazards; but the Orleanists had recognized that
+France, for the moment at least, was Republican, and their press owned
+openly that to persist in Personal Government instead of reverting to
+Constitutional Government was to march to certain disaster. The Marshal,
+in fact, found himself confronted with two alternatives: either he must
+accept Gambetta's demand to submit or resign; or he must run the risk of
+getting rid of his difficulties by means of a _coup d'état_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 26, 1877.
+
+ The prospect does not grow clearer, though I see, or at all
+ events like to fancy I see, a cooling down of the fury which
+ prevailed a week ago.
+
+ The Marshal is supposed to be a man of one idea, and his one
+ idea at the present moment is said to be that he is bound to remain
+ at his post.
+
+ This idea might lead him to name a Ministry from the majority,
+ but then he would have to dismiss all the Fourtou prefects, whom he
+ solemnly promised to stand by.
+
+ On the other hand, the idea might carry him on to a _coup
+ d'état_.
+
+ The plan devised by his opponents, and indeed by some of his
+ friends, for getting him out of the scrape, is that the Senate
+ should refuse to support him in extreme measures, and that he
+ should then declare (which would indeed be true) that he had never
+ promised to stay in opposition to both branches of the Legislature.
+
+ Communications which have been going on between the Elysée
+ and the Duc d'Audiffret Pasquier, the President of the Senate, are
+ said to have shown that the Senate cannot be depended upon either
+ to vote a second dissolution, or to carry on the Government in
+ conjunction with the Marshal, and without the Chamber of Deputies.
+
+ I register as rumours, strongly requiring confirmation, that
+ the Marshal has summoned the Chasseurs d'Afrique to reinforce the
+ garrison of Paris; that in consequence of disagreements between
+ Grévy and Gambetta, the Republicans offer the Presidency of the
+ Republic to General Chanzy, the Governor-General of Algeria; that
+ the more moderate Liberals have hopes of bringing in the Duc
+ d'Aumale as President, if MacMahon should actually retire.
+
+ As the population is disarmed and there is no National Guard,
+ there can be no need to increase the numbers of the garrison of
+ Paris. If any fresh troops were really brought up, it would be from
+ mistrust of the spirit of those already here.
+
+ Gambetta must have departed very far from his usual political
+ tact, if he has set up claims in opposition to Grévy. Grévy would
+ be quite alarming enough, and to establish the doctrine that the
+ President must be a general would bring France to the level of a
+ South American Republic.
+
+ It would be a curious result of an election, in which the
+ Orleans or Right Centre Party has met with a signal defeat, that an
+ Orleans Prince should be placed at the head of the State.
+
+The proper course for the Marshal to have adopted was to have accepted
+the position of a Constitutional President; to have appointed a
+Ministry which would have obtained a majority in the Chamber; and to
+have restrained it from excesses by the exercise of his legitimate
+authority, and by means of the power of the Senate. Instead of this,
+however, he first attempted to form a Ministry of the same colour as
+the old one; then tried to meet the Chamber with his old Ministers, and
+finally fell back upon perfectly unknown people who carried no weight
+at all, and who professed to represent no party. To this Ministry the
+Chamber refused to pay any attention, and after many threats in the
+Elysée organs to violate all laws; to collect and spend money without
+the sanction of Parliament, to suppress newspapers, and to proclaim
+a state of siege, the Marshal surrendered ignominiously in December,
+and accepted a Ministry in which M. Dufaure was President of the
+Council, and M. Waddington, Minister for Foreign Affairs. Thus, what
+should have been a natural and proper consequence of the elections was
+converted into an humiliating defeat, and there had been such a series
+of solemn declarations, none of them adhered to, that all confidence
+in the Marshal had disappeared. Of the more important members of the
+new Government, M. Dufaure was a lawyer with Conservative leanings. M.
+Waddington, who had been educated at Rugby and Cambridge, was intimate
+with Lord Lyons and the Embassy generally, but it was doubtful whether
+his connection with England would prove an advantage, as he might
+find it necessary to demonstrate that he was not too English. M. Léon
+Say, the Minister of Finance, was supposed to be a Free Trader; and
+M. de Freycinet, who was destined to take part in many subsequent
+administrations, had been Gambetta's Under-Secretary of State for War,
+and was looked upon as Gambetta's representative in the Cabinet.
+
+On December 17, MacMahon gave Lord Lyons his version of the history of
+the crisis.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Dec. 18, 1877.
+
+ I went to the weekly evening party at the Elysée last
+ Saturday. The Marshal took me aside, saying: 'I want to tell you
+ why I did it.' He proceeded to tell me that he had been led to
+ remain in office and make a Parliamentary Ministry, by a warning he
+ had received from abroad that if he retired, or if he established
+ a clerical Ministry, war would be the inevitable consequence.
+
+ So far the Marshal: what follows may be mere gossip.
+
+ On the afternoon of December 12, the Marshal had quite
+ determined _d'aller jusqu'au bout_; either to obtain from the
+ Senate a dissolution of the Chamber of Deputies, or to give in his
+ resignation. He was in consultation with General Rochebouet, who
+ was at the time Prime Minister, about drawing up a message in this
+ sense, when a letter was brought in, the bearer of which sent in
+ a message begging that the Marshal would receive him at once. The
+ letter was either written by the German Emperor, or at all events
+ it convinced the Marshal that the bearer was sent to give him a
+ message direct from His Imperial Majesty. The Marshal accordingly
+ received him alone, and he said he was a Prussian officer who had
+ been sent by the Emperor to entreat the Marshal to remain at the
+ head of the Republic, at all risks, and on any conditions; and
+ not to establish a Government which could be represented as being
+ clerical. The message is said to have represented that the Emperor
+ himself was most anxious for peace, but that he should not be able
+ to restrain 'other people,' if a clerical or a radical Government
+ were allowed to be established in France.
+
+ This sounds so like gossip that I should hardly have thought
+ it worth while to repeat it, if it had not tallied rather curiously
+ with the statement the Marshal himself volunteered to make to me
+ about his motives.
+
+ The 'other people' are supposed to be neither more nor
+ less than one other person--Prince Bismarck--and the message is
+ represented as having been sent by the Emperor William without the
+ knowledge of the Chancellor, or of the German Ambassador here.
+
+ Prince Bismarck's enemies, and they are of course numerous
+ enough here, like to argue from appearances that he has quite lost
+ the confidence of the Emperor, and some of them, who profess to
+ have peculiar means of obtaining information, say that he made
+ three conditions with the Emperor, as those on which alone he could
+ continue to serve him. 1st, that he should have _carte blanche_ in
+ the Government; 2nd, that the Empress should reside at Coblentz
+ or Baden rather than at Berlin; and 3rd, that certain people, of
+ whom he gave a list, should be removed from Court. As a natural
+ consequence, Bismarck's illness is attributed to his not having
+ obtained the consent of his Imperial Master to his conditions; and
+ it is said that he will not recover until his terms are complied
+ with. This story of the conditions appears to me to be a very
+ outrageous one, and I am quite unable to say whether there is any
+ admixture of truth in it. Those who recount it, love to draw from
+ it prognostications of the fall of the Great Chancellor.
+
+Whether the story of the Marshal's mysterious visitor was true or not,
+his defeat marked a decisive epoch in French internal politics; the
+Republic was now firmly established and cannot be said to have been in
+any dangers since, unless the vagaries of the impostor Boulanger be
+excepted.
+
+Ever since the beginning of the war between Russia and Turkey, Lord
+Derby had continually asserted that it was practically no concern
+of ours, and that he was quite determined not to be drawn into any
+intervention whatsoever. But as the Turkish resistance collapsed, and
+as it became more and more evident that there was nothing to prevent
+the Russians from exacting any terms they chose, unless some form of
+intervention took place, Her Majesty's Government decided to call
+Parliament together. Lord Derby was anxious to explain that this action
+had no sinister significance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Dec. 21, 1877.
+
+ You are not unlikely to be asked the meaning of Parliament
+ being called together earlier than usual. The explanation is
+ simple. We see a growing excitement on the question of the war; we
+ are menaced by an agitation friendly but troublesome, having for
+ object to drive us into war, and with a counter movement on the
+ other side. We think that much useless talk will be stopped; the
+ real opinion of the country be tested, and the Ministry relieved
+ from the annoyance of perpetual criticism which it cannot reply
+ to, if every peer and M.P. can say what he has got to say at
+ Westminster, rather than at a county dinner or borough meeting.
+
+ Those who have confidence in us will not be sorry to hear our
+ views explained by ourselves; those who have not, will have no
+ further opportunity of talking mysteriously about the country being
+ committed to this, that, or the other, without Parliament having a
+ voice in the matter. For it is clear that if we meant to act on our
+ own responsibility, and leave Parliament no choice except to ratify
+ or to condemn what we had done, we should not shorten by one-half
+ the interval that remains during which only such action is possible.
+
+ It is possible that there may be in France some renewal of
+ suspicions as to English designs on Egypt. If so, you may dispel
+ them by the most decided language you can use. We want nothing and
+ will take nothing from Egypt except what we have already, and what
+ other Powers share equally with us. We shall continue to work in
+ harmony with the French, and hope and expect the same from them.
+
+Lord Derby was the most cautious and unenterprising of men, and he
+already perhaps felt some suspicions as to the soundness of his
+colleagues in the Cabinet; but the assurance to be given to the French
+Government with regard to Egypt seems, on the face of it, somewhat
+gratuitous, if not rash. The situation in Turkey might have resulted in
+our being forced to go to Egypt at short notice, and only five years
+later he, Lord Derby, found himself a member of a Liberal Government
+which had been forced to adopt that very course.
+
+When the British Parliament met in January, the war was already
+practically ended, and the commissioners were treating for an armistice
+and for the preliminaries of peace. The Queen's Speech announced that
+although neither the Russians nor the Turks had infringed the conditions
+on which the neutrality of England depended, it might be necessary
+to ask for money and to take precautions, and on January 23, the
+Mediterranean fleet was ordered to pass the Dardanelles and to proceed
+to Constantinople. This action brought about the resignation of both
+Lord Derby and Lord Carnarvon, but upon the countermanding of the order
+to the fleet, Lord Derby resumed office. On January 28, the basis of the
+peace negotiations having been communicated, the Government asked for
+a vote of six millions, and in consequence of alarming intelligence,
+received from Mr. Layard the British Ambassador at Constantinople, the
+fleet was again ordered definitely to proceed to that city. Political
+excitement reached its climax, and light-hearted Jingoes, quite
+incapable of realizing the inadequacy of British military resources,
+proclaimed their readiness to fight any possible adversary.
+
+If it eventually became necessary for England to take active steps to
+secure her interests in the East, it was quite clear that no assistance
+whatever could be expected from France. M. Waddington took an early
+opportunity to assure Lord Lyons most emphatically that France wanted
+nothing for herself, and that she desired no acquisition of territory
+either in the Mediterranean or elsewhere; but whilst he disclaimed any
+desire of this nature, he showed in a most unmistakeable manner that
+an occupation of Egypt by England would create a bitter feeling in
+France which would long impair the friendly relations between the two
+countries. Speaking most confidentially, M. Waddington said that it was
+all important to France that England and Russia should not be involved
+in hostilities, and that France should not be left _tête-à-tête_ with
+Prince Bismarck, whether the latter played the part of an enemy or a
+tempter. In fact, the French Government, like its predecessor, was
+disquieted by a notion that Bismarck intended to propose to France
+some arrangement respecting Belgium and Holland, which would dismember
+those States, assigning of course to Germany the lion's share of the
+spoils, and it seemed to be apprehended that France would be called
+upon to choose between acquiescing in such an arrangement or incurring
+the active enmity of Germany. The fear of the French that they might
+become involved was so strong that Waddington was alarmed even at the
+idea of committing his Government to the British declaration as to
+the invalidity of treaties concluded without the participation of the
+Powers; but, in spite of this timorous spirit, and although the Treaty
+of San Stefano was not signed until March 3, Lord Derby informed Lord
+Lyons on February 2, that, the support of Austria having been obtained,
+Her Majesty's Government were determined to secure a Conference, and
+it was hoped that Italy and France would also exercise at least a
+benevolent neutrality. The uncertainty of the position was shown in Lord
+Derby's language with regard to Constantinople. 'I hardly know what will
+happen if the Russians insist on showing themselves at Constantinople.
+It is not a case we could make a _casus belli_ of, but I think it would
+in that case be desirable that the Neutral Powers should be present
+too--that is their fleets--both as a demonstration, and to keep order
+if necessary. The war being over, such a proceeding could not be
+misconstrued, as it certainly would have been before. All this, however,
+is uncertain.'
+
+Judging by subsequent experiences, Lord Derby would have spent a
+long time in securing the presence of the International fleets at
+Constantinople, and would have experienced still more trouble in
+persuading them to take any action. The Russians fortunately stopped
+short of Constantinople, and a Conference being now a practical
+certainty, Lord Lyons was invited to act as the British representative.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ February 6, 1878.
+
+ The Conference will probably come off, and it may come off
+ soon, though there is a chance of delay from differences as to the
+ place of meeting.
+
+ I find the feeling of the Cabinet unanimous, and I fully share
+ it, that you are the fittest person to attend the Conference on
+ our behalf. Indeed, I know of no one in whom I should have equal
+ confidence for a duty of that kind. Nothing has been said to the
+ Queen, but I have no doubt of Her Majesty's consent.
+
+ May I ask you if, considering the importance and difficulty
+ of the work, you will be prepared to sacrifice your personal
+ convenience so far as to accept the office if offered? I fear the
+ sacrifice will be considerable, but let up hope that the result
+ will repay your trouble.
+
+To most people, an invitation of this character, conveyed in so
+flattering a manner, would have had an irresistible attraction; but Lord
+Lyons was one of those persons to whom notoriety was indifferent, if not
+obnoxious, and who much preferred to confine himself to doing his own
+business in a practical and unostentatious spirit. He, however, felt it
+his duty to accept, hoping vainly all the time that the Conference would
+never take place at all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 8, 1878.
+
+ I wish to offer you my best thanks for your letter of the day
+ before yesterday. Your proposal to appoint me to represent England
+ at the Conference is very flattering in itself, and nothing could
+ be more gratifying than the terms in which it is made.
+
+ You were so kind as to speak of the sacrifice of my personal
+ convenience, but that consideration I will set entirely aside.
+ There are feelings of much greater weight which make me shrink from
+ the task, and it appears to me to be a task peculiarly difficult,
+ and one of which the result is, to say the least, extremely
+ doubtful. I may say, too, without any affectation of modesty, that
+ I do not think myself well qualified for it.
+
+ Still these are after all personal considerations which I
+ ought not to allow to interfere with any public duty which I may be
+ called upon to discharge. If therefore the Queen and the Government
+ should determine upon entrusting this mission to me, I should
+ undertake it heartily and zealously, and do my best to justify
+ their confidence.
+
+ Of course nothing can be settled until we know the rank and
+ number of the Plenipotentiaries of other Powers, the place of
+ meeting, and other particulars, which may have a material influence
+ in the selection of the Representative or Representatives of Her
+ Majesty.
+
+ If however the progress of events should ultimately lead to my
+ being chosen, I should be very grateful if you would allow me the
+ opportunity of conferring with you upon various matters, before any
+ definite arrangements are made. There is one to which I attach so
+ much importance that I will mention it at once. I trust that you
+ will allow me to choose myself the staff to accompany me on the
+ occasion. My efficiency and comfort would depend mainly on this.
+
+Apart from a disinclination to leave his own work, Lord Lyons probably
+considered that the outlook for England at a Conference was by no
+means reassuring. The issue of the Conference really depended upon the
+military position in which England and Austria would apparently stand,
+should the Conference itself break up _rê infectâ_, and at the end of
+February the English position looked to be none too favourable, for
+it depended upon the fleet having access to the Black Sea. If we were
+able to stop the Russian communications by sea, the Russians would be
+at the mercy of Austria by land, supposing Andrassy's boasts to be
+well founded; but we had no absolute security against the Russians
+occupying Gallipoli at any moment, and no semblance of a security of
+their not occupying the Black Sea exit of the Bosphorus, for the Turks
+were at their mercy, and, as pointed out by Mr. Layard, they were quite
+capable of making any arrangement with Russia, since they considered
+that they had been betrayed and abandoned by England. Neither, it might
+be added, was there any security that Austria would stand firm, for
+there was always the chance of her being bought off with Bosnia and the
+Herzegovina.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 26, 1878.
+
+ As to the Conference itself all seems more than ever in doubt.
+ Unless the Austrians are determined to go to war and are visibly
+ ready, and unless we are equally determined and equally ready on
+ our side, and unless the Russians are convinced of this, there can
+ be no chance of their making any concessions. Then, what will the
+ Austrians want? To bolster up the Turks, to waste energy in trying
+ to place under them again this or that district delivered by the
+ Russians, would be a very losing game. There must, I suppose,
+ be some new Principality or Principalities. If anything like a
+ national feeling and a national Government can be established in
+ them, their danger will be from Russia, and Russia will become
+ their natural enemy, unless they are thrown into her arms by a
+ hostility on the part of Austria, which will make them feel that
+ Russia alone is their defence against Turkey. Then there are the
+ Straits, and the difficulty of placing the Turks, or whoever is
+ to hold them, in a position to guard them against a Russian _coup
+ de main_ at least. Ignatieff seems to be already working the
+ connection between Egypt and the Porte, with a view to getting
+ money out of Egypt for Russia. I am inclined to think that the more
+ radically Egypt is severed from the Porte, and the less our free
+ action with regard to it is hampered by collective guarantees or
+ collective Protectorates the safer we shall be.
+
+The correctness of these views has since been amply demonstrated by the
+history of the Balkan States. The opinion about Egypt, however, was
+probably not at all to the taste of Lord Derby, who appeared to rejoice
+in divided responsibility.
+
+Lord Lyons himself was summoned to London early in March in order to
+confer with the Government respecting his procedure at Berlin, and
+judging from his letters to various correspondents, the course which Her
+Majesty's Government proposed to adopt was in a state of considerable
+uncertainty. It was, however, a source of much satisfaction to him that
+he would have the co-operation of Lord Odo Russell, who was an intimate
+friend, and in whose judgment he felt complete confidence. He also got
+his way about his staff, which was to include amongst others, Malet,
+Sheffield, and Mr. (now Sir William) Barrington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Odo Russell._
+
+ London, March 13, 1878.
+
+ My only comfort about this awful Congress or Conference is
+ that you will be my partner in it. I hope, if it does come off
+ after all, that we may get over it without doing harm to our
+ country or to ourselves. I wanted them to set me aside and take
+ advantage of the transfer to Berlin to put it into your hands;
+ and I still think this would be the best plan; but they say that
+ after their announcement of my appointment to Parliament, they
+ cannot cancel it. Sir Robert Peel has moved a resolution that I am
+ not a fit person to represent England at the Conference. I shall
+ console myself if he carries it. He grounds his motion upon 'my
+ well-known opinions.' I suppose he takes my opinions from a wholly
+ unauthorized and incorrect account of them which appeared in a
+ letter in the _Daily Telegraph_ yesterday. Some people suppose he
+ wrote the letter himself in order to have a peg to hang his motion
+ on. I don't think your difficulties at the Conference will arise
+ from strong preconceived opinions of mine. I shall try and get our
+ instructions made as precise as possible. Could you give me some
+ hints as to the particular points which should be decided before we
+ begin? You will know how far certain solutions in our sense will be
+ feasible or not. It is worse than useless that we should be told to
+ aim at impossibilities, and have to yield: though there may be of
+ course conditions, which if not admitted, will render it necessary
+ for us to retire from the Conference altogether.
+
+ I am sure you will be the greatest help and comfort to me, and
+ I hope I may be a help to you. Please tell me anything you wish me
+ to do or say here.
+
+Lord Odo Russell appears to have been equally in the dark as to the
+intended policy of Her Majesty's Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Odo Russell to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Berlin, March 16, 1878.
+
+ The feelings you express concerning the Conference are so
+ entirely my own that I need say no more, and only hope that Lord
+ Derby will give you a better qualified assistant than I can be with
+ regard to Oriental Affairs, of which I do not really know enough to
+ be of any use to you or to the country, beside such authorities as
+ Ignatieff, Lobanoff, Calice, Radowitz, Busch, etc., etc.
+
+ You ask if I could give you some hints as to the particular
+ points which should be decided before you begin.
+
+ I would do so with the greatest pleasure, if I only knew what
+ the policy of Her Majesty's Government is likely to be in Congress.
+ All I know about it at present is contained in Lord Derby's
+ despatch of May 6, and as far as Constantinople and the Straits are
+ concerned, I fancy Russia will be conciliatory.
+
+ You ask further how far certain solutions in our sense will be
+ feasible or not.
+
+ I wish I could answer your question, but can only beg of
+ you to tell me first whether we accept the consequences of our
+ neutrality, or whether we contest them: whether we are going
+ to reject the Turko-Russian Treaty, as we rejected the Berlin
+ Memorandum, or whether we are going to accept now what we refused
+ then.
+
+ Russia is now in possession of Turkey. Germany supports Russia.
+
+ France and Italy have no wish to quarrel with Russia or
+ Germany, and will not offer any serious opposition to the
+ Turko-Russian Treaty.
+
+ Austria may object to two things: the proposed limits of
+ Bulgaria, and the prolonged occupation of Russian troops.
+
+ If Russia is well disposed, she will consent to a smaller
+ Bulgaria and to a shorter occupation.
+
+ If she doesn't, Austria must choose between a diplomatic
+ defeat, a compromise, or war to turn Russia out of Bulgaria.
+ Bismarck will exert all his personal influence in favour of a
+ compromise to keep the three Emperors' Alliance together before
+ Europe in Conference assembled.
+
+ The annexation of Armenia and the war indemnity are questions
+ which Russia will scarcely consent to submit to the Congress at all.
+
+ What then is our attitude to be? Please let me know as soon as
+ you can, and I will do my best to answer your questions.
+
+ If we go in for Greek interests we shall have the cordial
+ support of Germany and Austria, I think--but Greek interests are
+ in direct opposition to Turkish interests, if I am not greatly
+ mistaken.
+
+ On hearing of your appointment I wrote to you to congratulate
+ myself and to beg of you to grant us the happiness of taking up
+ your quarters at the Embassy, and also to advise you to bring a
+ numerous and efficient staff, as I have not hands enough at Berlin
+ for an emergency.
+
+The letters of Lord Odo Russell at this period show that he was
+completely in the dark as to the intentions of Her Majesty's Government,
+and that he was quite unable to get any answer as to what was to be
+their policy with regard to the Treaty of San Stefano. He himself was
+convinced that the three Empires had already settled what the result of
+the Congress was to be, and that they simply intended to communicate it
+to Greece, Roumania, and other Powers for whom they wished to manifest
+their contempt, such as France and England, _à prendre ou à laisser_.
+Under these circumstances, it became doubtful whether it was worth
+while for England to go into a Conference at all and court unnecessary
+humiliation, serious as the responsibility would be if such a course
+were decided upon.
+
+There can be no doubt that much of the prevailing uncertainty was due to
+Lord Derby, who with great difficulty had contrived to keep pace with
+his more enterprising colleagues, and whose over-cautious temperament
+had prevented the adoption of any really definite policy. But Lord
+Derby, unable to stand the shock of seeing a few thousand Indian troops
+sent to the Mediterranean, resigned office on March 28, and the advent
+of Lord Salisbury at the Foreign Office marked a new departure in
+British Foreign Policy.
+
+Lord Salisbury's circular of April 1, 1878, was intended to show that
+the Treaty of San Stefano threatened the interests of Europe, and
+that the whole, and not parts of it, as proposed by Russia, should be
+submitted to the Congress. It pointed out that the creation of a big
+Bulgaria, stretching over the greater part of the Balkan Peninsula,
+and with ports on the Black Sea and the Ægean, would give Russia a
+predominant influence; that the proposed annexations in Asia Minor would
+give Russia control over political and commercial conditions in that
+region, and that the exaction of an indemnity which it was impossible
+for Turkey to provide, would enable Russia either to exact further
+cessions of territory or to impose any other conditions which might be
+thought advisable. The logic was sound, and at all events Lord Salisbury
+succeeded in producing a definite British policy, which his predecessor
+had signally failed to do.
+
+When Lord Lyons returned to Paris at the beginning of April the question
+of whether there was to be a Congress or not was still in suspense.
+French opinion was rather more in favour of England on the Eastern
+Question than had been expected, but there was no sign of anything more
+than passive sympathy, and Waddington, who was particularly sensitive
+on the subject, intimated, not obscurely, that the good will of France
+depended upon England not acting independently of her in Egypt. It
+looked, in fact, as if England would be left to bell the cat, although
+Lord Salisbury's circular, as was generally admitted, had immensely
+raised British prestige on the continent. The suspicion felt in France
+as to Russian intentions was shown by the failure of agents of the
+Russian Government to negotiate a loan at Paris for thirty millions
+sterling, and Lord Salisbury's letters in the early part of April show
+that, while there were symptoms of yielding in Europe, there appeared to
+be no prospect of those concessions with regard to Asia Minor to which
+Her Majesty's Government attached great importance.
+
+On the whole, the French Government was apparently anxious to act as
+far as possible with England, without committing itself too much, since
+the idea of a Russian naval station in the Mediterranean was highly
+obnoxious; but Waddington was hampered, amongst other causes, by the
+proceedings of Gambetta, who was disporting himself in some of the
+European capitals with the object of forming, or appearing to form,
+relations with foreign statesmen, which would enable him to put forward
+a claim to become eventually Minister for Foreign Affairs. Waddington
+always in private repudiated responsibility for what Gambetta said
+or did, but the latter was now so important a personage that it was
+necessary to keep on good terms with him and to submit to a patronage
+which must have been irksome to French Ministers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, April 24, 1878.
+
+ The negotiations for the simultaneous withdrawal of the fleet
+ and army from Constantinople proceed very slowly. We are making
+ no difficulties, but the Russians cannot make up their minds about
+ details, and are probably trying to screw some concessions out of
+ the luckless Turks. I shall be very glad to see the arrangement
+ succeed, because our fleet is doing no possible good there at this
+ moment. Whatever value it had, disappeared as soon as the peace was
+ signed. But as the Russians seem to be afraid of it, we must make
+ the most of it. Possibly, in their secret hearts, they entertain
+ very much the same opinion as to the position of their armies.
+
+ The general negotiations do not improve. Russia gives me the
+ impression of a Government desperately anxious for peace, and
+ driven on by some fate towards war. Andrassy undoubtedly means to
+ have Bosnia; but whether he will be satisfied with that I am not
+ so certain. It is a possible policy for him to throw the Danube
+ over altogether; to secure an outlet for his produce by a railway
+ to Salonika, and to accept a simultaneous extension southward in
+ parallel lines of Austrian and Russian possession--whether in the
+ form of actual territory, or of vassal states. In that case, he
+ will throw us over, and his course will be easy enough if he can
+ square the Hungarians. But that may be a difficulty. Do you gather
+ any information about his objects?
+
+ Is it your impression--as it is mine--that the French are
+ supremely anxious to push us into war?
+
+Lord Lyons's reply to these inquiries gives the reasons why the French
+views with regard to an Anglo-Russian conflict had undergone an
+alteration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, April 26, 1878.
+
+ I owe you many thanks for your letter of the day before
+ yesterday.
+
+ You ask me whether it is my impression that the French are
+ extremely anxious to push us into war.
+
+ Confidence in their returning military strength, and the
+ apparent success of their endeavours to conciliate Germany have
+ calmed their fears of Bismarck. They are no longer nervously
+ desirous that the forces of England should be kept in the west,
+ as a necessary check upon the great Chancellor's supposed designs
+ upon Holland, upon Belgium, or upon France herself. On the other
+ hand, they have given up counting upon Russia as an ally against
+ Germany, and have abandoned Décazes's policy of courting her and
+ espousing her interests. The result of all this is that they are
+ willing enough that the main force of England should be employed at
+ a distance from home.
+
+ They have been reassured about Egypt, and they think that if
+ England is engaged in hostilities with Russia, she will be less
+ disposed and less able to interfere with France or to separate from
+ her in Egyptian affairs. They have lost their great fear, which was
+ that England, instead of opposing Russia, would seek a compensation
+ for herself in the annexation of Egypt. Thus another of the reasons
+ which made them desire that England should abstain from all action
+ has disappeared.
+
+ There are, moreover, the patriots, who look far ahead, who do
+ positively desire that England should go to war with Russia. Their
+ calculation is that Austria and Italy would sooner or later be
+ drawn into the war on the English side, and that then, Germany and
+ Russia being isolated, France might join the rest of Europe against
+ them, and recover Alsace and Lorraine. These are said to be the
+ views of Gambetta and his friends.
+
+ There is, however, one feeling which pervades the great
+ mass of Frenchmen. They wish England to take the chestnuts out
+ of the fire for them. They are quite determined not to go to war
+ themselves for anything less than Alsace and Lorraine, but they do
+ wish to exclude Russia from the Mediterranean, and they are very
+ willing that the danger and the burthen of effecting this should be
+ incurred by England.
+
+ With these views their newspapers go on patting us on the
+ back, and may continue to do so, as long as we seem to be ready to
+ act alone; but they would change their note, if they saw any risk
+ of France being drawn into the war with us, until _after_ Austria
+ and Italy had joined us.
+
+ I know of nothing to confirm Odo Russell's information that
+ in return for the consent of Germany and Russia to exclude Egypt,
+ etc., from the deliberations of the Congress, Waddington engaged to
+ support Germany and Russia in everything else. What appeared on the
+ surface was that this exclusion was made openly by France a _sine
+ qua non_ of her attending the Congress, that she communicated the
+ condition simultaneously to all the Powers, and did not at all ask
+ for the assent to it as a concession. If there is only Bismarckian
+ authority for the bargain stated to have been made by Waddington
+ with Germany and Russia, I think it _mérite confirmation_. The one
+ object of Bismarck seems always to be to sow dissensions between
+ France and any other Power that she may seem to be approaching.
+
+ Notwithstanding the Comte de St. Vallier's assertion to Odo
+ Russell, Mr. Adams is quite certain that it was M. de St. Vallier
+ himself who reported to Mr. Waddington that Odo had communicated
+ to the Emperor William, Prince Bismarck, etc., a telegram from Mr.
+ Adams on the subject of the sympathies of France with England.
+ In fact Mr. Waddington who is an old schoolfellow and friend of
+ Mr. Adams, read to him parts of the private letter from M. de St.
+ Vallier in which the report was contained, and indeed one of the
+ phrases he cited from the letter was _le telegramme Adams_ as the
+ source of the communication made by Odo Russell.
+
+ The Prince of Wales arrived this morning and I have been all
+ the afternoon at the Exhibition with him, which obliges me to write
+ in such haste, that I cannot be brief.
+
+ I have just seen Hobart Pasha, who goes on to England
+ to-morrow morning and will try to see you.
+
+ I doubt whether Waddington or the Austrian Ambassador here get
+ any information about Andrassy's real views and objects.
+
+ The Russians seem to be hard at work trying to make the
+ execution of the Treaty of San Stefano a _fait accompli_. _Beati
+ possidentes._
+
+Lord Salisbury's suspicions as to the pressure being put upon the
+unfortunate Turks by the Russians were confirmed by an interesting
+letter from Mr. Layard to Lord Lyons, in which the much-denounced Abdul
+Hamid appears in quite a new light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Constantinople, May 1, 1878.
+
+ I am not surprised that Waddington should care nothing about
+ Armenia. The question is a purely English one, but to us a vital
+ one. The Treaty of San Stefano puts the whole of Asia Minor
+ virtually at the mercy of Russia and insures her influence over
+ Mesopotamia and perhaps ultimately over Syria, which would probably
+ not be pleasant to the French. This immense addition to the power
+ of Russia in Asia, and the command that she obtains, if the Treaty
+ be carried out, of routes to India and Central Asia, is a matter
+ of serious import to England. But probably there is no European
+ Power which does not envy us the possession of India, and would
+ not secretly rejoice at the prospect of our losing it. I believe
+ this feeling to be particularly strong with Frenchmen. But if we
+ intend to preserve our Empire as it now is, we must be prepared to
+ deal with this question of Russian aggrandisement in Asia Minor and
+ drive them back. Our only way of doing so, is by making use of the
+ Mussulman population. The idea of an autonomous Christian Armenia
+ to form a barrier to Russian advance is one of those absurdities
+ which are cropping up daily amongst our sentimental politicians,
+ who know nothing of the matters upon which they pretend to lay down
+ the law.
+
+ The Grand Duke Nicholas, before going, made an ultimate
+ attempt to bully the Sultan into surrendering Shumla, Varna and
+ Batoum; but His Majesty held firm and His Imperial Highness failed
+ to get a promise out of him on the subject. It is curious that
+ whilst our ignorant and unscrupulous newspaper correspondents are
+ systematically writing down the Sultan and denouncing him as a poor
+ weak creature incapable of having an opinion of his own, he has
+ shown far more firmness than any of his Ministers. Had it not been
+ for him, it is highly probable that the ironclads would have been
+ given over to the Russians, and more than probable that the Grand
+ Duke would have been allowed to occupy Buyuk Dere and the entrance
+ to the Bosphorus. The Russians threaten to seize Varna, Shumla
+ and Batoum by force, but I much doubt whether they will venture
+ to do so, as right is not on their side. Shumla and Varna are not
+ to be given up to Russia, but to the Bulgarian Principality when
+ constituted: and the arrangements for the final settlement of the
+ Russian frontier in Asia are to be made within six months of the
+ conclusion of the 'definitive' not the 'preliminary' Treaty.
+
+ I am anxiously waiting to hear whether the simultaneous
+ withdrawal of our fleet and the Russian forces can be arranged. It
+ is of the utmost importance to the Turks to get the Russians away
+ from San Stefano, but I cannot understand how the Russians could
+ consent to give up so advantageous a position, unless they found
+ that if they remained there they would be exposed to considerable
+ danger from a joint attack by the English fleet and the Turkish
+ forces.
+
+Layard, who was a fighting diplomatist, and possessed the rare quality
+of knowing what he wanted, had long chafed at the irresolute action
+of the British Government, and was all in favour of making a resolute
+stand against Russian aggression. Throughout the war, he had continually
+complained of the apathy and indecision of the British Cabinet, and
+attributed these deficiencies to divided counsels and to the advanced
+age of Lord Beaconsfield. Now, with Lord Salisbury installed at the
+Foreign Office, he plucked up hope again.
+
+ 'Salisbury,' he wrote to Lord Lyons, 'seems to know what he
+ wants--which is a great contrast to his predecessor. If he is firm,
+ we shall, I think, triumph in the end, and remove a great danger
+ from Europe and ourselves. Were it not for that double-dealing,
+ untrustworthy fellow Andrassy, we might perhaps accomplish all
+ that we require without war. Andrassy's proceedings give rise to a
+ strong suspicion that the secret understanding between the three
+ Emperors still exists. The Sultan is persuaded of it, and I have
+ found that his instinct in such matters is usually right.'
+
+On May 11, Lord Salisbury wrote to Lord Lyons saying that Count Münster
+(German Ambassador in London) had assured him that the object upon
+which the French were bent in the Mediterranean was Tunis. 'Do you
+hear anything of the sort?' he asked Lord Lyons, and added the highly
+important statement: 'It is of course an extension of French territory
+and influence of which we should not have the slightest jealousy or
+fear. But I am not assuming in any way that the Porte would wish to give
+it up. I should only like to have your opinion how far France would wish
+to have it.'
+
+To this Lord Lyons replied:--
+
+ Ever since I can remember, the Italians have suspected the
+ French, and the French have suspected the Italians of designs upon
+ Tunis. Bismarck's mention of it at this moment is probably only
+ one of his usual devices to sow distrust of France. I have never
+ found that the acquisition of Tunis recommended itself to French
+ imagination, and I don't believe it would be taken as anything like
+ a set-off against English acquisitions in Egypt or Syria. I believe
+ our principal interest in Tunis arises from its being a source
+ of supply of provisions to Malta. When Décazes wished to set us
+ against the supposed Italian designs upon it, he used to talk of
+ its being dangerous to us to have Malta in a vice between Sicily
+ and an Italian Tunis, but it never seemed to me that the peril was
+ very clear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ England is very popular here at this moment, and the Prince of
+ Wales's visit has been a principal cause of this, but the French
+ have no intention to fight with us or for us. They back us up in
+ asserting the sanctity of Treaties, and they certainly desire that
+ the _status quo_ may be maintained in the Mediterranean, until
+ France is a little stronger.
+
+It will be remembered that only a few years earlier the German
+Government had informed the French Government through Count Arnim that
+it would not tolerate the establishment of anything in the nature of
+a French Protectorate in Tunis; so that if the French were now really
+entertaining any designs of that nature, it was pretty obvious that it
+could only be the result of a hint from Berlin. The question of Tunis,
+however, was shortly overshadowed by greater issues. On May 16, Lord
+Salisbury transmitted to Paris a long document which formed the basis
+of the so-called Anglo-Turkish Convention. The proposals embodied
+subsequently in the convention were contained in a private letter to
+Mr. Layard, dated May 10, and the latter was directed not to proceed
+with the negotiations until further instructions were received, as the
+necessity for the convention depended upon the nature of the reply which
+Count Schouvaloff was to bring back from St. Petersburg. Whatever may
+have been said at the time in denunciation of the occupation of Cyprus
+and the Asia Minor Protectorate, it can hardly be denied that Lord
+Salisbury had a good case logically, as is shown by the following letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 22, 1878.
+
+ Until I see Schouvaloff to-morrow I shall know little of the
+ probabilities of our acting on that private letter to Layard of
+ last week, of which I sent you a copy. If, however, we do so, it
+ seems to me that we have a very good logical case--Is logic any use
+ in diplomacy?--against any objections the French may raise.
+
+ By the Tripartite Treaty of April 25, 1856, we had a right to
+ call on them to help us in restraining Russia from appropriating
+ Turkish territory. They have loudly and constantly asserted that
+ no military action is to be expected on their part. In Europe we
+ can meet the consequences of that desertion by the help of Austria,
+ Greece, the Rhodope mountaineers and others. But in Asia we are
+ abandoned wholly to ourselves. The French have left us to face and
+ guard against the consequences of that Russian encroachment which
+ they undertook to join with us in resisting. Does it lie in their
+ mouth, if we say that such encroachments, if persisted in, require
+ special precautions? that we cannot turn the Russians out by
+ ourselves, and that abandoned by our ally, who should have made the
+ task easy to us, we have no choice except to mount guard over the
+ endangered territory and take up the positions requisite for doing
+ so with effect? I do not see what answer the French would have.
+
+ But you will probably reply that my reasoning is idle trouble,
+ because logic is of _no_ use in diplomacy.
+
+The French would have had no real cause for complaint if they had
+discovered the contents of the proposed Anglo-Turkish Convention, for
+as Lord Salisbury had already pointed out, he had been careful 'to turn
+the eyes of desire away from Syria,' the only portion of Asia Minor in
+which France was interested; but Waddington had been making declarations
+against any of the Powers helping themselves to Turkish territory, and
+although these declarations were meant only to apply to Bosnia and
+Herzegovina, he would probably have used much the same language if he
+had learnt that England was thinking of occupying any portion of the
+Turkish Empire. Logic may not be of much use in diplomacy, but it is
+of still less use in influencing public opinion, and an appeal to the
+Tripartite Treaty, after it had been set aside so long, would have come
+rather late in the day. As, however, the necessity for providing for
+British interests and British safety in Asia was indisputable, Lord
+Salisbury was justified in contending that those Powers who disliked the
+only methods which were within our reach, should give us such help as
+would enable us to dispense with them.
+
+Upon the return of Schouvaloff from St. Petersburg, it turned out,
+as Lord Salisbury had anticipated, that Russia was prepared to make
+concessions in Europe, but scarcely any in Asia. Layard was, therefore,
+directed to negotiate the Anglo-Turkish Convention.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, May 29, 1878.
+
+ I send you two memoranda, or rather two separate versions
+ of the same paper, which will explain fully the nature of the
+ propositions which Schouvaloff brought back to me, and the extent
+ to which we have been able to accept his proposals. The upshot of
+ the matter has been that the Czar yields substantially all we want
+ in Bulgaria and as to the Greek provinces, but sticks to his text
+ as to Montenegro, Bessarabia, and the Armenian conquests, except
+ Bayazid.
+
+ I have informed Schouvaloff that against these Asiatic
+ acquisitions it will be necessary for us to take precautions; and
+ while taking from him a formal engagement that Russia will not
+ extend her position in Turkey in Asia, we shall ourselves give to
+ Turkey a guarantee to the same effect. We shall accept these terms
+ as soon as he receives from St. Petersburg authority to take them
+ in the redaction on which we have ultimately agreed. At the same
+ time we have taken our measures to secure ourselves against the
+ consequences of the Asiatic advance. Layard received on Saturday
+ telegraphic directions in the sense of the private letter which I
+ addressed to him a fortnight ago, and of which I sent you a copy,
+ and with great vigour and skill he procured the signature of an
+ agreement on Sunday last. We do not intend that this fact shall be
+ made public until the Congress, as the agreement is made wholly
+ conditional on the retention of Batoum and Kars. But whether we
+ shall succeed in these good intentions remains to be seen. Our past
+ performances in that line do not justify any very sanguine hope.
+
+ As there seems no chance of the Porte ceding Bosnia, and as
+ it is necessary to keep Austria with us in the Congress, we have
+ offered to support her in any proposal she makes in Congress on the
+ subject of Bosnia, if she will support us in questions concerning
+ the limits of occupation and organization of Bulgaria. It is not
+ necessary to tell Waddington this, but, as we have advanced a step
+ since he last asked us the question, it is important to avoid
+ language inconsistent with it.
+
+One cannot help suspecting Lord Salisbury's sense of humour as being
+responsible for the stipulation, that, if the Russians abandoned to the
+Turks their conquests from them in Asia Minor, the occupation of Cyprus
+should come to an end and the Anglo-Turkish Convention become null
+and void. On the following day (May 30), the so-called Anglo-Russian
+agreement was signed, and the enterprising Mr. Marvin, who had been
+temporarily employed at the Foreign Office on the cheap, handed it over
+to the _Globe_ newspaper, thus creating a political sensation of the
+first order.
+
+The agreement with Russia being now completed, and an invitation to the
+Congress in suitable terms having been accepted, Lord Beaconsfield and
+Lord Salisbury decided to go to Berlin themselves, instead of sending
+Lord Lyons.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ June 5, 1878.
+
+ I feel that I owe you many apologies for my rudeness in not
+ writing to you on Saturday night to announce to you the decision
+ of the Cabinet--and to thank you for the very kind and cordial
+ way you had placed yourself at our disposition in the spring to
+ perform what was a very ugly duty. The Cabinet was rushed to the
+ decision which it took, partly by the consideration to which you
+ advert, that the threads of the last two months' negociations were
+ more completely in our hands than by any process of communication
+ they could be in yours--but also by the fact that we have dangerous
+ questions looming at Paris--and we cannot afford to have you absent
+ from your post.
+
+ My excuse for my negligence is the prosaic one that I had
+ not a moment of time. The agonies of a man who has to finish a
+ difficult negociation, and at the same time to entertain four
+ royalties in a country house can be better imagined than described.
+
+ The Convention at Constantinople has been signed with
+ expression of lively gratitude on the Sultan's part. I am sorry
+ that your impressions of the mood in which the French are likely
+ to receive the news when published, are still so gloomy. However,
+ we must hope for the best. We have assembled a powerful fleet at
+ Portsmouth and we shall have six or seven first-rate ironclads to
+ do what may be necessary in the Mediterranean, besides smaller
+ ships. And our relations with Bismarck are particularly good. So I
+ hope our friends at Paris will confine themselves to epigram.
+
+ If we can, we shall keep the matter secret till we get at
+ Congress to the part of the Treaty of San Stefano (Art. XIX) which
+ concerns the Asiatic annexations. I do not know whether d'Harcourt
+ has any inkling, but ever since his return from Paris his manner
+ has changed.
+
+Lord Lyons hailed the decision of Lords Beaconsfield and Salisbury as a
+'deliverance from a nightmare which had weighed upon him since March,'
+and found a sympathizer in Lord Odo Russell, who had never expected
+much good from the Congress if the Three Emperors' League was revived,
+and who doubted whether the British public would be contented with an
+amended San Stefano Treaty. The probable action of Waddington, who
+was to be the French representative at Berlin, is foreshadowed in the
+following letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, June 4, 1878.
+
+ I am very glad that you and Lord Beaconsfield have determined
+ to go yourselves to the Congress. The matters to be treated are too
+ grave to be left to subordinates, and they could hardly be treated
+ properly by any one who had not had a minute acquaintance day by
+ day with the recent communications with Russia and Austria.
+
+ Waddington will, I think, be a satisfactory colleague in some
+ respects, but in others I am afraid you will have difficulties with
+ him. His English blood and his English education tell both ways.
+ On the one hand, he is more straightforward than most Frenchmen;
+ he understands and shares many English feelings, and he sees the
+ force of English arguments, or perhaps I should rather say, of
+ arguments put forward in an English way. But, on the other hand, he
+ feels strongly the necessity of guarding against the tendency in
+ France to suspect him of an English bias. He will be disposed to
+ join in resistance to exaggerated Russian pretensions with regard
+ to Roumelia and the Danube. His personal sentiments are strongly
+ in favour of Greece. He has a certain sympathy with Christian as
+ against Mussulman, but he does not carry this to an immoderate or
+ unpractical extent. There is, however, one point on which you may
+ find him very stiff. He is most strongly opposed to any change in
+ the relative position of the Great Powers in the Mediterranean,
+ and he would, I am afraid, be quite as unwilling to see England
+ extend her influence in that sea, as he would be to see Russia do
+ so. It is in order to prevent any alteration in the _statu quo_ in
+ the Mediterranean, more than from any other reason, that he has
+ made the participation of France in the Congress conditional on
+ the exclusion of all questions not directly arising out of the war
+ between Russia and Turkey, and has positively mentioned Syria and
+ Egypt as countries to be excluded from the discussion. He would
+ not perhaps be disinclined to let these questions come up, if he
+ thought he should obtain the support of other Powers in resisting
+ any change made outside of the Congress.
+
+ At any rate, public feeling in France would probably be too
+ strong to allow him to acquiesce in any redistribution of territory
+ or influence in favour of England. But I expressed my opinion on
+ this point so fully to you and Lord Beaconsfield in the interview I
+ had with you just before I left England, that I have nothing more
+ to say about it. The horrible event[19] which took place at Berlin
+ the day before yesterday has, however, thrown so strong a light
+ upon one phase of French opinion, that I feel bound to direct your
+ attention to it. It seems very shocking that while the Emperor
+ William is suffering from the wounds so wickedly inflicted, people
+ here should be speculating upon the consequences of their being
+ fatal, but so it is. The French believe that the maintenance of
+ the present military system in Germany depends upon the Emperor
+ William, and that even if His Majesty's successor had the same
+ determination as His Majesty himself to keep it up, public opinion
+ in the country would make it impossible for him to do so. What
+ foundation there may be for this supposition, I do not pretend to
+ determine; but that it influences the French is certain. Anything
+ which makes them believe the life of the Emperor to be precarious,
+ diminishes the restraint which the fear of Germany imposes upon
+ them, and renders them more stiff in asserting their own views and
+ pretensions, and less averse from contemplating the possibility of
+ supporting them by more than words.
+
+ There are, in my opinion, strong arguments to be brought in
+ favour of our taking measures to be in a position to resist Russia
+ by our own means, if other Powers will give us no help in doing
+ so; but as you said in a former letter, logic is perhaps not of
+ much use in diplomacy, and seems to me to be of still less use
+ in influencing public opinion. I doubt our logic doing much to
+ reconcile the French to our exercising a separate protection over
+ Turkey in Asia, or occupying a Turkish island in the Mediterranean.
+ I am afraid you will think I have become more nervous than
+ ever, and more prone to the common error among diplomatists of
+ exaggerating the importance of the country in which they are
+ themselves stationed, but anyhow I have not seen any reason to
+ change my views as to the feelings prevalent in France.
+
+ The Parliamentary session at Versailles is about to close.
+ Thanks to the Exhibition, it has been a very tranquil one, but we
+ must be on the look-out for squalls when the Chamber meets again
+ in the autumn. Gambetta has hitherto restrained his followers from
+ opposing the Ministry, and from proposing radical measures, but it
+ is doubtful whether he will be able, even if willing, to restrain
+ them after the end of the Exhibition. Some unexpected incident
+ might even produce a crisis before. At any rate the elections of
+ a portion of the Senate, which will take place early next year,
+ may remove the check which the Conservative majority in that House
+ has hitherto put upon the Chamber of Deputies. The Marshal does
+ not talk of making any more attempts at resisting the will of the
+ majority, but I understand that he does not talk very seriously of
+ retiring as soon as the election is over.
+
+ It may perhaps be worth while to mention that Waddington finds
+ the influence of Gambetta over the Government very irksome, and is
+ not fond of having it alluded to.
+
+The Congress met at Berlin in the middle of June, and the awkward
+question of whether Waddington should be informed of the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention or not was debated. Lord Lyons knew perfectly well that the
+French would be furious when they heard of it, and that the greater the
+surprise, the greater would be their indignation. The lines laid down
+for Waddington's guidance at the Congress were that France desired:
+
+1. Peace.
+
+2. Neutrality.
+
+3. The necessity of the consent of all the Powers to any modifications
+of the Treaties.
+
+4. The exclusion of Egypt, Syria, the Holy Places, and other topics
+foreign to the Russo-Turkish War.
+
+These points were certainly not favourable to England receiving any
+support from France in defending her menaced interests in Asia Minor,
+as the absolute neutrality of France was the point most insisted upon.
+In fact France was so obviously anxious to stand aloof, that one
+suggestion was made that she should be asked to co-operate with us in
+Asia Minor on the assumption that such co-operation was sure to be
+refused. This, however, was considered to be too hazardous a course,
+and it was eventually decided to say nothing to Waddington for the time
+being, lest he should make the Anglo-Turkish Convention an excuse for
+not attending the Congress at all. The secret, unlike the Anglo-Russian
+agreement, seems to have been well kept, and cannot have been known to
+the Russians, or they would have utilized it for the purpose of sowing
+discord between the British and French representatives. Finally, on July
+6, Lord Salisbury told the whole story to Waddington in a private letter.
+
+In this letter Lord Salisbury pointed out that, as far as the Russian
+annexations in Asia Minor were concerned, we were in a completely
+isolated condition, since Austria was only willing to take part in
+restoring the Porte to a certain independence in Europe, while France
+had clearly intimated that she had no intention of engaging in war for
+the purpose of maintaining the stipulations of the Treaty of 1856. The
+result was that England was compelled to act alone, as her interests
+were too great to allow the _status quo_ in Asia Minor to be completely
+destroyed, and consequently the onerous obligation of a defensive
+alliance with Turkey had been undertaken in order to provide against
+future Russian annexations beyond the frontier assigned under the
+present negotiations at Berlin. As this engagement could not be carried
+out from such a distance as Malta, the Sultan had made over Cyprus to
+England during such period as the defensive alliance might last. The
+conditional nature of the Convention, and the restraint shown by Her
+Majesty's Government in rejecting more tempting and advantageous offers
+are dealt with in the following passages.
+
+ We have entered into an agreement which is now embodied in a
+ formal Convention at Constantinople, that whenever the Russians
+ shall, for whatever reason, return to their Asiatic frontier as
+ it existed before the last war, we will immediately evacuate
+ the island; and that intermediately we will annually pay the
+ Sultan whatever is ascertained to be the surplus of revenue over
+ expenditure.
+
+ I am telling Your Excellency no secret when I say that we have
+ been very earnestly pressed, by advisers of no mean authority, to
+ occupy Egypt--or at least to take the borders of the Suez Canal.
+ Such an operation might have been very suitable for our interests
+ and would have presented no material difficulties.
+
+ No policy of this kind however was entertained by Her
+ Majesty's Government. We had received an intimation from the French
+ Government that any such proceeding would be very unwelcome to the
+ French people, and we could not but feel the reasonableness of
+ their objection under existing circumstances.
+
+ We have therefore turned a deaf ear to all suggestions of that
+ kind.
+
+ We have been likewise recommended to occupy some port on the
+ coast of Syria, such as Alexandretta, but we felt that, however
+ carefully guarded, such a proceeding might, in the present
+ condition of opinion with respect to the Ottoman Empire, be
+ construed as indicating an intention to acquire territory on the
+ mainland of Western Asia; and we did not desire to be suspected
+ of designs which will be wholly absent from our thoughts. We have
+ therefore preferred to accept from the Sultan the provisional
+ occupation of a position less advantageous indeed, but still
+ sufficient for the purpose, and not exposed to the inconveniences
+ I have mentioned. How long we shall stay there I cannot tell. But
+ I think there is just ground of hope that the Russians will find
+ in a short time that the territory they have acquired is costly
+ and unproductive; that the chances of making it a stepping-stone
+ to further conquests is cut off, and that they will abandon it as
+ a useless acquisition. In that case our _raison d'être_ at Cyprus
+ will be gone and we shall retire.
+
+ I have adopted this form of conveying the matter to you, as
+ the Convention being entirely within the Treaty competence of
+ the two Powers, requires no official communication. But it would
+ have been inconsistent with the feelings of friendship existing
+ between our two countries, and with my gratitude for your courteous
+ procedure towards me personally, to have allowed you to hear it
+ first from any other source.
+
+There can be little doubt as to the identity of the 'advisers of no
+mean authority,' for Bismarck had been urging upon England for some
+time the occupation of Egypt, obviously with the main intention of
+creating discord with France, and Her Majesty's Government deserved all
+the credit claimed by Lord Salisbury for resisting these overtures. It
+is, however, somewhat difficult to follow Lord Salisbury's reasonings
+for preferring Cyprus to Alexandretta. It was plain that the occupation
+of either of these places would cause irritation, and as subsequent
+events have shown, Cyprus has never been of much use to us, and besides
+being crushed under the burden of the tribute annually paid to the
+Turkish Government, is inhabited chiefly by Greeks who do not appear to
+thoroughly appreciate British rule. Alexandretta, on the other hand,
+might, under our control, have developed into a highly important seaport
+and become the starting-place for the Bagdad railway; whereas, as a
+matter of fact, it has now practically passed into the hands of the
+Germans.
+
+M. Waddington did not remain long in sole possession of his exclusive
+information, for on July 8, the Anglo-Turkish Convention was made
+known to the world, and the general impression produced was that Lords
+Beaconsfield and Salisbury had effected a brilliant _coup_. In France,
+however, the news caused quite unjustifiable indignation, and the
+prudent Lord Lyons telegraphed to Lord Salisbury on July 10, advising
+him to get the final acts of the Congress signed as quickly as possible,
+lest Waddington should be directed to come away without putting his name
+to anything.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 12, 1878.
+
+ Your telegram of last night was a great relief to me, but I
+ shall not feel quite happy till I hear that all is actually signed.
+ I am happy to find that Gambetta and the Ministerial Parties, who
+ are violent on the subject of the Convention, are not having things
+ all their own way in the press. No newspaper can be said to defend
+ England altogether, but the more sensible papers are against any
+ active opposition on the part of France. Gambetta and Waddington
+ are not friends, and Gambetta will no doubt attack Waddington and
+ try to upset him. This may lead to serious difficulties in France.
+
+ It is no use to shut one's eyes to the fact that at this
+ moment, there is a great and general irritation in France against
+ England. It is too soon to foresee what turn public opinion will
+ take eventually, but at the present moment, we must not forget to
+ take this irritation into account in our dealings with this country.
+
+The general feeling was so unsatisfactory, that he felt compelled to
+write to Mr. Knollys[20] urging that the Prince of Wales, who was acting
+as President of the British Section of the International Exhibition,
+should postpone a contemplated visit to Paris, and enclosing articles
+in the press of an abominable character directed against His Royal
+Highness. Irritation over the Anglo-Turkish Convention was not confined
+to one party, but existed in every class from the _haute société_
+downwards. The Conservatives and their press utilized it as a means
+of attacking the Republic, complained of the effacement of France,
+and asserted that she had been duped by her former ally, while the
+Republican opposition, headed by Gambetta, charged Waddington with
+having made a shameful surrender to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 16, 1878.
+
+ The first explosion of French wrath, on the appearance of
+ the Convention of the 4th of June, was even more violent than I
+ anticipated. It was well that you had the Minister for Foreign
+ Affairs under _your_ influence, and at a distance from that of
+ the excited spirits here. Now the first force of the eruption is
+ spent and the lava cooled down. I am afraid only on the surface,
+ but any way, it must be the surface which cools first. At all
+ events the strong language is in great measure abandoned. In the
+ first place, as no one now recommends any immediate action on the
+ part of France, the French are beginning to see that they cut a
+ sorry figure by barking without biting. In the second place, they
+ conceive that the alliance of the Three Empires is as close as
+ ever, and they think that if they quarrel with England, they will
+ be giving a triumph to Bismarck and find themselves face to face
+ with him without any friend on their side. Lastly, I would fain
+ hope that some of them are beginning to take a really reasonable
+ view of things, and to see that we had absolutely nothing left for
+ it, but to act for ourselves, as they would not or could not help
+ us.
+
+ Still we shall have some trouble with them, and shall probably
+ find them for some time suspicious, jealous, and hard to deal with.
+
+ Egypt may be our first difficulty. With or without a hint
+ from home, French agents there will be seeking to trip us up. It
+ seems to me that our task there will be a delicate one. On the one
+ hand, it will no doubt be desirable to soothe French vanity as far
+ as possible; but, on the other hand, anything like a defeat or a
+ retreat in Egypt, might very much impair the prestige which the
+ position which we have taken with regard to Asia has given us.
+ I wish Rivers Wilson had already been installed as Minister of
+ Finance when the Convention of the 4th June was made public.
+
+ Another ticklish question is that of the Newfoundland
+ Fisheries. I am very anxious to know what, if anything, passed
+ between you and Waddington on the subject at Berlin. The present
+ moment does not seem a very happy one for resuming negotiations,
+ and at all events it might be well to keep the matter, if possible,
+ in the calm atmosphere of London, and at a distance from the heat
+ of the political weather here.
+
+ I have been indirectly in communication with Gambetta, and
+ have reason to hope he is being brought, or is coming of himself,
+ round about the Convention. What I am immediately afraid of is
+ his nevertheless trying to upset Waddington. I should regret
+ Waddington's fall on all grounds, and it would be extremely awkward
+ to have a successor in the office brought in on the pretext that
+ Waddington had not been stiff enough with regard to England. The
+ candidates for his place are said to be Freycinet, the present
+ Minister of Public Works, who was Gambetta's Sub-Minister for War
+ in 1870 and 1871; M. Duclerc, one of the Vice-Presidents of the
+ Senate, who passes for a moderate man, but who has no knowledge of
+ foreign affairs, and Gambetta himself. I suppose, however, Gambetta
+ would be an impossibility with the Marshal, and that he himself
+ would feel that he was compromising his prospect of greater things
+ hereafter, by taking a subordinate office now.
+
+M. Waddington, upon his return from Berlin, realizing doubtless that his
+position had been shaken, though from no fault of his own, intimated
+his intention of writing a despatch in which Her Majesty's Government
+would be called upon to give to the French certain assurances with
+regard to Egypt and Tunis. As it was desirable that this request should
+not be made in too peremptory a manner, he was exhorted to make his
+communication in such a way as would make it easy for Her Majesty's
+Government to return a cordial answer. The difficulty about giving the
+assurances was pointed out by Lord Salisbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, July 20, 1878.
+
+ What M. Waddington said to you is very much what he said to me
+ at Berlin, though the lurid touches about war have been filled in
+ afterwards.
+
+ The precise answer to be given to his promised despatch must
+ of course depend very much on the terms in which it is framed. But
+ he may be certain that we shall answer it not only with the desire
+ of cultivating to the utmost possible extent our good relations
+ with France, but also with the aim of making his own personal task
+ more easy, as far as it is in our power to contribute to that
+ result.
+
+ The matter to which he has called your attention, as he did
+ ours at Berlin, was difficult to make the subject of binding
+ assurances, because the contingencies under which those assurances
+ would receive a practical application are difficult to foresee.
+
+ If France occupied Tunis to-morrow, we should not even
+ remonstrate. But to promise that publicly would be a little
+ difficult, because we must avoid giving away other people's
+ property without their consent, and also because it is no business
+ of ours to pronounce beforehand on the considerations which Italy
+ would probably advance upon that subject. In the same way, with
+ respect to Egypt, we have stated distinctly more than once that we
+ do not entertain any intention of occupying it; and that statement
+ we are perfectly willing to renew. But, having done that, and
+ having expressed our anxiety to work with France in Egypt, we
+ have said as much as would be seemly or possible. We can hardly
+ pledge the Khedive as to what he means to do, without in reality
+ assuming a voice in his concerns which we do not, according to any
+ international right, possess.
+
+ These considerations make me rather anxious that M. Waddington
+ in his proposed despatch should avoid putting categorical questions
+ which we might not be able to answer precisely as he wishes,
+ and yet which we could not avoid answering without seeming to
+ exhibit precisely that coolness which he very properly and justly
+ deprecates, and any appearance of which we are as anxious as he is
+ to avoid. I think that his despatch--if I might suggest it--would
+ more properly take the form of a statement, in general terms, of
+ the territorial points on the African coast in which France takes
+ an interest, leaving us to make such assurances as we think we can
+ properly give, and which we will certainly make as cordial as we
+ can.
+
+ To French influence in Egypt we do not offer any objection;
+ and we have never taken any step calculated to oust it. But any
+ detailed engagements as to questions of administration could
+ not be taken without imprudence; for each step must be taken as
+ the necessity for it arises. The two great points are to keep
+ the Khedive on the throne, and to get the financial obligations
+ satisfied. For these objects, the two countries will, I hope,
+ co-operate heartily.
+
+ I am a little anxious as to the form he gives his despatch,
+ for if he makes it too peremptory, he may produce that very
+ appearance of estrangement which it is our common object to avoid.
+
+ I will write to you more fully about the Newfoundland
+ Fisheries when I have had time to study the papers. My
+ conversations with him have put me fully in possession of the
+ French case. I am not so certain that I know all the points of the
+ English case.
+
+An opportunity fortunately occurred of conciliating one personage who
+might have given a great deal of trouble, and afforded an instance of
+the influence which can occasionally be brought to bear upon advanced
+democrats when judiciously applied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 21, 1878.
+
+ The Prince of Wales leaves Paris for London to-night. As his
+ arrival at Paris to attend the English concerts at the Exhibition
+ had been publicly announced, I did not think that it would be
+ advisable that it should be postponed, but I have been a little
+ nervous about it. So far however there has been no contretemps, and
+ the visit has been politically useful.
+
+ The Prince invited Gambetta to breakfast with him yesterday.
+ It was His Royal Highness's own idea, but I thought it judicious.
+ I have not the least doubt that if the Prince of Wales had not
+ been civil to Gambetta, the Russian Embassy would have asked any
+ Grand Duke who came here to show him particular attention, in order
+ to bring him over to Russia. The success of such a manoeuvre has I
+ think been effectually guarded against.
+
+ Gambetta appears to have spoken to the Prince strongly in
+ favour of an alliance between France and England--to have declared
+ himself more or less reconciled to the Convention of June 4th--and
+ to have spoken in the most disparaging terms, not so much of the
+ Foreign Policy of Russia, as of the institutions, the Government,
+ and the administration of that country. I hear from other quarters
+ that Gambetta was extremely pleased with the interview. I am
+ assured also that the Prince of Wales acquitted himself with great
+ skill. The Prince thought, and so did I, that it was better that
+ I should not be at the breakfast. The Embassy was represented by
+ Sheffield. The occasion of the invitation to Gambetta was his
+ having been very obliging and useful in matters connected with the
+ Exhibition.
+
+ To-day Waddington met the Prince of Wales at luncheon at the
+ Embassy.
+
+ So far, then, things look well, but I am assured the calm
+ does not extend far below the surface. Gambetta has the southern
+ temperament, and his language is a good deal influenced by the
+ impression of the moment. He has postponed, but he has not really
+ given up, his attack on Waddington. He will still, if he continues
+ in his present mood, try to turn him out in October, when the
+ Chambers reassemble.
+
+ The thing which would have most effect in reconciling the
+ French to our acquisition and protectorate, would be to make them
+ practically advantageous to the holders of Turkish and Egyptian
+ Bonds.
+
+When M. Waddington eventually presented his despatch, or rather
+despatches, for there were two, they were apparently found
+unobjectionable in tone; but on the ground that the one referring to
+Tunis was not 'couched in more diplomatic language,' it was suggested to
+him that he should rewrite it in language more suitable for publication
+subsequently; this he declined to do, but promised not to publish it at
+all. The chief object presumably of these communications was: in the
+first place to obtain assurances from England with regard to Egypt,
+and in the second place to make Lord Salisbury's statement about Tunis
+appear as an invitation to the French to appropriate that country. M.
+Waddington, quite naturally, did not wish it to be thought that he had
+come back empty handed from Berlin at a time when the Great Christian
+Powers were helping themselves liberally at the Turk's expense.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 24, 1878.
+
+ Waddington's two despatches were left with me yesterday. They
+ are very friendly in tone and will not, I think, be difficult to
+ answer. The answers however must be delayed some days, as the
+ Cabinet does not meet till Saturday.
+
+ Intermediately, I demur a little to the quotations that he
+ makes from my conversation. The general tenor is quite accurate,
+ but his vivacious French by no means renders the tone of my
+ communication, and what is of more importance, to the rights and
+ claims of other Powers, Turkey and Italy especially. What I told
+ him was that if a state of things should arise in which there was
+ no other obstacle to his occupying Tunis but our objection, that
+ objection would not be made. I made the observation for the purpose
+ of showing him that we had no Mediterranean aspirations--and did
+ not desire to disturb the balance of power in that sea. Our eyes
+ were bent wholly on the East. But he makes me talk of Tunis and
+ Carthage as if they had been my own personal property and I was
+ making him a liberal wedding present.
+
+ I do not know whether he will be inclined to put his
+ quotations from my conversations into a more general form. I think
+ it will save the possibility of misunderstanding later; and will
+ also dispense with the necessity of a correction on my part, as he
+ has reported the general drift and terms of my observations with
+ perfect fidelity.
+
+The reception of the Anglo-Turkish Convention in France may be said to
+have been the first of a series of difficulties which unfortunately
+impaired the relations between France and England during many years,
+but which have now happily almost entirely disappeared. The irritation
+aroused in France was completely unjustified, and almost incapable of
+explanation, unless the secrecy which surrounded the negotiation of the
+Convention may be considered an adequate cause. No French interests were
+prejudicially affected; and the maintenance of secrecy really relieved
+France from a considerable difficulty, for a premature disclosure might
+have prevented the participation of France in the Congress; but oddly
+enough, the Anglo-Turkish Convention appeared to be the only matter
+relating to the Congress in which the French took any interest, and
+so much indignation did some patriots show that it was even seriously
+suggested that by way of inflicting a surprise upon England, France
+should seize Chios, or Rhodes, or Crete. In fact, at one time, Crete
+appeared to possess considerably greater attractions than Tunis, in
+spite of the latter's proximity to Algeria.
+
+Probably the real explanation of this display of temper was that the
+French felt their strength to be returning, and were in no mood to
+put up with what they erroneously considered to be a slight, whether
+intentional or unintentional.
+
+One frantic jeremiad from Constantinople over the Treaty of Berlin may
+be quoted before the subject is dismissed. Layard, who had been already
+greatly scandalized by the publication of the Anglo-Russian agreement,
+wrote:--
+
+ What do you think of the Treaty of Berlin? It appears to
+ me that if ever an apple of discord was thrown amongst nations,
+ this is the one. I see in it the elements of future wars and
+ disorders without number, and an upsetting of all the principles
+ of justice and right which have hitherto governed the relations
+ and intercourse of states. Force and fraud have triumphed, and
+ when Turkey has been completely destroyed and cut up under the new
+ system, it will probably be applied with similar successful results
+ to other countries. Russia has gained, with the assistance of
+ Germany, all and more than she wanted, and the interests of England
+ and of other Powers were sacrificed in order to enable Bismarck
+ to recruit his beery stomach by drinking some mineral waters.
+ It is all very well to sit round a green table and to cut up an
+ Empire on a map. It is a very different thing to put what has been
+ so easily settled into execution. I anticipate no end of trouble
+ and bloodshed for years to come in this unhappy country. We have
+ not yet recovered here from the effect of the publication of the
+ unfortunate memorandum which so completely destroyed the great and
+ commanding position that we had acquired.
+
+There is not much here about Peace with Honour.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 17: Jan. 7, 1876.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Jan. 24, 1877.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Nobiling's attempt to assassinate the German Emperor.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Now Viscount Knollys.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+M. GRÉVY'S PRESIDENCY
+
+(1878-1879)
+
+
+The event in 1878 which aroused more interest in France than the Berlin
+Congress or anything else, was the holding of the great Exhibition
+in Paris, which not only demonstrated to the world the recovery of
+France from the disasters of 1870-71, but had the beneficial effect
+of improving Anglo-French relations. It was universally acknowledged
+that nothing had contributed more to the success of the Exhibition
+than the hearty co-operation given from first to last by England, and
+in this connection the services rendered by the Prince of Wales were
+of conspicuous value. His Royal Highness had come to Paris early in
+the year to press forward the preparations of the British section; he
+was present at each important phase of the Exhibition; he attended
+unremittingly at the office of the British Royal Commission, and was
+assiduous in transacting business there with the French Exhibition
+authorities as well as with the British and Colonial Commissioners and
+exhibitors. These visible proofs of the Prince's interest in their great
+undertaking were by no means lost upon the French, and the judgment and
+tact which he displayed, whenever opportunities arose for impressing
+upon the French people the cordial feeling entertained by himself and
+by his country towards France, produced an excellent political effect.
+
+The Exhibition naturally threw upon the Embassy an immense amount of
+extra labour, consisting largely of social work, and one of the most
+brilliant social functions of the year was a ball at the British Embassy
+attended by the Prince and Princess of Wales, at which the various
+hostile sections of the French political world met, on that occasion
+only, in temporary harmony.
+
+The general success of the Exhibition and the prominence of English
+participation inspired Queen Victoria with the desire to pay a very
+private visit to Paris, accompanied by Princess Beatrice and a small
+suite, towards the beginning of August. So anxious was she to maintain
+secrecy that the only person in England to whom her intention was
+confided, was Lord Beaconsfield, and Lord Lyons was enjoined not to say
+a word about it to any one, but to inform her confidentially whether she
+could visit the Exhibition without being mobbed; whether the heat was
+likely to be intense; and whether there was any danger to be apprehended
+from Socialists--the term Socialist doubtless including, in the Royal
+vocabulary, Anarchists, Terrorists, and Revolutionaries in general.
+Incidentally, too, she expressed a wish to hear the Ambassador's opinion
+of the Treaty of Berlin.
+
+Lord Lyons answered the first queries satisfactorily, but it was
+characteristic of him that, even to his sovereign, he declined to commit
+himself to an opinion on the policy of his official chief. 'Lord Lyons
+was always of opinion that Your Majesty's Representative at the Congress
+should be a Cabinet Minister, and he rejoiced very much when he heard
+that Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury had been appointed. He has no
+detailed or authentic information of the proceedings of the Congress,
+but so far as he can judge at present, he has every hope that the
+results will be satisfactory to Your Majesty.'
+
+A long series of letters followed, and after much hesitation, the
+Queen finally abandoned her intention, the prospect of hot weather
+apparently proving to be too great a deterrent. One singular incident in
+the correspondence, which was conducted with much secrecy, was that a
+letter from Lord Lyons went all the way to New York before reaching its
+destination at Balmoral--an error for which some one presumably suffered.
+
+During the autumn and winter of 1878, constant discussions took
+place between the English and French Governments on the subject of
+questions connected with Egypt and Tunis, and it was again thought
+at one time that a French _coup_ was in contemplation as a reply to
+the Anglo-Turkish Convention. The New Year was signalized by the
+denunciation of the Commercial Treaty. In announcing this intelligence,
+Lord Lyons said that his only surprise was that the existing Treaty had
+lasted so long, and that he did not consider it advisable to make any
+attempt to conceal annoyance about it. The treaty of 1860 had been made
+from political motives, and our best chance of being decently treated
+commercially lay in the dislike of the French to placing themselves on
+bad terms with us. 'This is the policy Gambetta avows. As for any Free
+Trade feeling in France, that is absolutely a broken reed for us to lean
+upon.'
+
+In January, 1879, senatorial elections took place which resulted in
+large Republican gains, and it seemed probable that the existing
+Moderate Ministry might not last much longer. It was generally expected
+that when the Chambers met, there would be a great struggle on the
+part of the advanced Left for all the lucrative and important posts,
+and there were the usual fears of mob rule which prevailed whenever
+a partial or entire change of Ministry was imminent. The prospect
+of losing Waddington as Foreign Minister drew from Lord Salisbury a
+characteristic expression of regret: 'I suppose M. Waddington is likely
+to be a transitory phenomenon, if the papers are to be believed. I am
+sorry for it; for he suits us much better than some converted Legitimist
+with an historic name, whose policy I suppose will be a compound of
+Louis XIV. and 1791.'
+
+Waddington was not to go yet, however, and Lord Lyons complained that
+he made his life a burden to him in connection with the proceedings
+of the British Consul General at Tunis--an aged official who did not
+view the spirited French policy there with any friendly eye, and whose
+removal the French Government ardently desired. As a general massacre of
+aged official innocents was contemplated shortly by the British Foreign
+Office, a somewhat ignominious compromise was offered in the shape of
+an early retirement of this particular official under an age limit. The
+French intentions with regard to Tunis had by this time become quite
+evident, and the unfortunate Bey found it extremely difficult to prevent
+excuses being found for active intervention in the shape of naval
+demonstrations and so forth; it being well known that Marshal MacMahon
+and other military men were extremely eager to annex the country at the
+first opportunity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 14, 1879.
+
+ I should be very sorry to do anything disagreeable to the
+ French with regard to Tunis. It is the place about which they are
+ most susceptible at this moment, and the irritation they would feel
+ at any interference with them there, would overpower, at all events
+ for the time, all considerations of the general advantages of being
+ well with England.
+
+ When I said that I saw no reason for hiding any displeasure we
+ might feel at the denunciation of the Commercial Treaties and at
+ the manner in which it was done, I meant that we should not abstain
+ from direct expressions of dissatisfaction at the thing itself.
+
+ My notion is that if we take it too quietly, the
+ Protectionists will be able to make the Chambers believe that they
+ can do what they like about the Tariff, and need not fear any
+ resentment from England. I think that if it can be managed, it
+ will be advisable to put it out of the power of the ministers to
+ say that the denunciation has been well received by the English
+ Government, and has produced no bad impression upon it. In order to
+ effect this, I should be glad that something unmistakable on the
+ point should be said in a written communication. If, as I suppose,
+ Montebello's[21] answer to your note declares that the intention
+ is to denounce the Treaties one and all, then the rejoinder which
+ you must make in order to _prendre acte_ of the denunciation
+ would afford a natural opportunity of expressing annoyance and
+ apprehension. This is what was in my mind when I wrote.
+
+ There are many members in the Chamber who would deprecate
+ anything likely to produce coolness between France and England,
+ and it is not desirable to leave the Protectionists the means
+ of asserting that there is no danger that a restrictive tariff
+ would do this. But the feeling is a vague one, and it would be
+ weakened by endeavours to define it sharply, or to appeal to it too
+ pointedly.
+
+ Gambetta holds that the true policy of France is to cultivate
+ the friendship of England and not to loosen the tie of France upon
+ her by instructions injurious to her commerce. He is in particular
+ very much afraid of the feeling in favour of the Empire which would
+ be revived in the wine-growing districts, if under the Republic the
+ English wine duties became less favourable to French wines.
+
+ The game of the Protectionists is to put the duties in the
+ general tariff as high as they dare, without provoking retaliation;
+ and the general tariff once passed, to declare that it is the
+ latest expression of the will of the country, and that the
+ Government has no right to relax it by treaty, unless by way of
+ barter, in return for great concessions made to France.
+
+ In the mean time matters may possibly in some measure
+ be modified, as regards commercial policy by changes in the
+ Government, but the modification in this respect would scarcely be
+ very great.
+
+ The 'groups,' as they are called, of the Left have been
+ endeavouring to get the ministers to negotiate with them before
+ the Chambers met. They want, now the Chambers have met, to reduce
+ the Ministers to absolute dependence on Parliamentary Committees.
+ The Ministers are acting properly and constitutionally. They
+ decline to be dictated to by groups and committees, and they intend
+ to announce their programme from the Tribune, and to call for a
+ vote of confidence or want of confidence, from both Chambers.
+ Waddington, when I saw him yesterday, was very confident of
+ success. They have found it necessary to sacrifice the Minister
+ of War, who, among other defects was entirely inefficient in the
+ Tribune, but Waddington did not anticipate any other changes in the
+ Cabinet. He said that Gambetta had promised the Government his full
+ and cordial support.
+
+ To pass from Paris, or rather from Versailles to
+ Constantinople, I will give you for what it may be worth, a story
+ which has been brought to the Embassy by a person who has sometimes
+ shown himself to be well informed with regard to what is passing
+ at the Porte. He affirms that a compact has been made between
+ Khaireddin and Osman Pashas to dethrone Sultan Abdul Hamid and set
+ aside the Othman family altogether as effete and half insane. This
+ being done, a member of a family established at Konia is, according
+ to my informant, to be declared Sultan.
+
+ I have often heard of the Konia family as having a sort of
+ pretention to the throne, as descending from Seljuk Sultans or some
+ other dynasty overthrown by Othman or his successors.
+
+ Abdul Hamid does not generally leave his Grand Viziers in
+ office long enough for them to be able to mature a 'conspiracy
+ against him.'
+
+In January a prolonged struggle took place between the Ministry and the
+Left, chiefly over the burning question of Government officials, and
+the alleged unwillingness to introduce really Republican measures; and
+before the end of the month Marshal MacMahon and his Prime Minister,
+M. Dufaure tendered their resignations. It was well known that the
+Marshal was anxious to take this course, and he followed the advice of
+his friends in choosing, as his reason for resigning, his inability
+to concur in a measure which deprived some officers of high rank of
+their military commands. When, therefore, he was confronted with the
+alternative of signing the decree removing his old companions in arms,
+or of resigning himself, he replied that Ministers would have to look
+out for another President, and M. Grévy, a comparatively moderate
+Liberal, was elected in his place by a large majority. The 'transitory
+phenomenon,' M. Waddington, however, remained in office and indeed
+became head of a new Administration, but it was felt that this
+arrangement was merely temporary. Power had really passed into the hands
+of Gambetta, and although he contented himself, for the time being, with
+the Presidency of the Chamber of Deputies, there was nothing to prevent
+him from establishing himself in office, whenever he should think that
+the opportune moment had arrived; since, unlike the Speakership in
+England, the Presidency of the Chamber is looked upon in France as the
+road to the highest Ministerial rank.
+
+In consequence of the election of a new President of the Republic in
+the person of M. Grévy, the question arose as to whether the Foreign
+Representatives should receive fresh credentials, and the action of
+Prince Bismarck in this connection caused fresh discord amongst leading
+French politicians. When M. Waddington was at Berlin, he had made a
+very favourable impression upon the Chancellor, and as he himself
+subsequently informed me, Bismarck had taken great pains to be civil
+to him, and to manifest that especial confidence which takes the form
+of abusing other people--notably Prince Gortschakoff. He now took the
+opportunity to inform M. Waddington that he entertained such remarkable
+esteem for him, that he had advised the Emperor to dispense with any new
+letter of credence, a proceeding which infuriated Gambetta and disposed
+him to upset Waddington at an early date. 'Altogether there seems an
+impression,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'that the new Ministry will not last
+long. Gambetta does not like either Grévy or Waddington. Waddington has
+yet to show that he has the staff of a Prime Minister in him. He has
+not hitherto been a very ready or a very effective speaker. He is
+even said to have a slight English accent in speaking French. I don't
+believe any one ever perceived this who did not know beforehand that he
+had had an English education. But this English education certainly has
+had the effect of preventing him having exactly French modes of thought
+and French ways, and thus he is not always completely in tune with the
+feelings of his hearers in Parliament.'
+
+[Illustration: _J Russell & Sons, Phot._
+
+_William Henry Waddington_
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD]
+
+It was a common charge made against the late M. Waddington by his
+opponents that he spoke French with an English, and English with a
+French accent. As a matter of fact, he was a perfect specimen of a
+bilinguist, and would have passed as a native of either nation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Feb. 11, 1879.
+
+ Fournier's[22] vagaries are becoming very dangerous, but we
+ are in a state of anarchy here. The Ministry is composed in general
+ of men of respectable character and respectable abilities; but
+ there is no one of them who has hitherto obtained any great hold
+ on the Chambers or on the country. Their proper game would be to
+ try and form a Liberal-Conservative party of the Centre Gauche,
+ the Centre Droit, and the Gauche Républicaine, with whose support
+ and that of the country at large, they might keep the Ultra Reds
+ in check. Hitherto they have not shown that there is stuff enough
+ in them for this, but then they have hardly had a chance. They
+ have made a weak compromise on the Amnesty Question, but if they
+ get a good majority on that question, they might start afresh and
+ show what is in them. So far they are looked upon by most people
+ as warming pans for Gambetta and his followers: and I have been
+ assured that some of the French Representatives abroad do not
+ hesitate to communicate with Gambetta behind Waddington's back.
+
+ I must confess that, contrary to my wont, I am rather gloomy
+ about the state of things here. The relaxation of the efficiency
+ of the police is undeniable. This was one of the symptoms of the
+ decay of the Empire. The Gendarmerie is being tampered with. Recent
+ measures seem to increase the opportunities for disturbances, and
+ diminish the means of dealing with them. I do not see where, in
+ the present Government, resistance to disorder is to come from in
+ an emergency. But I will not croak. Waddington and his colleagues
+ may steady themselves in office and restore authority yet, but they
+ have not much time to lose.
+
+ Waddington would be the safest Minister we could have in
+ Eastern Affairs, if he made his subordinates abroad obey him.
+ Gambetta might be more friendly in commercial matters and more
+ ready to be an active ally in the East, but he would expect a
+ recompense in the West, and might be a dangerous friend who would
+ require careful 'watching.'
+
+Poor M. Waddington's prospects were not improved by a trivial but
+untoward incident in the Chamber. In the course of one of his first
+speeches as Prime Minister 'a great deal of laughter is said to have
+been produced by his dropping some of the sheets of his written speech
+over the edge of the Tribune, and having to wait till they were picked
+up'--an incident which serves to show the more generous spirit of the
+British politician, since a recent Prime Minister was in the habit of
+delivering soul-stirring orations by the same method, without evoking
+any disrespectful criticism on the part of his opponents.
+
+Towards the end of February a crisis in Egypt rendered it necessary for
+the British and French Governments to have recourse to joint action for
+the purpose of protecting their interests.
+
+As the result of a Commission of Inquiry in 1878, the Khedive Ismail,
+who had long boasted that Egypt was practically a European state,
+accepted the position of a Constitutional Ruler, with Nubar Pasha as
+his Prime Minister, Mr. Rivers Wilson[23] as Minister of Finance, and a
+Frenchman, M. de Blignières, as Minister of Public Works. It was in the
+highest degree improbable that a man of his intriguing and ambitious
+character would submit permanently to any such restraint, and before
+long he succeeded in working upon the disaffection of those persons
+whose privileges were threatened or affected by European control, to
+such an extent that, by organizing a military riot, he was able to force
+Nubar Pasha to resign on February 20, 1879. At the same time he demanded
+much greater powers for himself, including the right to preside over the
+Cabinet, and to have all measures submitted to his approval--demands
+which were strongly resisted by his European Ministers, who invoked the
+support of their Governments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 21, 1879.
+
+ I have just received your telegram announcing your concurrence
+ in Waddington's draft instructions to Cairo, and I shall
+ communicate it to him forthwith.
+
+ Waddington seemed quite firm on the point of not allowing
+ the Khedive to resume his personal power, and would no doubt be
+ ready to join in any practical steps for that purpose; but in
+ the meantime it may be feared that His Highness is consolidating
+ his resumption of power. Waddington looks upon the whole affair
+ as a simple manoevre of the Khedive to upset the new system of
+ government. It does not in fact seem likely that so arrant a
+ coward would have risked his own precious person, if he had not
+ had a pretty good understanding with the rioters. Public opinion
+ in France would, I think, support Waddington in taking strong
+ measures. There does not seem to be any one but Nubar of position
+ enough to be a Prime Minister of any independence; Waddington
+ seemed fully aware that if the Khedive is present at the council of
+ Ministers, no Egyptian Minister will open his lips.
+
+ Godeaux telegraphed last night that order having been
+ restored, the presence of a ship of war at Alexandria might not be
+ necessary, but Waddington thought on the contrary that it would
+ be 'essential in order to produce a salutary impression on the
+ Khedive, and keep him in some check.'
+
+Nubar Pasha was regarded as English and anti-French, and his fall was,
+therefore, received at Paris with some degree of complacency; but the
+feeling was not sufficiently strong to make the Government hold out
+against his restoration to office, should that be considered necessary
+for the purpose of checking the Khedive, and the tendency was to make
+no suggestions and to wait for the lead of England, it being understood
+that both Governments were resolved not to consent to any change of the
+political system in Egypt.
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 1, 1879.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As to Egypt, I gather from your telegram to-day that
+ Waddington looks on our message to Vivian[24] as in the nature of
+ an ultimatum, and he is puzzled what we are to do next if it should
+ be rejected. We do not in the least look on it as an ultimatum, and
+ it is not so phrased. We may well receive either from the Khedive
+ or the Agents some alternative proposal which may be discussed,
+ and perhaps hammered into an acceptable arrangement at least for
+ a time. But in any case our position cannot be worse here than if
+ we had acquiesced at once in the results of the conspiracy against
+ Nubar; while the chances are that it will enable us to arrive at
+ some plan for partially curbing the Khedive, which at all events
+ shall partially disguise the check we have undoubtedly received.
+ The causes are obscure. It is evident there has been imprudence. I
+ wish I could be quite satisfied there has been perfect loyalty.
+
+Writing a day or two later, Lord Salisbury explained that he was in some
+difficulty, as Mr. Vivian and Mr. Rivers Wilson held different opinions.
+The former wanted to conciliate the Khedive by not forcing upon him the
+restoration of Nubar, while Mr. Rivers Wilson strongly insisted upon his
+return. Lord Salisbury himself was inclined to the latter course because
+'otherwise the Khedive will be like a horse who has succeeded in beating
+his rider, and will never be safe for that rider to mount again,' but
+eventually decided against it. From the following letter it looks as
+if the retirement of the hapless British Representative at Tunis was
+intended as a peace offering to the cause of Anglo-French joint action
+in Egypt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 6, 1879.
+
+ It is better always to get the credit of one's good actions,
+ which are naturally few. Will you kindly tell M. Waddington in the
+ most unofficial way in the world that----having returned himself as
+ 67 years of age (he entered the service 55 years ago, and therefore
+ must have begun his public labours at a precocious age) we have
+ suppressed the Consulate General of Tunis, and that there will
+ henceforth be a man on reduced salary, a consul or agent, after the
+ close of this month.
+
+ I think the French will find difficulties enough with Italy if
+ they ever try to increase their influence in Tunis; but that is no
+ affair of ours. We have hot water enough elsewhere without desiring
+ to boil any in Tunis.
+
+ One good turn deserves another, and I hope Waddington will
+ feel himself bound to keep his agents from Anglophobia in Turkey.
+
+ The Egyptian compromise will do very well for the time. It
+ seems doubtful whether Nubar is worth anything now. An Oriental
+ does not easily pluck up a spirit when he has once been beaten, and
+ Nubar is reported to have told friends in England that he knew that
+ whenever the Khedive had done with him there was a cup of coffee
+ waiting for him.
+
+The compromise referred to took the form of a new Egyptian Ministry
+containing the two English and French representatives, and nominally
+presided over by the Khedive's eldest son, Prince Tewfik. The
+experiment, however, of trying to keep a Ministry in office in spite of
+the opposition of the chief of the State did not last long, for in April
+the irrepressible Khedive dismissed his Ministers and installed Cherif
+Pasha as Prime Minister. This spirited action caused M. Waddington
+much perplexity, as he did not believe that French public opinion
+would allow him to take a slap in the face quietly from the Khedive.
+The French bondholders were too influential to think of throwing them
+over, and then there was the Crédit Foncier, a more or less Government
+establishment, which no French Government could allow to come to grief.
+There was a keen desire to maintain the concert between England and
+France on Egyptian affairs, but if the bondholders suspected that
+England was likely to be lukewarm on their behalf, there was a strong
+probability that the French Government might be forced to act alone
+in the enforcement of French claims. Lord Salisbury on his side was
+naturally reluctant to be identified with the bondholders' cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 10, 1879.
+
+ I see by your telegrams which have arrived to-day that M.
+ Waddington suggests as a means of coercion against the Khedive that
+ MM. Rothschild should refuse to pay him the balance of the loan.
+ Mr. Rivers Wilson had made the same suggestion to the Baron. But
+ the latter, in a message sent yesterday through his son, repudiated
+ any idea of such a proceeding as dishonourable, and attributed the
+ suggestion to momentary excitement.
+
+ With respect to the second idea, the only question is whether
+ the Sultan will ever summon up courage to take such a step, and
+ if he does, whether he can enforce it. If it can be done quite
+ smoothly, _perhaps_ it would be the best course; but I speak with
+ some doubt.
+
+ It may be quite tolerable and even agreeable to the French
+ Government to go into partnership with the bondholders; or rather
+ to act as sheriffs' officer for them. But to us it is a new and
+ very embarrassing sensation. Egypt never can prosper so long as
+ some 25 per cent. of her revenue goes in paying interest on her
+ debt. We have no wish to part company with France: still less do we
+ mean that France should acquire in Egypt any special ascendency;
+ but subject to these two considerations I should be glad to be free
+ of the companionship of the bondholders.
+
+M. Waddington's 'second idea' evidently referred to the deposing of the
+Khedive by means of the Sultan; but his difficulty lay in the old French
+jealousy of the Porte exercising influence over the internal affairs
+of Egypt, and during the reign of Sultan Abdul Aziz the consequence of
+that influence had certainly been a constant drain of money from Cairo
+to Constantinople. One suggestion was that the Sultan should summon the
+Khedive to come to Constantinople to do homage, a ceremony which he
+had never yet performed, and a refusal to obey would have made him a
+rebel in the Sultan's eyes; but the objection to this course was that
+the Khedive might, if he went, take large sums of money with him and so
+propitiate his suzerain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 16, 1879.
+
+ Waddington's policy is not very intelligible. I suppose it
+ is a compromise between a sense of the danger of doing anything
+ strong, and of the necessity of satisfying the Crédit Foncier.
+ In the despatch which you will receive we have done our best to
+ accommodate ourselves to Waddington's view, without taking up a
+ wholly untenable position.
+
+ There is one thing which it is necessary not to forget, though
+ I could not mention it in the despatch. We have very different
+ audiences to please; and though we may agree upon the actual
+ intimation to be given to the Khedive and the Sultan respectively,
+ the argument leading up to those communications cannot in both
+ cases be precisely the same. We must lay stress on separate points,
+ and the argument derived from the Khedive's application for a
+ European Minister must be treated differently by the two Powers,
+ as the circumstances were not similar. We should therefore avoid
+ identic notes, though we may make a concerted representation.
+
+ The communication to the Porte had better be indiscreetly
+ communicated to the Khedive's agent there, who is an intelligent
+ man. It may only result in producing a very heavy payment to the
+ Porte. But that, under existing circumstances, will itself be of
+ advantage.
+
+ I suppose that Waddington means to upset the Ottoman Bank
+ project as a retort for the failure of Tocqueville's.
+
+ What does he think of Martino's share in the recent Egyptian
+ crisis? Italy is likely to be a plague to all of us.
+
+In France there was a violent party, more or less supported by Gambetta,
+which desired to send some energetic Agent to Egypt who would bully
+the Khedive successfully. Unfortunately, such energetic agents were
+extremely likely to quarrel with their British colleagues, whereas M.
+Waddington, who was peaceably disposed, wished to appoint quiet and
+unobtrusive representatives who would work harmoniously, and implicitly
+follow their instructions. There was, however, some excuse for the men
+of action, as a very well-founded suspicion prevailed in Paris that the
+Russians, and even the Germans, were busy at Rome inciting the Italians
+to make trouble for England and France at Cairo. Moreover, Gambetta and
+his friends believed, probably with reason, that the Khedive would never
+have gone so far in defying England and France if he had not felt that
+he was backed up by other Powers, as well as by Italy.
+
+Mr. Vivian, the British agent in Cairo, who had been summoned to London,
+returned to his post at the end of April bearing a note, the gist of
+which was, that the two Governments, in view of the iniquities of the
+Khedive, 'reserved to themselves an entire liberty of appreciation
+and action in defending their interests in Egypt, and in seeking
+the arrangements best calculated to secure the good government and
+prosperity of the country.' In other words, the Khedive was warned that
+he had better be careful; but there was, so far, no hint of deposition.
+
+In Lord Salisbury's letter to Lord Lyons, enclosing a copy of the above
+note, there is an interesting personal opinion on the question of
+governing Orientals by Europeans. 'With all these Oriental populations I
+suspect that the _rôle_ of Europeans should in the main be confined to
+positions of criticism and control. They can only govern after absolute
+conquest, and then expensively. The difficulty of governing without
+conquest is, of course, enormously increased when two nationalities have
+to be provided for, and two Governments to be consulted.'
+
+The period following the return of Mr. Vivian to his post was marked
+by a violent and entirely unreasonable campaign against England in the
+French press, it being thought, for some unknown reason, that France had
+been abandoned, and M. Waddington took the somewhat unusual course of
+sending a message to Lord Salisbury through Mr. Rivers Wilson, instead
+of communicating in the ordinary manner.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 21, 1879.
+
+ On Monday Rivers Wilson sent me word that he had a message
+ to deliver to me from Waddington. Accordingly I asked him to come
+ and see me yesterday to deliver it. It was to the effect that
+ Waddington was willing and anxious to move the Porte to dethrone
+ the Khedive, if England would join in this step. I represented
+ that there were three difficulties. The Sultan might not assent:
+ if he did, the Khedive might not yield. If the latter did yield,
+ the successor might be either feeble or bad, and we should be
+ called upon to support him in one case, and replace him in the
+ other. To the first objection Wilson replied that Waddington had no
+ apprehensions as to the Sultan's consent; to the second he (Wilson)
+ and every person who knew Egypt well, did not doubt that the moment
+ a Firman was issued, the Khedive would fall; as to the third, he
+ could only say that Prince Tewfik was a compendium of the cardinal
+ virtues.
+
+ If Waddington did not communicate his proposal to you, I am
+ obliged to consider what possible motive he could have had for
+ taking this circuitous route, unless he meant to disavow the offer
+ later on. If he says nothing to you about it, it may be worth while
+ to sound him.
+
+ If there were no France in the way, I should be disposed to
+ give no reply to the Khedive's note we received by the last mail,
+ or at least only to say that since the dismissal of the English
+ Minister, the Khedive's finance had become so hopelessly tangled,
+ partly owing to his extravagance, partly to the conflict with
+ other Powers into which the decree of April 22nd has brought him,
+ that we must reserve our judgment with respect to all questions
+ of financial control till the position of affairs had become
+ more intelligible. I think that on some such plea as that we
+ might stand by and look on for a few months till the Khedive
+ has knocked himself to pieces, which he inevitably will do. The
+ fiscal condition is now so hopeless that I am rather grateful to
+ the Khedive for refusing to put it into the hands of an English
+ Minister. I doubt whether any European can now undertake it
+ without discredit, until the country has gone into liquidation.
+ The disproportion between the debt and the revenue--joined to
+ the difficulties which have now been raised by the action of the
+ courts and the attitude of the other Powers, makes effective or
+ even humane government hopeless till there has been a bankruptcy.
+ But then that would not suit a purely Bourse policy like that of
+ France. We must take notice of this difference of the French view,
+ and we may have to modify our policy accordingly; for we cannot
+ allow France to go on alone, and we will not part company with her
+ if we can possibly help it. But in this state of our relative views
+ and wishes, it is already for us to wait, and for her to propose.
+ If left alone, our disposition would be to find an excuse for
+ waiting, and if we move it will be because France is urging us. We
+ should therefore naturally wait till France made a proposal to us,
+ and should be inclined to cross-examine her as to what will be
+ her next move after that, in the various contingencies which may
+ result from the course they propose. I think, however, you might
+ open communications by mentioning, quite unofficially, how much
+ pain the articles in the _République Française_ and the _Débuts_
+ have given us. To ordinary papers we should of course have paid no
+ attention; but one of them is, or was till very recently, edited
+ by a gentleman in the French Foreign Office; the other is in part
+ the property of a Minister. We are utterly unable to understand on
+ what foundation the reproaches rest that we have shown reserves
+ and hesitations in the pursuit of the joint Egyptian policy. On
+ the contrary, if we had occupied towards France the position which
+ Servia occupies towards Russia, our compliance could hardly have
+ been more exact. But this outbreak of causeless wrath justifies us
+ in asking what France wants, and what she complains of.
+
+ You will of course say as much of this, or as much more as
+ you may think wise. But it may be as well to show that we are
+ not insensible to this attempt to work Parliament against us
+ by revelations or communications on matters which the French
+ Government themselves have charged us to treat as confidential.
+
+The attacks on England in the French press were not inspired, as Lord
+Salisbury supposed, by the French Foreign Office, but by Gambetta, who
+desired a strong policy in Egypt and seized the opportunity to fall upon
+Waddington. The latter, however, by this time had made up his mind as to
+what should be done.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 22, 1879.
+
+ As you will have seen by my telegram, what Waddington said
+ to me yesterday was, that there appeared to him to be only two
+ alternatives with regard to the Egyptian question--to depose the
+ Khedive or to establish a Control. He talked a good deal more
+ about the Control than the deposition; but when I asked him if
+ this meant that the Control was the alternative he preferred, he
+ declined to express any preference for the one or the other. If we
+ are to wait until he has devised measures (and this is what he told
+ me he was about) for establishing an efficacious control we need
+ not fear being called upon to act in a hurry. I quite agree with
+ you that we cannot let France go on alone in Egypt; for if we do,
+ she may go lengths which will produce something a great deal more
+ dangerous than a mere coolness between us. French power and French
+ feeling are very different from what they were some years ago,
+ when the French would have let us do almost anything we chose in
+ Egypt, if we would have taken care of the interests of the French
+ bondholders.
+
+Nothing can be plainer than Lord Salisbury's desire to act in concert
+with France, and to have regard to French interests in Egypt, but the
+constant attacks made upon British policy and the persistent hostility
+of French agents, not only in Egypt, but elsewhere, rendered the task
+anything but easy. Gambetta's hostility was partly due to the fact that
+he was an enthusiastic Phil-Hellene, and considered that not enough was
+being done for Greece in the way of procuring for her accessions of
+territory at the expense of Turkey. It is as well to point out that,
+whereas the Turks had been compelled to cede territory to States with
+which they had been at war, they were at this time being pressed to cede
+territory to Greece because that Power had remained at peace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ June 6, 1879.
+
+ The recent course of the French newspapers which have the
+ credit of being inspired by Gambetta and Léon Say is certainly a
+ puzzle. Looking over the course of negotiations between us and
+ Waddington on Egypt, I should find it very difficult to say which
+ of the two Governments had pulled the other on, and which had
+ dragged the other back. As far as any important negotiations go,
+ I should say that we had been a shade more in favour of active
+ measures than the other side. The two newspapers in question
+ are evidently well informed; and therefore their assumption
+ that we have prevented the French from acting must be put on
+ for a purpose; what purpose it is difficult to say. The most
+ obvious solution--bearing in mind the English friendships of the
+ two statesmen concerned--is that the whole movement is meant
+ to operate on English internal politics, and not on European
+ politics at all: and this view is supported by the use which has
+ actually been made of the controversy here. The incident is common
+ enough in diplomatic history: but it has always been bitterly
+ resented by the Government which is the subject of that species
+ of attack. But in this case there is some doubt as to how far
+ Waddington is implicated. Nothing is more difficult to deal with
+ than a 'Marionette Government,' because the marionettes are not
+ responsible, and you cannot get at the man who pulls the strings.
+ There is one spot in the diplomatic battlefield--almost the only
+ one--where we have been exposed to risk, and have consequently
+ been anxious--the Balkan Peninsula: and on this we have been
+ systematically opposed by France. Ring, Coutouly and Fournier have
+ played us every kind of trick. But all the time, nothing could
+ have been more unexceptionable than Waddington's language and
+ instructions. So it is with this newspaper warfare. The secondary
+ agents, who are popularly supposed to act from inspiration are
+ undisguisedly hostile. Waddington's demeanour all the time is
+ imperturbably friendly. Is it helplessness, or bad faith? The
+ question is one of considerable practical importance: for if we are
+ to measure the co-operation of France by the action of Fournier and
+ Gambetta, we shall do wisely to retire, gently but effectually,
+ from a perilous partnership. And it is impossible to ignore this
+ aspect of the case in considering the precise line to be pursued in
+ the two pending questions of Greece and Egypt.
+
+ Our object in Egypt, ever since we promised some four years
+ ago not to take it, is to see that our own interests are not
+ injured and that French interests receive adequate, but not
+ excessive consideration. If, however, Gambetta means mischief, it
+ may be wise for us to seek the protection of English interests
+ only, and leave the French to take care of themselves. This would
+ be done by pushing forward the other Powers. Their interference
+ would be fatal to Egyptian solvency, and consequently to
+ French bondholders. But it would be as fatal a bar to French
+ preponderance as the plan of duplicating all appointments, and
+ as none of these great Powers are naval, we could look after
+ the Canal just as easily if they were masters in Egypt, as
+ under the present Anglo-French system. If the French are really
+ friends, the Anglo-French system may be maintained in spite of
+ many inconveniences in order to cement that friendship. But if
+ Gambetta and Fournier are to be taken as the directing force in
+ French politics, the Anglo-French system is merely a make-believe,
+ and will only draw us into a succession of crises in which we
+ shall probably be outwitted. This dilemma merits very careful
+ consideration. Greece is a less important and more transitory
+ affair. In order to avoid division in the Congress we went rather
+ further than we thought quite wise; and we have no wish to go
+ further still. Of course, abstractedly, it would be much better
+ that all the Hellenic populations should be under a Hellenic ruler.
+ But Turkey is still a fact of which account must be taken; and the
+ danger of Turkey resisting is very serious. The fact that Greece
+ has not won this territory as prize of war, nor earned it as the
+ consideration of any service done, but is to gain it merely by her
+ skill in singing diplomatic dithyrambics, appears to irritate the
+ Turks intensely. It is not our present policy to adopt a course
+ which shall induce the Sultan to listen to the Russian proposals
+ which are so freely placed before him. We would not therefore,
+ in any case, take a leading part in pressing the cession on him.
+ But we doubt extremely the wisdom of exciting anew the Moslem
+ fanaticism, by demanding a town to which the Albanians attach so
+ much importance as Janina. However, in this question we should
+ have been a good deal influenced by the wishes of France, if we
+ could have thought that by exalting the influence of Fournier we
+ were strengthening a friend. But can we do so?
+
+There was, in reality, no foundation for Lord Salisbury's suspicions
+that Gambetta and his allies were seeking to interfere in British
+internal politics. The objectionable articles were written under an
+erroneous impression that France had been outwitted, and that Mr.
+Vivian, in pursuance of secret instructions from his Government, was
+working for the failure of the joint Anglo-French administration in
+Egypt and for the establishment of exclusive British influence. But as
+the attacks in the French press mainly took the form of abusing England
+for not agreeing to energetic proposals made by the French Government,
+it was a legitimate grievance against M. Waddington that he never took
+any steps whatever to contradict this perfectly baseless accusation.
+As for the conduct of French agents who were continually intriguing
+against their English colleagues, it is probable that M. Waddington was
+able to exercise little or no control over them, and it has already
+been mentioned that some of them were in the habit of corresponding
+directly with Gambetta behind the back of their official chief. Lord
+Lyons, who naturally was anxious to make things as easy for the French
+as possible, recommended that the vanity and susceptibility of French
+diplomatists abroad and of the public at home, should be studied as
+much as possible, since there was a universal feeling that France was
+now too strong to play a secondary part anywhere, and that sacrifices
+on our part were preferable to allowing her to throw herself into the
+arms of Russia. Lord Salisbury therefore persevered in the difficult
+task of endeavouring to co-operate cordially with the French Government,
+and M. Waddington applied himself to elaborating the scheme of Dual
+Control which was eventually adopted. Meanwhile it had become apparent
+that, in order to obtain anything like a successful result, the Khedive
+Ismail must be got rid of somehow, a course which was urged not only by
+Gambetta, but by the French Agent at Cairo. Joint efforts were made by
+the French and British Agents to induce him to abdicate in favour of
+Prince Tewfik, which were seconded by the representations of Germany
+and Austria; but these were of no avail, and the Gordian knot was
+not cut until the Sultan suddenly intervened on June 26. On that day
+a telegram arrived from Constantinople, deposing Ismail by Imperial
+Iradé, and conferring the Government of Egypt upon his eldest son Prince
+Tewfik, who was at once proclaimed Khedive without any disturbance of
+tranquillity.
+
+The action of the Sultan was not only sudden but unexpected, and Lord
+Salisbury at once took steps to assure the French Government that it was
+not due to the instigation of Her Majesty's Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ June 26, 1879.
+
+ Pray assure M. Waddington that the Turkish move reported
+ to-day does not proceed in any way from our suggestion. We have
+ only urged in the very strongest terms that the Sultan should not
+ interfere with what we were doing in Cairo. But the Sultan seems to
+ have been perfectly resolved to have a finger in the pie; and as he
+ was not allowed to interfere to save the Khedive, he indemnified
+ himself by interfering to upset him.
+
+ I am not specially in love with the Firman of 1873, which
+ I see the Sultan has revoked. But I am afraid it will annoy
+ Waddington, and therefore I am anxious he should be well convinced
+ we had no hand in it.
+
+ Now it is done, the wisest course we can take is to accept it,
+ and devote our energies to procuring any new Firman that may be
+ necessary to the present state of Egyptian finances. I don't think
+ it will be any great evil if their power of raising armaments is
+ limited. But on all this I should like to have Waddington's opinion.
+
+M. Waddington was a sensible man, and therefore there was no difficulty
+in convincing him that England was not responsible for the Sultan's
+action; but French opinion generally was incredulous, and it was
+believed that the deposition of Ismail was the result of the rivalry at
+Constantinople between the French and British Ambassadors. The latter
+was unjustly suspected of a desire to reduce Egypt to the condition
+of a Turkish Pashalic, and it was obvious that the revocation of the
+Firman indicated the intention of the Sultan to reassert his influence
+over Egypt in a manner which French policy had consistently opposed.
+Although, therefore, the Sultan's action had delivered both England
+and France from a highly embarrassing situation, and had been taken
+at a most opportune moment, it was considered advisable, instead of
+expressing gratitude, to criticise adversely the form of the Imperial
+Iradé, and to insist upon the issue of another.
+
+What was, however, of really more essential importance than the somewhat
+remote fear of Turkish interference was the question of how the Dual
+Control was to be effectively established.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 7, 1879.
+
+ Our perplexity as to the effect of the Firman has received
+ a rather comical solution. No such Firman exists. An 'Iradé' is
+ merely the Sultan's signature; and that was only given to the
+ telegraphic message deposing Ismail. So that the revocation of the
+ Firman of 1873 has not taken place, and the discussion as to the
+ exact meaning of such a revocation seems to be premature. All that
+ we now have to do is to prevent, if we can, any Firman at all being
+ issued to Tewfik, and then every one will be happy.
+
+ Tewfik is resolved to begin the Liquidation at once; and if
+ it be true that interest is rolling up at the rate of £80,000 a
+ month, there is good cause for his desire to hurry it. But the
+ Controllers will hardly be enough. We want to have some hold over
+ the government of Egypt, though we do not want to assume any
+ overt responsibility. The great object seems to me to be to have
+ representatives inside the offices who shall be able to report
+ what the Government are doing to the Agents, and shall be able to
+ give advice to the Government in accordance with the instructions
+ of the Agents. If you have a European Minister, the Agent must
+ be suppressed. I despair of making two talented Englishmen work
+ side by side, without subordinating one to the other; and if we
+ must choose between Agent and Minister as a vehicle of English
+ influence, the former seems to me the easier to work with. He is
+ not quasi-independent, and therefore will obey orders. He occupies
+ a recognized and traditional position and therefore excites no
+ jealousy either among Moslems or other Christian Powers; and he
+ cannot be dismissed; and if his advice is not taken, or applied
+ badly, the country he serves is not in the eyes of the world
+ primarily responsible. The case on the other side is that the
+ European Minister has more power. But has he? What power did Wilson
+ enjoy? The only power Europeans can enjoy at Cairo rests on the
+ fear which their Governments may happen to inspire, and this fear
+ will operate as strongly through an Agent as through a Minister.
+ We do not put European Ministers even into the Governments of
+ dependent Indian Provinces: and there we have, what we cannot have
+ in Egypt for a long time, 'bayonets to sit upon.'
+
+ We have made the mistake in Egypt and elsewhere, of
+ underrating the vitality of the Moslem feeling. I am afraid M.
+ Waddington is doing so with respect to Greece.
+
+Another letter deals further with the question of Control, and contains
+some interesting reflections on moral influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 15, 1879.
+
+ I am very much of the opinion that the Control should take
+ the form of inspection. It is the only form of Control likely to
+ be effective. Actual authority we cannot exercise. We tried to do
+ it through the European Ministers, but when the stress came, the
+ disbanded officers proved to us that two pairs of arms are not much
+ use against two thousand. The only form of Control we have is that
+ which is called moral influence--which in practice is a combination
+ of menace, objurgation, and worry. In this we are still supreme
+ and have many modes of applying it--diplomatic notes, consular
+ interviews, newspapers, blue books. We must devote ourselves to the
+ perfecting of this weapon. And, obviously, the first condition of
+ its use is complete knowledge of what is going in.
+
+ The exchange, therefore, of nominal authority for real
+ inspectionship is a step in the right direction. It is facing
+ facts. We must exert ourselves to open to these inspectors every
+ avenue of information; and we must have a certain number of
+ sub-inspectors paid by Egypt, who shall travel about, collecting
+ information. It is essential, of course, that these last should
+ know the language.
+
+ The division of the jurisdiction of the two inspectors is
+ a serious puzzle. Upper and Lower Egypt certainly will not do,
+ unless we have Lower Egypt. I had thought of a North and South
+ division--the Nile--starting at Damietta. But I know Vivian does
+ not like this; moreover I see difficulties about handing over
+ Alexandria to the French.
+
+ Waddington's proposal for a rotatory jurisdiction sounds odd.
+ What would he think of it as applied to any other department of
+ life--Ambassadors, Bishops, or Ministers? I suppose the frequency
+ of what they call a 'Prefectoral Movement' in France has put it
+ into his head.
+
+ Would it be possible to fuse them into a board, giving them
+ a native colleague to be chosen by themselves, and then decide
+ by majority? I have spoken to Baring[25] about the Commission of
+ Liquidation. I doubt his accepting the Control, though I think he
+ would the Liquidation.
+
+ As to the Firman, we are agreed as to the limitation of
+ armaments. I should be glad to see loans forbidden altogether.
+ To an Oriental ruler they are like firewater to the Red Indians.
+ I should be glad to see a declaration that the Powers would not
+ recognize or encourage the payment of any loan contracted by the
+ Egyptian Government after this date. They are not wanted to meet
+ any present stress; but the fellaheen are already loaded with quite
+ as heavy a weight as they can bear.
+
+The question of appointing the Controllers and deciding what their
+functions were to be, gave rise to more difficulties, caused by the
+obvious desire of many Frenchmen to get the Egyptian finances entirely
+into French hands. Ultimately Major Baring and M. de Blignières
+were appointed, but their powers were not formally defined until
+November. By the decree of November 15, 1879, it was laid down that
+the Controllers should have full rights of inquiring into all branches
+of the administration; the rank of Ministers and seats in the Cabinet,
+although restricted to making suggestions; the power of appointing and
+dismissing subordinate officials; and it was further enacted that they
+were irremovable without the consent of their respective Governments. By
+this action the British and the French Governments practically assumed
+the responsibility of Government, and for some time to come Egypt ceased
+to give trouble.
+
+In the month of June, 1879, an event had occurred which was of profound
+importance to all political parties in France. The Prince Imperial
+had perished in Zululand, and with him had vanished the hopes of a
+resuscitated Empire. The tragedy of the Prince's death is heightened
+by the fact that it was only owing to an unfortunate misunderstanding
+that he was ever allowed to accompany the expedition. On March 1,
+Lord Salisbury writing to Lord Lyons stated that the departure of the
+Prince Imperial was: _'a mal entendu_ which we are unable to understand
+even here. The Government had very distinctly negatived it, but in
+consequence of some misapprehensions, our orders were not attended to
+by the military men, and he received encouragement which could not
+afterwards be withdrawn. If you think Waddington is at all sore on the
+matter, you are authorized to explain this fully to him. But I rather
+expect to hear from you that no importance is attached by the French
+Government to what has taken place.'
+
+Two days later he again wrote:--
+
+ I am very sorry to hear that so painful an impression was
+ created in Paris. We have never been able to discover exactly
+ how it was done, or why our already clearly expressed objection
+ was disregarded. He was of course at liberty to go, and people
+ who ought to have known better were at liberty to write private
+ letters and go to railway stations. Of course nothing official has
+ been done, but the border line between official and private has
+ been very closely trenched upon. However, all we can do now is to
+ express our sincere regret.
+
+At Lord Lyons's next interview with M. Waddington, the latter asked (not
+in a complaining manner) how the Prince's expedition to Zululand had
+been brought about, and was told in reply that the Prince had settled it
+himself through personal friends and that Her Majesty's Government had
+by no means approved of it. President Grévy alluded to the matter in the
+course of a conversation with the Prince of Wales, who happened to be in
+Paris, and also expressed no disapproval; in fact, he went so far as to
+remark: _qu'il avait très bien fait_. Thus the principal personages in
+France evidently did not consider the matter of much importance; but,
+on the other hand, the Republican press showed considerable irritation,
+which, under the circumstances, was perhaps not entirely unnatural, as
+it did not seem credible that the Prince could have started without the
+approval of the British Government. When the news of his death arrived,
+it was felt that, for the time being at all events, Bonapartism had been
+practically crushed out of existence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, June 20, 1879.
+
+ In hearing of the sad end of the short life of the Prince
+ Imperial, one's first thought is for the Empress, whose bitter cup
+ of sorrows is now full.
+
+ The immediate political result is the utter disorganization
+ of the Imperial Party. It was far from strong, but still it was
+ the most efficacious element of opposition to the Republicans, and
+ they will now have things still more their own way. The Fleurys,
+ Rouhers, and the old Imperial following can never hope to live to
+ recover from the blow. I suppose Prince Napoleon will hardly put
+ himself forward in the position of a pretender to the Imperial
+ Crown, and he would have no party with him if he did. In the
+ more remote future his eldest son may prove a more formidable
+ candidate than poor Prince Louis could have been. He is said to be
+ a remarkably clever, attractive youth, and a thorough Bonaparte
+ in appearance. No hereditary responsibility for Sedan can be cast
+ upon him; he is undoubtedly of the Bonaparte race, and he has been
+ brought up in France. For the present, however, Prince Louis's
+ melancholy death is a decided accession to Republican strength.
+
+The death of the Prince excited the sympathies of all classes in France
+with the stricken Empress, but when in July, preparations were being
+made for the funeral in England, the bitterness of French party politics
+displayed itself in that hostility which, carried beyond the grave, it
+is the least possible to condone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 10, 1879.
+
+ The susceptibility the French Government is showing about
+ the funeral of the Prince Imperial is neither wise nor dignified.
+ If ever there was an occasion on which political animosities
+ might be left in abeyance, surely this is one. The death of the
+ Prince Imperial has put an end to many hopes and aspirations,
+ and has inclined numerous adherents of the family to acquiesce
+ in the present state of things. It is certainly not politic to
+ require of people in this frame of mind an overt manifestation
+ of heartlessness and ingratitude to the dynasty which has had so
+ mournful an end. The ceremony so manifestly relates to the past
+ and not to the future that there can be no reasonable objection
+ to allowing the old adherents of the family, whether Marshals and
+ Generals, or merely civilians to go over to attend it. I fancy
+ that Grévy himself and the Republicans _de la vieille_ cannot get
+ over, even on such an occasion as this, their old hostility to the
+ Empire.
+
+These almost incredibly vindictive feelings again manifested themselves
+when a proposal was made that a monument to the unfortunate Prince
+should be placed in Westminster Abbey. M. Waddington, who must have
+been heartily ashamed of the part he was forced to play, remonstrated
+privately against the project, and intimated to Lord Lyons that he
+thought of writing to Dean Stanley, whom he happened to know, and of
+urging him not to consent to it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 22, 1879.
+
+ I think, on the whole, I had better not answer your despatch
+ officially about the Prince Imperial's statue; but you can tell
+ Waddington unofficially as much of the following as you may
+ think useful. As soon as I got it, I communicated with the Prime
+ Minister, who sent to the Dean of Westminster. The Dean, when the
+ message reached him, had already forwarded to all the newspapers
+ a letter which you have read in the issues of this morning. On
+ reading it we came to the conclusion that the matter had gone too
+ far to be recalled.
+
+ On historical considerations the Dean proposes to put the
+ monument into Henry the Seventh's chapel, and for that purpose,
+ undoubtedly, the Queen's permission must be obtained. But as
+ regards the Abbey in general he is absolutely supreme. He might
+ put up a statue of Nana Sahib, if he chose. So we must decline to
+ accept any responsibility for his proceedings. As he has publicly
+ made the announcement that it is his intention, if not interfered
+ with, to give the requisite permission, it is clearly impossible
+ for us to 'apply pressure' to induce him to give way. The motive
+ for doing so would have to be confessed and would cause much
+ misapprehension.
+
+ I have expressed a wish to see the inscription before it is
+ put up, and I have no doubt I shall be allowed to do so. I think I
+ can assure M. Waddington that there is not the slightest danger of
+ anything about Napoleon IV. being contained in it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The monument was never erected, the project meeting with much opposition
+in Parliament as calculated to offend the susceptibilities of the French
+Government.
+
+It must be admitted that the circumstances surrounding the death of this
+unfortunate Prince reflect discredit, though in an unequal degree, upon
+both the French and the British Governments. If the French Government
+showed a petty and vindictive spirit totally unworthy of a great and
+powerful nation, the misunderstanding which enabled the Prince to go
+to South Africa; his vague and indefinite status with respect to the
+expeditionary force; the equally vague conditions attaching to his
+relations with Captain Carey, which were partly responsible for his
+death; the unhappy suggestion of the Abbey monument; the helpless
+attitude of the Government in the face of an enterprising ecclesiastic;
+and the subsequent unseemly discussion in the House of Commons, are
+eloquent of slipshod and careless methods which are discreditable to
+British administration and constitute a somewhat humiliating page in the
+national history.
+
+The autumn of 1879 was marked by the conclusion of the Austro-German
+alliance, hailed at the time by Lord Salisbury as 'glad tidings of
+great joy,' and destined profoundly to influence European politics for
+many years to come. In spite of assurances given by Bismarck himself,
+by Andrassy, and by Haymerle, this new grouping of two first-class
+military Powers caused much perturbation at Paris, which was certainly
+not allayed by Lord Salisbury's benediction, and provided convenient
+material for an attack upon the tottering Waddington administration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 14, 1879.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As to French internal politics, the most striking feature is
+ the somewhat vague but almost universal feeling of uneasiness about
+ the future which pervades France. It is impossible not to see that
+ this feeling has increased even during the few weeks that have
+ elapsed since I went away on leave in August. I suppose that the
+ immediate fear is that the Waddington Ministry will be succeeded by
+ one more Radical, and that thus, step by step, the Ultra-Reds will
+ get the Government into their hands.
+
+ When I first saw Waddington on my return, he was in good
+ spirits, thinking that the threatened attacks upon him about
+ the amnesty, the Government, and especially the diplomatic
+ appointments, had blown over. Now, however, he is menaced with
+ an interpellation on the Austro-German understanding. This
+ understanding is, of course, extremely unpalatable to the French,
+ and among them the general belief is that it binds Austria to
+ assist Germany, in case of need, to defend Alsace and Lorraine
+ against France. Waddington has the most positive assurances from
+ Bismarck, Andrassy and Haymerle that there is nothing against
+ France in it, but this is not enough to reassure the cavillers.
+ The intention seems to be to reproach Waddington with this
+ understanding generally, as indicating the failure of his Foreign
+ Policy, and in particular to blame him for having an Ambassador at
+ Vienna who neither prevented, nor found it out, and an Ambassador
+ in London who did not make the French policy on the subject
+ properly understood by the English Government. It seems that
+ it is intended to argue that you would not have spoken of the
+ understanding in the terms you used at Manchester, if you had
+ known the painful impression it had made in France.
+
+ There are two opinions in France on the Foreign Policy to be
+ now adopted. Perhaps the general, unreflecting public are inclined
+ to throw themselves into the arms of Russia. The wise heads (and
+ there is some reason to hope that Gambetta may be among them) look
+ rather to England, and are willing to conciliate her by supporting
+ her views in the East. It may be worth while to take this feeling
+ into account, and perhaps with that view rather to put forward the
+ reinstatement of Khaireddin and Midhat as the objects in view, than
+ exclusively English appointments.
+
+It seems to be a more or less established rule that when an English
+Foreign Secretary makes a speech, Ambassadors should write and expatiate
+upon the admirable effect which has been produced abroad, and Lord
+Lyons's comment upon Lord Salisbury's Manchester speech approaches more
+nearly to criticism than appears elsewhere in his correspondence. The
+charge of ignorance brought against the French Ambassador at Vienna
+was probably quite correct, but the British Embassy at Vienna must
+have been in the same case, for the existence of the Austro-German
+alliance was first discovered by that extremely able public servant,
+the late Sir Joseph Crowe, K.C.M.G.[26] As for the alleged inaction of
+the French Ambassador at London, that official was a retired admiral,
+whom apparently Waddington seldom seems to have consulted, and over
+whose unconscious head business was habitually transacted by the French
+Foreign Office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 21, 1879.
+
+ We are within a week of the opening of the session, but the
+ situation has not become more clear. Gambetta and Waddington have
+ a personal dislike to each other, and no doubt Gambetta would be
+ glad to oust Waddington, and to put in his place some new Minister
+ for Foreign Affairs, such as the Marquis de Noailles, with some
+ creature of his own, such as Spüller as adlatus or Under Secretary
+ of State. But then Gambetta would find it difficult to do this
+ without bringing about such a break up of the Ministry as would
+ raise the question of his own taking office. But if those who ought
+ to know him well judge aright, he does not wish to come into power
+ until he sees his way to doing something very great--in fact to
+ getting back Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+ Gambetta professes to be strongly in favour of the English
+ Alliance, and for that and for other reasons, to make a liberal
+ treaty of commerce with us. I do not, however, imagine that his
+ ideas of a liberal treaty go beyond maintaining, or nearly so, the
+ tariffs as they stand in the existing Anglo-French Treaties.
+
+ I imagine he has thought of going to England himself whenever
+ he has a good opportunity, not with a view to putting himself into
+ the hands of Sir Charles Dilke and taking part in any Ultra-Radical
+ demonstration, but rather with a desire of conciliating the
+ moderate public opinion in England, and showing that he has no
+ desire to promote a Republican Propaganda abroad. He seems to have
+ a decidedly friendly feeling towards the present English Ministry.
+
+ I have heard that the Russian Grand Dukes had been led by
+ General Chanzy to expect a much more warm and cordial reception at
+ Paris than they actually met with, and that consequently they were
+ by no means pleased.
+
+ Waddington seems to be as little prepared to go into the
+ Newfoundland question as he was two months ago. The impression
+ he makes upon me is the same that he made upon you. The Navy
+ Department keep him in awe of them and prevent his acting upon the
+ reasonable views he expressed to you at Berlin.
+
+The various difficulties in all parts of the world which were before
+long to trouble Anglo-French relations for many years, had now
+begun to manifest themselves in such places as Newfoundland, Tahiti,
+Réunion, the Gambia, and elsewhere. All these troublesome questions
+fell under the Marine Department, and their accumulation was productive
+of an irritation which hampered M. Waddington, whose position was
+also weakened by a rabid demand made upon the Ministry for Government
+appointments. In fact it was difficult to see how any French Ministry
+could last, if the American system of a fresh division of the spoils
+was to take place whenever a change occurred. In America the Executive
+is safe for four years, but in France, directly the places had been
+distributed, the disappointed combined to overthrow the unhappy
+Ministers responsible for the distribution.
+
+Meanwhile his most formidable opponent, the ex-Democrat, Gambetta, had
+assumed the _rôle_ of a grand seigneur, and gave sumptuous Parliamentary
+banquets which were pronounced by the highest gastronomic authorities to
+be exquisite in every respect. He contemplated a visit to London, and it
+is somewhat surprising to learn that the Democrat showed a very obvious
+prepossession in favour of the English Conservative Party.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 12, 1879.
+
+ Gambetta has heard with very great satisfaction that you and
+ Lord Beaconsfield would be very glad of the opportunity of seeing
+ him, which will be afforded if he carries into effect his idea
+ of going to England. He feels that it would be essential that
+ he should not make himself the guest or place himself under the
+ special guidance of any political person on one side or the other.
+ He would probably go to an hotel. As to the time of his visit,
+ he does not seem to have formed any definite plan. It seems to be
+ connected in his mind with the Treaty of Commerce, and he seems
+ inclined to secure himself a good reception by contributing first
+ to making a favourable Treaty of Commerce. I suppose he and his
+ countrymen would consider a Treaty simply renewing the arrangements
+ of 1860 as very favourable to us. He absolutely repudiates all
+ notion of anything like Republican propagandism. He has a strong
+ bias in favour of the Conservatives in England. His sympathies are
+ with an active Foreign Policy, and he has a grudge against the
+ Liberals because they did not come to the assistance of France in
+ the Franco-German war. He seems to follow English home politics
+ very carefully. He wishes England and France to act together in
+ the East, but considers that things have got into a horrid mess at
+ Constantinople, and expresses regret that the French and English
+ Embassies there do not pull more together.
+
+ I think one of his objects in going to England would be to
+ show people in France that he is considered a person of sufficient
+ importance to be admitted into the society of people of rank and
+ station in aristocratic England.
+
+ He has also no doubt the higher object of making France and
+ himself popular in England, so as to avert all risk of England's
+ joining the Austro-German Alliance to the detriment of France.
+
+ The danger would be that he would form too great expectations
+ of obtaining a positive alliance with England, and that if we did
+ not come up to his expectations in this respect, he might in his
+ disappointment, turn to Russia. But from this point of view, the
+ most dangerous thing would be to _froisser_ his susceptibility by
+ showing any coldness beforehand about his visit.
+
+ He undertakes to let us know whenever he comes to any
+ resolution about going to England.
+
+From the above letter it will be seen how much importance was attached
+to Gambetta's views, and how desirable it was considered to secure his
+goodwill; but apparently the visit to London from which so much was
+expected, never took place--perhaps because his English Conservative
+friends were shortly afterwards turned out of office.
+
+The threatened attack upon the Waddington administration took the
+form of a vote of want of confidence which was moved in the month of
+December, but successfully rejected. The Ministerial success, however,
+was of a somewhat fictitious nature, as the Left Groups when united,
+outnumbered the Right, and the Government was, therefore, liable
+to be turned out by a combination. M. Waddington himself professed
+satisfaction, and affirmed with pride that he had been congratulated
+upon his majority by the British Government; while from Berlin, Vienna,
+and even from St. Petersburg, where he was not in favour, assurances had
+been received of the satisfaction felt at the prospect of his continuing
+in office. The result, too, of the vote enabled him to carry out an
+intention he had long had in his mind, of abandoning the Presidency of
+the Council, and of retaining the office of Minister of Foreign Affairs.
+His own wish was to see M. Léon Say Prime Minister, but as that was out
+of the question, he favoured the appointment of M. de Freycinet, who, in
+addition to other qualifications, possessed the confidence of Gambetta,
+and would therefore render it difficult for the latter to attack the
+Government. The proposed transformation of the Ministry, however, was
+found difficult to effect, chiefly owing to the animosity of Gambetta
+against Waddington; the former being credited with the intention of
+upsetting any Ministry in which the latter remained. Gambetta was in
+fact pursuing a systematic dog-in-the-manger policy which was little
+to his credit, for while continually attacking and threatening the
+Government he was unwilling to take office himself, with the Chamber
+then in existence, since he realized that the Ultra-Radicals were trying
+to force him into a position in which he would have either to accept
+responsibility or to abandon the leadership of the Republican Party.
+The object, in short, of Clémenceau and the extreme party was to use
+Gambetta up in order to make room eventually for themselves. Neither
+President Grévy or Freycinet showed any accommodating spirit with
+regard to Waddington's plans, and when Freycinet laid down conditions
+which were unacceptable, the President tried to persuade Waddington to
+remain on as Prime Minister; but Waddington's position had been further
+impaired by imprudent representation on the part of President Grévy
+and others, that he was highly acceptable to Bismarck as a Minister,
+and Waddington admitted openly himself that he was wanting in the
+qualifications of a French Parliamentary leader. Consequently the upshot
+of it all was that he resigned, and Freycinet was allowed to form a new
+administration on his own terms. 'I part with Waddington with great
+regret,' wrote Lord Lyons. 'He had the greatest of all recommendations,
+that you could believe him, and feel sure of him.' These regrets were
+shared by Lord Salisbury. 'I am very sorry for the loss of Waddington.
+It was a luxury to have a French Minister who worked on principles
+intelligible to the English mind.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 30, 1879.
+
+ With the new Ministry I suppose Gambetta's reign is to begin.
+ The Cabinet was almost ostensibly formed by him. He did not, and
+ probably could not, put in any of the chief men of his own party.
+ They are kept, or keep themselves, in reserve to come into power
+ with Gambetta himself. The present Ministers are personally to a
+ certain extent Moderate, and altogether, so far as they are known,
+ mediocre. Freycinet is said to have some inclination to assert
+ independence, but he has not hitherto rebelled against his old
+ master Gambetta.
+
+ The man who appears to have lost most reputation in the affair
+ is President Grévy. He knows well enough that it is Gambetta's
+ intention to supplant him, but he has allowed himself to be
+ circumvented with his eyes open, from lack of resolution and lack
+ of energy, and has apparently let his rival obtain complete control
+ of the Government.
+
+ I do not suppose that we shall see at present any marked
+ change in the Foreign Policy of the French Government. Freycinet
+ knows nothing whatever of Foreign Affairs. Gambetta has strong
+ general notions, but seems more inclined to insist upon disposing
+ of the patronage of the Foreign Office than to go into the details
+ of the business. At home I suppose the first measure will be a
+ wholesale redistribution of places. _Aux situations nouvelles,
+ il faut des hommes nouveaux_, was the principle proclaimed by
+ Clémenceau. Beust[27] turns the phrase round and says: _Aux hommes
+ nouveaux il faut des situations._
+
+ At all events the centre Gauche is dead, and with it the
+ Thiers' policy, which was to preserve as far as possible the
+ institutions, the laws and the administrative system in France,
+ with the simple change of having an elective President, instead
+ of an hereditary sovereign at the head. The policy could not last
+ long unless it was directed by a really able energetic President.
+ France is now about to try real democratic and republican
+ government, and it will be a dangerous experiment in a country like
+ this. It would be a still more dangerous experiment if the old
+ warlike spirit had survived in the people. Happily for peace, they
+ are more intent upon making and enjoying money than upon obtaining
+ military glory, or even upon recovering their lost provinces.
+ Gambetta will try for the recovery of the Provinces if he preserves
+ his energies and fortune seems to give him a chance.
+
+ I have just seen Pothuau[28] who seems very indignant at his
+ place in London having been offered to Waddington, and declares
+ that he has no intention of giving it up.
+
+Lord Lyons was destined to witness many more changes of Government in
+France before his final departure; most of them accurately described by
+the hackneyed phrase: _Plus cela change, plus c'est la même chose._
+
+A letter from Major Baring written at the close of the year is worth
+quoting as evidence of the improved and hopeful condition of Egypt,
+and also of the harmony prevailing at the time between the English and
+French Controllers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Major Baring to Lord Lyons_.
+
+ Cairo, Dec. 29, 1879.
+
+ You may like to hear what I think of the state of things here,
+ so I venture to write this line.
+
+ There is a very decided improvement. Since I have been
+ connected with Egyptian affairs I never remember matters going so
+ smoothly. I like what I see of the Khedive, and I see a great deal
+ of him, for he frequently presides at the Council, and besides this
+ I often go to see him on business. Riaz's head is rather turned by
+ the decorations he has received, but he is very well disposed and
+ will always follow our advice, if we insist. He is oppressed with
+ the fear that Nubar will return to office; as, without doubt, he
+ will sooner or later; but it is not at all to be desired that he
+ should return just yet. What we want is _time_. If we can get along
+ for six months, or better, a year, without any considerable change
+ I really believe that the financial crisis which has now lasted so
+ long may be brought to a close.
+
+ Cherif and the Turks made overtures to Nubar the other day,
+ but he was wise enough to decline so unnatural a coalition.
+
+ Before long our financial scheme will be ready to launch, and
+ if, as I hope, it is accepted, the Commission of Liquidation will
+ no longer be necessary. This is perhaps the best solution of the
+ matter.
+
+ We shall reduce Unified to 4 per cent, and leave Preference
+ alone.
+
+ Blignières is behaving most loyally in everything which
+ concerns English interests. The Khedive and his Ministers have, I
+ think, got over the prejudice they entertained against him.
+
+M. de Freycinet took over the Foreign Office as well as the Presidency
+of the Council; as has already been stated, he was quite ignorant of
+all foreign questions, and was also looked upon as less reliable than
+M. Waddington. The first official interview with him, however, produced
+a favourable impression, all the more because he did not let out a
+flood of common-places about devotion to England, and so forth; but the
+important question was to know what line Gambetta was inclined to take
+in Foreign Policy, and Sheffield was deputed to find out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 17, 1880.
+
+ Gambetta has expressed confidentially to Sheffield to-day his
+ views as to the Foreign Policy of France; with the intention of
+ course that they should be communicated to me only in the strictest
+ privacy.
+
+ He considered that the Austro-German Alliance had been made
+ against France; that it entered into Prince Bismarck's calculations
+ that it might throw France into the arms of Russia, but that His
+ Highness thought that there would be more than a compensation for
+ this if in consequence of it England were completely detached from
+ France. Gambetta declared that France had not fallen into this trap
+ and would not fall into it--that she would never make an alliance
+ with Russia, but that if Russia were attacked by Germany, France
+ would have to take care of her own safety. He had information which
+ convinced him that there was no foundation for the assertions that
+ Russian troops were being massed on the frontier of Germany, and
+ he believed that these rumours were spread from Berlin to afford a
+ pretext for an attack on Russia, to be made so suddenly as to be
+ successful at once and to enable Germany to turn towards France
+ without any fear of Russia in her rear.
+
+ In order to disconcert this plan Gambetta thought it highly
+ important that a good understanding should be established between
+ England and Russia both with regard to Turkey and to India. He
+ held that it was the interest of France to urge in every way the
+ Russian Government to come to such an understanding with England.
+ He looked upon the state of things at Constantinople as very
+ bad, and attributed it to the disagreements between the French
+ and English Ambassadors; while in order to promote the accord
+ which he wished to see between England and Russia he desired that
+ the best feeling should exist between the French and English
+ Representatives at Constantinople. It was evident, however, from
+ what he said that any complaint against Fournier by England would
+ be met by counter-complaints on the part of France against Layard.
+ If Fournier resigned, Tissot the French Minister at Athens would be
+ Gambetta's candidate for the Embassy in Turkey.
+
+ Gambetta denied most positively that there was any truth
+ whatever in the rumours that he had been in communication with
+ Bismarck about the restoration of Lorraine to France or anything
+ of the kind. As to the insinuation that it was proposed that
+ while Lorraine should be restored, France should receive a slice
+ of Belgium in compensation for Alsace, Gambetta said that it
+ was plain that this could only have been put about to produce
+ ill-will between England and France. After the Benedetti affair, no
+ Frenchman in his senses would enter into secret arrangements with
+ Bismarck about Belgium, and the French Republic had certainly no
+ desire under any circumstances to despoil its neighbours.
+
+ Gambetta expressed a desire that a liberal Treaty of Commerce
+ should be made with England and he was eloquent on the importance
+ of a close and cordial union between the two countries.
+
+ Gambetta impressed upon Sheffield that he was speaking to him
+ simply as a friend, and quite privately. I think it is interesting
+ and important to know what sentiments he expresses in this way:
+ but, of course, if he was quoted, or if what he said was allowed to
+ transpire, he would feel bitterly towards us and at once put an end
+ to all communications of the kind. His tone appears to have been
+ quite that of a man who felt that he would have the power to carry
+ into effect the policy he recommended in this country.
+
+ Freycinet has just been to see me, but I did not find him
+ equally communicative on the general Foreign Policy of France.
+
+As Freycinet was occupied at that moment, _more Gallico_, in clearing
+the old officials out of the Foreign Office, and as he admittedly
+possessed little knowledge himself, his reticence under the
+circumstances was not surprising; but, so far as could be gathered, it
+was the intention of the new Ministry to follow the prudent course of
+their predecessors, a profession of faith evidently intended especially
+for Berlin. As regards the so-called Eastern Question, interest had
+temporarily shifted from Egypt to Greece, and the various Powers were
+endeavouring without much success to negotiate the cession of Turkish
+territory to that country. The usual spring war scare had taken a
+different shape, and, without any foundation whatever, Bismarck was
+credited with the extraordinary intention of suddenly falling upon
+Russia, while a coolness had sprung up between the French and Russian
+Governments owing to the refusal of the former to surrender the Nihilist
+Hartmann, who was implicated in an attempt to wreck a train in which the
+Russian Emperor was travelling.
+
+This refusal annoyed the Emperor so much that he withdrew his
+Ambassador, Prince Orloff, from Paris, the French consoling themselves
+with the thought that if they lost the favour of the Russian Emperor
+they would, on the other hand, ingratiate themselves with Bismarck.
+
+Upon the Greek Frontier question, which in consequence of an English
+proposal had been referred to an International Commission, there was,
+for some unknown reason, a disposition to blame the British Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Sir H. Layard._
+
+ Paris, March 19, 1880.
+
+ The withdrawal of Orloff, on account of the refusal of the
+ French Government to give up Hartmann, is of course the topic of
+ the day here. The form adopted is that which was used when normal
+ relations between Russia and the Pope were suspended some years
+ ago. The Emperor Alexander is, I understand, very angry; but I do
+ not know how long this _mouvement d'humeur_ will hold out against
+ the obvious political interest which both Russia and France have in
+ not being on bad terms with each other. There was a strong feeling
+ on the Left of the Chamber against giving Hartmann up, and as to
+ foreign relations, I suppose the French set pleasing Bismarck
+ against displeasing the European Alexander.
+
+ Freycinet is decidedly against the admission of Turkey to the
+ Greek Frontier Commission. It might have been politic to admit her,
+ though I don't see how she could have been asked to engage to be
+ bound by the votes of the majority.
+
+ I think things in the East are indeed looking serious. How
+ Turkey is to be kept going, in spite of herself, much longer,
+ passes my comprehension. I should be sorry to make a fourth in an
+ alliance between France, Russia and Turkey. If France and Russia
+ did unite for any serious purpose, I should think the last thing
+ they would wish would be to tie such a clog as Turkey to their
+ wheels. If there is any truth in the proverb, _Quem deus vult
+ perdere si_, etc., I am afraid that there can be very little doubt
+ that the ruin of Abdul Hamid is in the hands of Allah.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 21: French Secretary of Embassy at London.]
+
+[Footnote 22: French Ambassador at Constantinople.]
+
+[Footnote 23: Sir Charles Rivers Wilson, G.C.M.G.]
+
+[Footnote 24: H.B.M. Agent and Consul General at Cairo.]
+
+[Footnote 25: Now Earl of Cromer.]
+
+[Footnote 26: At that period British Consul-General at Düsseldorf.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Austrian Ambassador at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 28: French Ambassador at London.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE REVIVAL OF FRANCE
+
+(1880-1881)
+
+
+The General Election in England which took place in March, 1880,
+resulted not only in the rout of the Conservative Party, but in the
+reversal of the Foreign Policy of Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury,
+and necessitated the withdrawal of Sir Henry Layard from Constantinople,
+while Lord Lytton, whose Afghan policy had been furiously denounced by
+the Liberal Party, sent in his resignation. It is worthy of note that
+Lord Lyons, whom no one could accuse of Jingo tendencies, and whose
+opinion was certainly a very much better one than that of most of Lord
+Lytton's critics, was emphatically in favour of the latter's Afghan
+policy. Writing to Lady Lytton on January 8, 1879, he had expressed
+himself as follows:--
+
+ I have never had the least misgiving about Lytton's policy
+ with regard to Afghanistan, and I was always sure it would be
+ wisely carried into execution. I am only too thankful that we
+ have a spirited Viceroy. You can hardly form an idea of the
+ advantage our reputation has derived, all over Europe, from the
+ Afghan campaign, and you have seen enough of diplomacy to know how
+ much success in all questions of Foreign Policy depends upon the
+ prestige of the country one represents.
+
+Sir Henry Layard had incurred even greater execration than Lord Lytton
+in the eyes of the Liberal Party, because he was considered to have
+been deeply committed to what was described as the Pro-Turkish policy
+of the Conservative Government, although his inexpiable offence
+seems to have consisted chiefly in strenuous and unavailing efforts
+to induce the Turks to put their house in order. During his stay at
+Constantinople he had been greatly hampered by the consistent opposition
+of his French colleague, M. Fournier, whose great object it appeared
+to be to thwart English action whenever opportunity occurred. The
+French Government, which professed great anxiety to act in harmony with
+England, upon ascertaining that Sir Henry Layard was to be replaced by
+Mr. Goschen,[29] withdrew Fournier and appointed M. Tissot in his place.
+
+A change in the French Embassy in London was also imminent, and the
+circumstances attending the appointment of a new Ambassador were not
+devoid of humour.
+
+Admiral Pothuau, the Ambassador under the Waddington régime, had been
+forced to retire, probably much against his inclination, and it was
+considered that M. Léon Say would make an excellent representative, more
+especially as he passed as that _rara avis_, a French Free Trader; but
+M. Say shortly after accepting the appointment was elected President
+of the Senate, and therefore forced to resign. To find a satisfactory
+successor was apparently not so simple a matter as might have been
+assumed. Nothing could have been more correct than M. de Freycinet's
+ideal of a French Ambassador in London: 'a man possessing the full
+confidence and sharing the sentiments of his Government; not so much of
+a politician as to be thinking more of establishing his own political
+position at home than of following his instructions: a man who would
+stay long at the post, and desire to stay there; who would form personal
+friendships with English Statesmen, and improve good relations and
+soften asperities by personal influence. A man calculated to take a part
+in a society like that of London, and who would not be out of place at a
+Court--a man who would have a wife with the same qualities--finally, a
+man not unaccustomed to diplomatic business and diligent and accurate in
+transacting it.' When, however, the question passed from the abstract to
+the concrete, M. de Freycinet's ideas ceased to flow so freely, and he
+seemed utterly at a loss to find the ideal being which his imagination
+had sketched, although he mentioned M. Challemel Lacour--as a man who
+would not do. In spite, however, of M. Challemel Lacour being in M.
+de Freycinet's opinion a man 'who would not do,' it was evident that
+he had a powerful backing, for an emissary from the French Foreign
+Office shortly made his appearance at the Embassy and intimated in
+so many words that the appointment of M. Challemel Lacour would be
+agreeable to Gambetta. That no doubt was a considerable advantage, but
+M. Challemel Lacour by no means corresponded to M. de Freycinet's ideal
+representative, being a man of unconciliatory character and particularly
+notorious on account of a speech which he had once made, in which,
+alluding to political opponents, he had used the words _Fusillez moi ces
+gens là!_ an expression which was continually being quoted against him.
+In the meanwhile, however, M. de Freycinet had had an inspiration, and
+sent for Lord Lyons to tell him that he had discovered just the right
+man for the place. Unfortunately, this personage was married to a lady
+whose antecedents were not considered to be satisfactory, and it became
+necessary to intimate that under the circumstances the appointment would
+not be favourably received in England.
+
+ 'Freycinet was dreadfully put out,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'when he
+ found that the appointment was impossible. He complained chiefly
+ of Léon Say for having brought him into the difficulty, by first
+ accepting the London Embassy and then standing for the Presidency
+ of the Senate.
+
+ 'Léon Say's picture of the lady is about as much like what she
+ was when I last saw her a few years ago, as Challemel Lacour is
+ like Freycinet's ideal of a French Ambassador in London.'
+
+The appointment of M. Challemel Lacour was persisted in, and gave rise
+to some very disagreeable discussions in the House of Commons. Doubtless
+much of the abuse of M. Challemel Lacour was undeserved, but whatever
+his political capacity, he was not remarkable for urbanity.
+
+On the occasion of a big official dinner at the Paris Embassy, when
+requested to take in the absolutely unexceptionable and agreeable wife
+of one of his principal ministerial colleagues, he replied with an
+emphatic '_Jamais!_' which precluded any further discussion.
+
+The question of diplomatic appointments recalls the fact that it was
+about this time that my connection with Lord Lyons first began, through
+becoming a member of his staff, and that it may be appropriate to say
+something about his habits and personal characteristics.
+
+Lord Lyons, who was then more than sixty years of age, was a big,
+heavily built man, whose appearance in no respect suggested the
+diplomatist of fiction, and who rather resembled the conventional
+British squire as depicted by Leech; and the chief characteristic of his
+somewhat homely features was a small piercing eye which nothing seemed
+to escape, from the most unimportant clerical error to a minute detail
+in a lady's dress. As compared with the ordinary English diplomatist,
+his knowledge of foreign languages, without being exceptional, was
+thoroughly adequate. He, of course, spoke French with perfect facility,
+and it is probable that he wrote it with greater correctness than many
+Frenchmen, having a complete mastery both of the grammar and of all
+the complicated expressions which are made use of in correspondence.
+He was also equally at home in Italian; had a knowledge of German,
+and was well acquainted with modern Greek. In addition, he was a fair
+classical scholar, and a peculiarly retentive memory enabled him,
+unlike most people, to remember much of what he had read. His manner,
+at first sight, seemed somewhat alarming, and he was altogether a
+person with whom no one would have felt disposed to take a liberty,
+but the alarming impression, which was solely due to shyness, wore off
+with closer acquaintance as the natural kindliness of his disposition
+revealed itself, and one of the excellent traits in his character was,
+that he never formed a favourable or unfavourable opinion of any one
+in a hurry, but invariably waited for the test of time. The result
+was, in almost every case, that the more he saw of people the more
+he liked them and the more reluctant he became to part with men who
+had been associated with him for any length of time. The position
+which he occupied in British diplomacy during the twenty years which
+he spent at Paris may, without exaggeration be described as unique.
+No other man stood on quite the same footing, though it would be idle
+to deny that there were some who were perhaps more brilliant. But the
+implicit confidence which successive Foreign Secretaries placed in Lord
+Lyons's judgment was based upon the knowledge that his opinions were
+sound, unprejudiced, disinterested, and only formed after the most
+conscientious investigations. 'I never volunteer advice,' he used to
+remark, and it was perhaps for that very reason that his opinion was
+so frequently sought by the Foreign Office. In fact so much importance
+was attached to his views that he was occasionally asked to give his
+opinion upon subjects of which he had no knowledge whatever, ranging
+from the defence of Canada to the minimum dress allowance required
+by the wife of a British Ambassador at Paris. As he had no intention
+of seeking a consort himself, and as he had no intention, either, of
+resigning his post, the latter inquiry (which was made in 1870) appears
+somewhat superfluous; but, it may be worth noting, that as the result of
+conscientious researches, he reported that £1000 a year was considered
+to be necessary.
+
+As to his merits as a chief, every one who had ever been associated
+with him was of the same opinion, and it was generally held at the
+Foreign Office that service under him at the Paris Embassy was a
+liberal education in itself. It may be doubted, however, whether his
+capacity and love of work were not to some extent a disadvantage to
+his subordinates, since his industry was so great that it left them
+comparatively little responsible work to do. At the Paris Embassy the
+ordinary routine work is probably greater than at any other Embassy
+with the exception of Constantinople, but there was scarcely anything,
+however trivial, which he did not attend to himself. It is believed
+in some quarters that an Ambassador leads a dignified, luxurious and
+comparatively unoccupied life, but that was emphatically not the case
+with Lord Lyons. He rose early and began the day by carefully studying
+the more serious French newspapers; the whole of the time up to luncheon
+was spent in writing or reading despatches, or attending to the various
+small questions which were continually occurring. In the afternoon he
+worked again until about 3 or 4 p.m., and then usually went to see
+the French Foreign Minister or paid official calls in connection with
+current business. Upon his return he worked again until dinner unless
+interrupted by visitors, who were often of a tedious and uninteresting
+type, and it not infrequently happened that telegrams would arrive at a
+comparatively late hour of the night which it was necessary to deal with
+immediately. All correspondence which arrived at the Embassy, no matter
+from how insignificant a source, was attended to by him personally,
+and elaborate directions given with regard to the replies, which were
+invariably sent with the least possible delay. His industry was only
+equalled by an almost preternatural caution, which showed itself in
+a variety of ways. The reluctance to give advice has already been
+noticed, but his excessive caution showed itself not only in writing,
+but in conversation, and even amongst intimates he rarely expressed
+opinions on men or things which it would have been unsafe to quote in
+public, although his conversation was marked by much dry and original
+humour of that elusive character which cannot be described on paper. It
+was practically impossible to catch him napping. 'The Juarez (Mexican
+Revolutionary) Minister having left his card upon me without any
+official designation, I have returned a card also without an official
+designation,' he wrote from Washington in 1859. His reticence during the
+prolonged _Trent_ crisis has already been commented upon. 'I received
+by the last mail,' he wrote to Sir Henry Elliot in 1867, 'a letter from
+Hussein Khan, containing nothing but complimentary expressions. Not
+wishing to be outdone in civility, I have written a reply in the same
+strain. It has, however, occurred to me as just possible that Hussein
+Khan may desire to appear to be in correspondence with me for some
+particular object, and that there may be something which has occurred
+since I saw him, which might render it advisable that he should not be
+in correspondence with me. Accordingly I send my letter herewith open
+to you. If you see any reason, however slight, for not forwarding it,
+please destroy it, and take an opportunity of telling Hussein Khan that
+I asked you to thank him for his letter to me.' It will be remembered
+that even Queen Victoria was unable to draw him successfully on the
+subject of the Treaty of Berlin. Similar instances might be quoted
+indefinitely, and as an illustration of his caution in private life it
+may be mentioned that he never stirred a yard outside the house without
+a passport. A man of this temperament was not likely to make mistakes,
+and it is a remarkable fact that throughout a correspondence extending
+over something like forty years, there is not to be found a single
+expression in any official communication addressed to him which could by
+any stretch of the imagination be described as a censure or even as a
+criticism of his proceedings.
+
+As for the pleasures of the world, they hardly seemed to exist for him,
+but the ordinary human weaknesses, which were chiefly non-existent in
+his case, he regarded with an indulgent and even benevolent eye. He
+used to repeat with much glee that the chief entry upon his _dossier_
+at the Paris Préfecture de Police consisted of the words: _On ne lui
+connait pas de vice_, and this concise statement may be said to have
+been literally true. He had never been in debt, never gambled, never
+quarrelled, never, as far as was known, ever been in love, although it
+was a mistake to suppose that the opposite sex possessed no attractions
+for him. Nor did he possess the resources available to the ordinary man,
+for he cared nothing for sport, had probably never played a game in his
+life, and detested exercise and outdoor life. The surprising thing was
+that he contrived to keep his health, as although a total abstainer,
+he was a large eater, and never took the slightest exercise. In fact,
+during the last five or six years of his life he probably never walked
+further than the English Church in the Rue d'Aguesseau, which was within
+a hundred yards of the Embassy. 'Abstinence and exercise,' he used to
+say, 'were the only two things that disagreed with him.'
+
+The natural shyness of his disposition prevented him from deriving much
+real enjoyment from what is generally described as society, but all the
+social duties of an Ambassador were discharged in a manner which evoked
+universal approval. The entertainments at the Embassy consisted chiefly
+of dinners, which were remarkable for their excellence, and invitations
+to which were highly prized by all sections of French society. Nothing,
+in fact, could exceed the dignity or the faultless taste of the Embassy
+arrangements, and not only were Lord Lyons's entertainments renowned,
+but his horses and carriages were, even in Paris, noticeably amongst
+the very best, it being one of his strongest convictions that the
+British representative should always make an imposing appearance. But
+his hospitality was no matter of mere show; every night the unmarried
+secretaries were asked to dine with him unless otherwise engaged; and it
+was upon these occasions that he used to appear at his best; obviously
+finding more pleasure in their society than in that of any one else with
+the exception of his own relatives. Affection, indeed, for his relatives
+was one of his most marked characteristics, and it is highly probable
+that his devotion to his sister, the Duchess of Norfolk, and to her sons
+and daughters, was one of the causes of his not marrying; anyhow there
+was no further question of marrying after the failure of the determined
+attempt made upon him by an exalted personage, which has already been
+mentioned.
+
+His temper was singularly equable, and during his long stay in Paris
+it was said that upon two occasions only was he known to have broken
+out; once, when at a review at Longchamps, the Diplomatic Corps were
+allotted an inferior position, and once upon an occasion when his
+coachman appeared wearing trousers instead of top boots and breeches.
+These ebullitions were due to the fact that he attached enormous
+importance to all the outward signs of official representation, and
+strongly resented anything which bore in any degree the nature of a
+slight. In his capacity as a private individual he was the most modest
+and unostentatious of men, and it is recorded, as an instance of his
+shyness, that he once passed a week at Woburn without ever leaving the
+precincts of the garden, because he was so much embarrassed by the
+salutations of an adjacent lodge keeper.
+
+It might have been supposed that a man of this unimaginative and
+eminently judicial character would have failed to secure the regard
+of his subordinates, however highly he might be esteemed by Cabinets
+and Foreign Secretaries. As a matter of fact, probably no chief ever
+enjoyed greater popularity, which was due to a variety of causes. He
+was essentially a kind-hearted man, his correspondence abounds with
+instances of help given to persons who had been in his employment in
+any capacity, however humble; of opportune assistance rendered to
+other persons who had been unlucky in their public careers, and of
+recommendations of men whose services appeared to deserve recognition.
+And in spite of his apparently detached nature, he took the warmest
+interest in all those who were connected with him officially, and
+invariably showed the utmost consideration, not only for their feelings,
+but for their personal convenience. Thus, unlike some distinguished
+diplomatists, one of his great objects was to save his staff unnecessary
+work; he never put obstacles in the way of persons desiring leave, and
+every afternoon at the earliest possible moment, in order to release
+the Chancery, he used to send across the welcome written message: 'I
+have nothing more for to-day,' although that by no means signified that
+his own labours were concluded. Hardworking himself, he expected his
+secretaries and attachés to do their share, and it was only when they
+conspicuously failed, that he showed any sign of severity. During his
+long career it fell to his lot to administer many reprimands, but these
+were invariably so just and unavoidable, that the culprits seldom,
+if ever, felt any sense of resentment, and he always made a point of
+obliterating as soon as possible, any disagreeable incident of this
+nature. The consequence was that he had no enemies, and no one who was
+ever associated with him, has, so far as is known, ever had anything
+but good to say of him. Another excellent feature in his character was
+that he always made the best of his subordinates instead of searching
+for their weak points; however unpromising the material, he generally
+succeeded in effecting a marked improvement, and whenever any one who
+had been with him left for another post, he never failed to draw special
+attention to such good qualities as he appeared to possess with the view
+of assisting him in his future career. Perhaps I may be pardoned for
+interposing a personal testimonial, upon the occasion of a temporary
+transfer to Berne, which may serve as an example amongst many others.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, May 15, 1883.
+
+ MY DEAR ADAMS,[30]
+
+ I have settled that Legh is to be at Berne on the 28th, and I
+ hope you will like him. He is clever and well informed, though some
+ people think he does not look it.
+
+It need scarcely be added that many of the communications of this
+nature are of a more elaborate character, and refer to persons who now
+occupy distinguished positions in the British Diplomatic Service. As
+Lord Lyons grew older he became more and more reluctant to part with men
+whom he knew well, and it was pathetic to witness the obvious sorrow
+which he felt at their departure.
+
+Paris has always been the most coveted post on the Continent, and in
+addition to the social attractions of the place, the Embassy enjoyed
+the reputation of carrying on its business in an efficient manner
+chiefly owing to the qualities of the Ambassador. The reputation was
+well deserved, and I can only recall one serious _lâche_, not devoid,
+however, of humour, as to which I was unjustly alleged to be the
+culprit. At a moment when critical negotiations respecting intervention
+in Egypt were proceeding with the French Government, a member of the
+Embassy had an extremely confidential conversation with an important
+French Cabinet Minister, in the course of which the Minister criticized
+in very uncomplimentary terms his Ministerial colleagues, and the
+conversation was immediately embodied in a confidential despatch to
+the British Foreign Office. The following morning a much agitated
+Chef de Cabinet appeared at the Chancery, bearing the despatch, and
+announced that he 'thought that some mistake had occurred, as the
+despatch had been received by the French Minister for Foreign Affairs.'
+To the general consternation, it now became evident that the despatch,
+instead of being placed in the Foreign Office bag, had found its way
+into a lithographed envelope addressed to the _Ministre des Affaires
+Etrangères_, and the whole horrid mystery was laid bare. The question
+arose whether Lord Lyons should be told or not; the arguments of fear
+prevailed; the French Minister behaved in an honourable manner and kept
+silence, and Lord Lyons, fortunately for all concerned, never heard
+of an incident which he would have looked upon as little short of a
+calamity.
+
+The only possible criticism that could be brought against Lord Lyons
+as an Ambassador would be that he led too narrow a life, and moved in
+too restricted a circle. Day after day and week after week he led the
+same existence; even his holidays were laid out on the same mechanical
+principle; every year he left his post, much about the same date, took
+the waters at some spa, and then proceeded on a round of visits in
+England, chiefly at the country houses of the governing families, such
+as Knowsley, Chatsworth, Woburn, and Hatfield, but always including
+a prolonged stay with his relatives at Arundel. He was essentially a
+diplomatist of the old type, consorting entirely in Paris with the
+official classes, the Faubourg, and the Haute Finance; keeping the
+press at arm's length, avoiding everything which did not come within
+the scope of his duties, and confining himself strictly to his own
+business. The modern developments of diplomacy; the use of the press,
+the hasty missions of amateur diplomatists, the gushing speeches which
+are apparently now considered to be obligatory upon the professional
+diplomatist--all this would have been hateful and perhaps impossible to
+a man who could boast that he had spent five years in America without
+making a speech or taking a drink. But in an impartial survey of the
+twenty-eight years which Lord Lyons spent at Washington, Constantinople,
+and Paris, it would be rash to assert that any other man would, under
+similar circumstances, have retained to an equal extent the confidence
+of successive British Governments and the esteem and friendship of
+the long series of Foreign Ministers with whom he was called upon to
+negotiate questions often of the most vital importance.[31]
+
+The main interest in foreign politics in the summer of 1880 lay in
+the Balkan Peninsula. Mr. Goschen had been sent out to Constantinople
+in the place of Sir Henry Layard, and Her Majesty's Government were
+endeavouring energetically to force the Porte to carry out the
+provisions of the Treaty of Berlin with regard to the rectification of
+the Montenegrin and Greek frontiers. The Greek Frontier Question made
+little way, and the Gladstone Government in their diplomatic campaign on
+behalf of the Greeks met with little encouragement or support from the
+other Powers, not even excepting France, who had always been the leading
+advocate of Greek claims. When M. de Freycinet was asked what he was
+prepared to do if the Turks resolved to defy the Conference which was
+then sitting, nothing more satisfactory could be got out of him than:
+_nous marcherons avec vous_, or _nous ne marcherons pas sans vous_, and
+to the question whether he would go far if necessary, he only made the
+cryptic reply, _peut-être bien_. The British Government were hankering
+after a naval demonstration, and it was disheartening to work with so
+pusillanimous a comrade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 21, 1880.
+
+ In answer to your private and personal letter of the day
+ before yesterday, I may say that I am not much afraid of the
+ French not being willing to go as far as we are willing to go in
+ coercing the Turks, if they set Europe at defiance about the Greek
+ Frontier. Freycinet seems to shrink from the idea that actual
+ coercion may be required, but his only distinct limit to the action
+ of France is that she will not do more than England.
+
+ I myself very much doubt whether the Turks will yield anything
+ to naval or other demonstrations, unless they are quite sure that
+ these demonstrations are the prelude to the actual use of force,
+ and it will not be easy to get them to believe this, unless we are
+ ourselves quite sure that that is what we mean.
+
+ Supposing we pushed demonstrations to the point of forcing
+ the Dardanelles, and sending the allied fleets to Constantinople,
+ we might produce a revolution, without obtaining the cession of
+ the territory to Greece. If the populations are in parts really
+ unwilling, the central government may be truly unable to compel
+ them to give in.
+
+ Supposing the Greek troops (_par impossible_) be defeated
+ either by the Turkish troops or by recalcitrant Albanians, the
+ ships of the Powers might not be able to do much to get them out of
+ the scrape.
+
+ I am very far from meaning to say, in answer to your question
+ as to the mildest and safest form of coercion, that it would
+ consist in moving troops to occupy the territory. To do so would
+ be neither mild nor safe, nor easy to arrange. But I am afraid
+ we shall find that in the end the treatment must be topical, and
+ that if the Greeks cannot take possession for themselves, we shall
+ hardly be able to obtain it for them by pressure exercised at
+ Constantinople only.
+
+ A rendezvous of the fleets at Corfu might have a good effect
+ on the Albanians, and perhaps increase the chance of the Greeks not
+ being seriously resisted.
+
+ I see Goschen suggests that the decision of the Conference
+ should be announced to the Porte by an identic note. I think a
+ collective note would have more effect and be more appropriate.
+
+The Turks, however dense they may be in other respects, are usually
+intelligent enough to perceive whether the Powers are in earnest or not,
+and as no Government except the British felt much enthusiasm for either
+the Greek or the Montenegrin cause, they showed no signs of giving way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 2, 1880.
+
+ I am afraid it does not look as if the Turks were going to
+ yield to the moral force of United Europe. Léon Say and Montebello
+ seem to hold even less resolute language to you than Freycinet
+ does to me. Did the King of Greece understand Gambetta to say
+ that France, with or without the co-operation of other Powers,
+ would support Greece with troops? Freycinet will no doubt do
+ whatever Gambetta tells him, but one of the inconveniences of the
+ power behind the Government greater than the Government, is that
+ Gambetta does not talk as cautiously as he would if he felt direct
+ responsibility. No power except Russia seems to be willing to bell
+ the cat. France seems to be the only one that has in abundance the
+ three elements--men, ships, and money. Freycinet always says he
+ will do anything with us, but nothing alone, and does not seem much
+ more willing than Austria to look the chance of having to use force
+ in the face.
+
+ I do not see much prospect of an immediate diplomatic lull,
+ and I very much want one because it is of importance to my health
+ (at least the doctors say so) to get away, but I conclude that I
+ ought not to shrink from going through the national Festival of the
+ 14th July, and that I should do what is to be done at least as well
+ as any of my colleagues.
+
+Reviews, it may be said, were functions which he abhorred beyond all
+others.
+
+The King of Greece was in Paris at the time, vainly trying to stir up
+Gambetta to come to his assistance, although Gambetta in conversation
+with Sheffield expressed strong opinions as to the desirability
+of France and England acting energetically in concert, and even
+professed himself in favour of their making a joint demonstration
+at Constantinople, and landing troops there if necessary. Upon the
+same occasion he betrayed his gross ignorance of English politics by
+lamenting that Lord Beaconsfield had not postponed the dissolution until
+the autumn, 'when he would have been certain of success.'
+
+Freycinet, however, remained deaf to Lord Granville's appeals, even when
+the latter reproached him with the humiliating position in which France
+would be placed by abandoning a question which she had made her own, and
+when the British Government proposed a naval demonstration in favour of
+the Prince of Montenegro, made all sorts of excuses for evading it if
+possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 13, 1880.
+
+ I was more displeased than disappointed by the refusal of
+ the French to join in the naval demonstration in favour of the
+ Prince of Montenegro. They always try to act with Germany and
+ have a horror of sending away a ship or a man unless Germany does
+ the same: such is their confidence in the friendship they profess
+ to believe in, that they want always to be ready at the shortest
+ notice to attack their friend or to defend themselves from him.
+ They are also, no doubt, jealous of any separate help to Montenegro
+ which does not explicitly pledge the Powers to action in the Greek
+ Question also.
+
+ I quite agree with you that separate threats from the
+ French to the Porte about Greece (however incorrect their acting
+ separately may be) are more likely to do good than harm. One Power
+ in earnest would frighten the Porte more than the six, if the
+ Porte were convinced that the five others would not restrain the
+ energetic one.
+
+During the next three months the Sultan, single handed, conducted a
+campaign against the six Great Powers, which, as will be seen, nearly
+ended in success; and it must, in fairness, be admitted that there was
+a good deal to be said from the Turkish point of view. The Powers were
+engaged in endeavouring to force the Porte to comply with conditions
+directly or indirectly resulting from the provisions of the Treaty of
+Berlin. But no steps whatever were taken, or ever have been taken, to
+force other States to comply with stipulations which appeared to be
+disagreeable to them. The right of the Sultan, which had been secured to
+him under the Treaty, to occupy Eastern Roumelia, remained in reality
+an empty phrase: the Bulgarian fortresses which were to have been
+demolished, remained untouched, the tribute due from Bulgaria remained
+unpaid, and there was no indication of an intention to reinstate the
+unfortunate Mussulmans who, as the result of the war, had been driven
+away from their homes, and had been despoiled of their property by
+their new Christian masters. Neither could it be justly maintained
+that, in agreeing to a rectification of the Greek frontier at Berlin,
+the Turks had recognized the right of the Greeks to annex a territory
+equal in extent to half of the Greek Kingdom. Added to this, were the
+difficulty and the humiliation involved in surrendering against their
+will, a large number of Mussulman subjects. The difficulty had in fact
+proved insurmountable in the case of Montenegro, and the Albanians
+who were in the first instance allotted to Montenegro offered so
+successful a resistance that the original plan was abandoned, and after
+much negotiation, the Porte accepted 'in principle' the cession of the
+Dulcigno district as an alternative. But the concession of anything 'in
+principle' by the Turks, usually means something quite different from
+the usual interpretation of that expression, and the Sultan succeeded
+in organizing a highly successful so-called Albanian League, and ably
+supported by a resourceful local Pasha, contrived by various expedients
+to delay the surrender of Dulcigno for so long that it began to look
+as if it would never take place at all. Finally, the resources of
+diplomacy becoming exhausted, a policy of coercion was decided upon, and
+an international fleet assembled off the coast of Albania in the month
+of September, under the command of Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour.[32]
+Each power signed a declaration of disinterestedness and a pledge not to
+acquire territory, but the hollow nature of this imposing manifestation
+was betrayed by a provision that no troops were to be landed, and the
+Sultan, who probably had some inkling of the situation, still refused
+to give way. A bombardment of Dulcigno would presumably have left him
+philosophically indifferent.
+
+As the Dulcigno demonstration did not appear likely to produce any
+satisfactory result, the British Government decided upon the hazardous
+step of proposing the seizure of Smyrna, that being considered the most
+efficacious means of coercing the Turks and of preventing the concert of
+the Great Powers from becoming the laughing stock of Europe. This step
+was evidently taken chiefly at the instigation of Mr. Gladstone, and the
+letters of Lord Granville bear witness to the extreme anxiety which
+he felt as to the result. No encouragement whatever was received from
+France; the timorous Freycinet having in the meanwhile been succeeded at
+the Foreign Office by the equally timorous Barthélemy St. Hilaire, an
+aged survival of the Louis Philippe period.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 4, 1880.
+
+ Barthélemy St. Hilaire's answer about the Greek Frontier does
+ not look as if we should receive any energetic help from France
+ towards obtaining the settlement of that or any other question
+ in the East. The answer was all ready cut and dried, and the
+ declaration as to France sticking to the Concert, but not taking
+ any initiative, had been made before to my colleagues. A more
+ experienced diplomatist would have acknowledged more elaborately
+ your courtesy in offering to communicate first with France, before
+ addressing the other cabinets on the Greek Frontier affair.
+
+ The fact is that the present Cabinet is still more frightened
+ than the last by the disapproval which has been manifested by
+ all parties in France of even the little that has already been
+ done. With regard to this, M. St. Hilaire made a remark to me
+ yesterday which seems to be true enough. France, he said, has quite
+ recovered her financial strength, and in great measure her military
+ strength, but the _moral_ of the people is not yet _relevé_.
+ They are horribly afraid of another war and consequently utterly
+ averse from anything like a risky or energetic policy. Another
+ popular sentiment, which is extremely inconvenient just now, is the
+ feeling that France made the Crimean War _pour les beaux yeux de
+ l'Angleterre_ and had better not repeat the experiment. Altogether
+ I am afraid France will be a trouble, not a help to us, and I am a
+ good deal put out about it.
+
+ Barthélemy St. Hilaire talked to me a long time about
+ Gambetta, with whom he described himself as very intimate. He
+ described Gambetta as having a naturally generous nature, as being
+ somewhat impulsive and incautious, but at the same time somewhat
+ 'Genoese.' He said that if I took opportunities of associating with
+ him, I should find his character an interesting study. The study
+ will not be a new one to me, and I am not sure that too apparent an
+ intimacy between me and Gambetta would be viewed without jealousy.
+
+M. Jules Ferry, the new Prime Minister, was no more amenable than his
+colleague.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 8, 1880.
+
+ As to the French agreeing to the Smyrna proposal, I cannot
+ prognosticate favourably. I had a long conversation yesterday
+ with Jules Ferry, the Prime Minister. I seemed to make some
+ impression by urging that to break up the European Concert now
+ would be to keep the questions open, with all their inconveniences
+ and all their dangers, for an indefinite time. He also admitted
+ the many advantages of the Smyrna plan, and was quite unable to
+ suggest any other course of action so likely to bring the Sultan
+ to reason without inconvenient consequences. But he perpetually
+ reverted to the argument that it would be going too near war to be
+ admissible under the French Constitution, and that the Chambers
+ on that account would call the Ministers severely to task. The
+ argument from the Constitution seems to me almost absurd, but it
+ is constantly used already in the press, and will no doubt be used
+ hereafter in the Chambers. The fact is that Jules Ferry and his
+ colleagues are horribly afraid of the effect which they believe any
+ action on their part would produce on public opinion and on the
+ Chamber.
+
+ I have seen B. St. Hilaire this afternoon. I went over with
+ him the same ground I had gone over with Jules Ferry yesterday, but
+ with much the same result. He told me that the question had been
+ discussed in the Cabinet this morning and was to be discussed in
+ another Cabinet to-morrow. Perhaps they would not like to stay out
+ in the cold if Germany and Austria came in, but I am afraid they
+ will certainly not say 'yes,' though they may say 'no' before those
+ Powers have given their answer. They seem to argue from the delay
+ of the German Government, that Bismarck is against the proposal.
+ Orloff, my Russian colleague, tells me that he is strongly urging
+ the French to agree. Beust and Radowitz (the German) talk as if
+ they themselves thought well of the Smyrna plan, but say they have
+ heard nothing from their Governments.
+
+ I spoke to B. St. Hilaire about your reasons for communicating
+ first with him about the Greek Question, and he sent with effusion
+ the message of thanks which he ought to have sent at first.
+
+ Choiseul is applying with vigour the _épuration_ system to
+ the Foreign Office and the Diplomatic Service. He seems to have
+ dismissed some very good men in both. Des Michels is one of his
+ victims, and to-day he has decapitated the head of the Commercial
+ Department.
+
+ I think it better not to communicate at present the draft
+ instructions to the Admiral. They would, I think, be seized upon as
+ arguments that the occupation of Smyrna would be an act of war.
+
+Her Majesty's Government were in effect in a very bad mess. The Smyrna
+proposal had received no real support from any Power. Bismarck had
+announced that the so-called Eastern Question was not worth the bones
+of a Pomeranian Grenadier, and nothing was to be expected from him.
+The same thing applied to Austria; neither Italy nor Russia were to be
+relied upon, and France was unwilling and unenterprising. No wonder
+that Lord Granville felt singularly uncomfortable: the Concert of
+Europe, as he expressed it, had 'gone to the devil,' no one was going to
+help him, and unless within a few days the Turks yielded, the British
+Government would be confronted with the alternatives of seizing Smyrna
+single handed or of confessing defeat and abandoning the contest. Lord
+Granville himself was in favour of the latter course, as being logical,
+and the natural consequence of the action of the other Powers, who would
+neither agree to the English proposals nor propose anything themselves.
+Mr. Gladstone, on the other hand, was apparently all for going on and
+acting as the mandatory of Europe, and as he usually got his way, it
+is possible that this dangerous course might have been adopted; but in
+the very nick of time, just at the moment when the situation looked
+to be at its worst, the Sultan suddenly gave way and announced that
+Dulcigno should be handed over to the Montenegrins. What brought about
+this sudden decision has always remained more or less of a mystery, but
+there is no proof that the proposed seizure of Smyrna (which would have
+probably inconvenienced European interests quite as much as the Sultan)
+was the deciding factor. According to the late Lord Goschen, who was in
+as good a position to know the real facts as any one else, the sudden
+surrender of the Sultan was caused by a Havas Agency telegram from
+Paris; but the contents of this communication have never been divulged,
+and Lord Goschen himself never ascertained what they were. The surrender
+of Dulcigno, which took place in November, terminated the crisis and
+enabled the Gladstone Government to claim a striking if lucky success
+for their own particular sample of spirited Foreign Policy.
+
+In the year 1880 the relations between the Liberal Government and
+the Irish Nationalists were the reverse of cordial, and a good many
+inquiries used to come from the Foreign Office respecting alleged Irish
+plots and conspiracies at Paris with requests that the French police
+authorities should be asked to give their assistance. These requests
+Lord Lyons was in the habit of discouraging as much as possible,
+partly from an ingrained dislike to being involved in any secret and
+equivocal transactions, and partly because he knew that if the French
+police gave their assistance in tracking down Irish conspirators, they
+would certainly expect reciprocity in regard to Bonapartists and other
+opponents of the existing system of Government at that time residing
+in England. For these reasons he always urged that the English police
+authorities should communicate direct with the French police authorities
+without using the Embassy as an intermediary. But the efforts of the
+Gladstone Government were not confined to endeavouring to check Irish
+plot by means of the police, and an attempt was made to restrain the
+turbulent bishops and priests engaged in the Home Rule agitation by
+applying pressure upon them from Rome. The credit of this expedient
+seems to have been chiefly due to the active and enterprising cleric,
+Monsignor Czacki, who was acting as Nuncio at Paris, and who appears
+to have conceived the idea that if the Pope could be persuaded to
+intervene on the side of the British Government, it might be possible
+to re-establish regular diplomatic relations between England and the
+Papacy. As far back as December, 1879, Monsignor Czacki had made certain
+overtures, but they met with no attention from Lord Salisbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 18, 1880.
+
+ Last October a very quiet, not to say dull, old Italian
+ prelate was succeeded here as Papal Nuncio by a very active,
+ talkative and agreeable Pole, Monsignor Czacki.
+
+ At the beginning of December Monsignor Czacki came to me and
+ told me that he had received a letter from Ireland accompanied by,
+ or referring to, letters from very important people, among which
+ was, he said, one from you. He had in consequence written to the
+ Pope, and the Pope had written to the Irish Bishops to exhort them
+ to do all in their power to restrain their flocks from taking
+ part in violent or seditious proceedings. Monsignor Czacki asked
+ me whether the state of affairs in Ireland was at the moment so
+ serious as to render it advisable that the Pope should repeat these
+ exhortations to the Irish Bishops. I made a somewhat banal answer
+ to the effect that though there were no grounds for feeling alarm
+ as to the ultimate issue of what was going on, there was good
+ reason that those who possessed influence there should use it for
+ the prevention of crime and outrage, and also of turbulence and
+ disorder.
+
+ I reported what has passed in a private letter to Lord
+ Salisbury, but I received no answer from him, and I heard no more
+ of the matter till yesterday.
+
+ Yesterday, however, Monsignor Czacki came to see me and
+ showed me a letter he had received a few days before from Lord
+ Emly. The letter said that previous intervention had produced the
+ best results, that several Bishops had denounced the agitation in
+ the strongest terms, but that unfortunately the Socialists were
+ publicly supported by various Bishops. It mentioned that the Roman
+ Catholic Bishop of Meath, and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of
+ Cashel had manifested their sympathy with Mr. Parnell, and that the
+ Roman Catholic Bishop of Kilmore had himself recommended Mr. Biggar
+ to the electors as a candidate. The letter begged Monsignor Czacki
+ to intervene again, but it made the request only from Lord Emly
+ himself, without any allusion to you or to any other person, as
+ being cognizant of it.
+
+ Monsignor Czacki said that he entirely sympathized with the
+ views of the writer and intended to send the letter to Rome; and he
+ proceeded to ask me whether I would authorize him to say that he
+ had shown it to me and that he sent it with my approval.
+
+ It seemed to me that this would be bringing the thing much too
+ near Her Majesty's Government for it to be right for me to assent
+ to it without knowing your wishes.
+
+ I confess this mode of communicating with the Vatican does
+ not commend itself to my judgment, and that it seems to me that it
+ might lead to awkwardness and interfere with better means you have
+ of communicating with the Pope, if you wish to communicate with
+ His Holiness at all. At the same time I was not absolutely sure
+ that you might not think there might be some convenience in having
+ this channel open. I did not therefore rebuff Monsignor Czacki, but
+ without giving any hint that I should refer to you, said simply
+ that I would think about what he had said.
+
+ He is very fond of enlarging academically upon the advantages
+ England would derive from entering into regular diplomatic
+ relations with the Holy See, or if that were impossible, from
+ re-establishing an unofficial agent at Rome.
+
+ You will gather from all this that Monsignor Czacki is not
+ altogether disinclined to be busy.
+
+The energetic Nuncio returned to the subject at the close of the year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Dec. 31, 1880.
+
+ You may remember that in June last I gave you in a private
+ letter a long account of a conversation which Monsignor Czacki, the
+ Papal Nuncio here, had volunteered to have with me on Irish affairs.
+
+ Monsignor Czacki came to see me three days ago, and enlarged
+ on the great advantage to the cause of order and tranquillity in
+ Ireland it would be for the Pope to pronounce an authoritative
+ condemnation of the wicked acts perpetrated in that country. He
+ hinted that the Pope had been misled by some of the Irish Bishops
+ who had recently been at Rome, and he dwelt on the inconvenience
+ which arose from the British Government's having no channel of its
+ own through which to communicate direct with His Holiness.
+
+ On the last occasion Monsignor Czacki offered to be himself
+ a channel of communication. He did not repeat this offer, but
+ his object in what he had said appeared to be to lead up again
+ to the question of the establishment of regular diplomatic
+ relations between England and the Vatican, or if that could not be
+ immediately, then to the return to Rome of an unofficial agent, in
+ the same position that was occupied by Odo Russell, and before him,
+ by me. He told me he spoke entirely of his own accord, but that he
+ was sure that Pope Leo XIII. would most willingly receive even an
+ unofficial agent.
+
+ Monsignor Czacki is a very great talker, which makes it easy
+ to say very little in answer to him, and I took full advantage of
+ the facility for being conveniently silent which this afforded me.
+
+ The impression he left upon me was that for some reason or
+ other the authorities at the Vatican decidedly wish to have some
+ sort of agent there, from whom they could receive information
+ respecting the views of the British Government upon the accuracy of
+ which they could fully rely.
+
+ I don't think that if it had depended on me I should have
+ discontinued the unofficial agent, awkward as the position had been
+ made by the presence of the Italian Government and of a regular
+ British Embassy. But to establish one now would be a question of
+ far greater difficulty than to have kept one going.
+
+Whether influenced by Monsignor Czacki or not, Her Majesty's Government
+sent Mr. Errington, a Liberal Member of Parliament, to Rome in an
+ambiguous capacity which was loudly denounced in the House of Commons
+both by Home Rulers and by fervent Protestants, and in the course
+of one of the discussions on the subject, Mr. Gladstone informed an
+astonished audience that there was all the difference in the world
+between an Agent and an 'Agente.'
+
+The French Municipal Elections which took place in January, 1881,
+produced a reassuring impression throughout the country, as both the
+extreme parties were decisively defeated, and the effect was largely
+to increase the power and influence of Gambetta, who was now in the
+enviable position of being able to make or unmake Ministries, and who
+at the opening of the Chambers made a kind of 'speech from the throne'
+which considerably perturbed the uninspiring President Grévy.
+
+Everything that Gambetta now said was of importance, and his views on
+the European situation were ascertained in the usual manner through
+Sheffield.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Feb. 8, 1881.
+
+ Gambetta asked Sheffield to breakfast on Saturday, and as
+ usual talked freely to him.
+
+ He appeared to think that the three Emperors had come to
+ an understanding with each other, and that whatever might be
+ their plans, it was certain that they would not be beneficial
+ to French interests. According to him, it was with the Emperors
+ not a question of the position of their Empires, but of their
+ own individual positions. They were opposed to liberal views and
+ liberal institutions. They were intent upon doing whatever would be
+ most hurtful to the prestige and success of the Republic in France.
+ They were, in fact, reconstituting the Holy Alliance.
+
+ At this moment France was unfortunately powerless. Until the
+ General Election had taken place, her destinies must be at the
+ mercy of any old women who were employed as stopgaps in ephemeral
+ ministries. Since Barthélemy St. Hilaire had been in office he had
+ only seen him once. He knew nothing or next to nothing of what went
+ on at the Ministère des Affaires Étrangères, and what little he did
+ know, he disapproved. 'Que voulez vous,' he said: 'nobody will do
+ anything to commit himself in any way, pending the uncertainty of
+ the elections.'
+
+ He seemed well informed about Egyptian affairs. He praised
+ Malet and said de Ring was entirely in the wrong in his quarrel
+ with de Blignières, which was very injurious to the calm direction
+ of Egyptian affairs. He expressed an intention to urge the
+ immediate recall of de Ring.
+
+ I mark this letter private because we should get into a great
+ scrape and close a very convenient channel of communication if
+ Gambetta found that he was quoted or that his sayings transpired in
+ any way.
+
+The interest of the year 1881 lies in the fact that it makes a fresh
+departure in French foreign policy and the abandonment of the retiring
+and timorous attitude which had prevailed ever since the war with
+Germany. The first State to experience the inconvenience of this new
+development was Tunis, and early in the year it became evident that
+a very acute Tunis question was imminent. The trouble began over a
+large property known as the Enfida Estate. This property was sold to
+an important French financial association, but upon the sale becoming
+known, a certain Mr. Levy, a Maltese British subject, put in a claim of
+pre-emption under Tunisian Law, and it was believed by the French that
+he had been instigated by the Italians, and was merely utilized by them
+as a convenient means of obstructing French enterprise. The dispute over
+the Enfida Estate rose to such proportions that a French ironclad, the
+_Friedland_, was sent to Tunis in February, and the British Government,
+who were bound to make a show of defending the interests of Mr. Levy,
+in spite of his dubious position, followed suit with H.M.S. _Thunderer_.
+Both vessels were soon withdrawn, but before long it was generally
+believed that a French invasion of the country was contemplated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 25, 1881.
+
+ The French public are getting very cross about Tunis.
+ Reasonable people see that we cannot allow our own subject to be
+ bullied, but the French in general do not distinguish between
+ the Enfida case and the Tunisian questions regarding predominant
+ influence, Italy, and so forth. Drummond Wolff's question last
+ night was very mischievous. It was his own party which gave the
+ assurances at Berlin which have made Tunis so very delicate a
+ matter between the French and us, and which dispose the French to
+ allege that the present Government is less friendly to them about
+ that country than the late. Anyhow, Tunis is the point on which
+ above all others the French are susceptible and irritable; and
+ the Italians, and, however unconsciously, our own Consul too, I
+ am afraid, are always stirring up awkward questions on the spot.
+ I should be heartily glad to be rid of the Enfida question in any
+ creditable manner. I so strongly suspect that Levy is simply put
+ forward by the Tunisians for their own gain, and supported by the
+ local enemies of goodwill between France and England, in order
+ to make mischief, that I only wish we could wash our hands of
+ the whole affair. There seems to me to be no evidence that he is
+ a _bona fide_ purchaser on his own account. Tunis is the really
+ ticklish point in our relations with France.
+
+The Enfida Estate case was not only unsatisfactory on account of Mr.
+Levy not being a very desirable _protégé_, but because it enabled
+the French to manufacture a grievance against the Bey, and gave the
+Italians an opportunity to encourage that unfortunate potentate in the
+belief that he would receive foreign support in the event of French
+aggression.
+
+The intentions of the French Government were disclosed before long.
+Shortly after the wretched Bey had protested against a memorial
+containing a long list of alleged French grievances against the
+Government of Tunis, M. Jules Ferry, on the ever convenient plea of the
+necessity of chastising hostile frontier tribes, asked for votes of
+credit for both the army and the navy, which were unanimously agreed to.
+Before the expedition actually started, the French agent at Tunis, M.
+Roustan, visited the Bey and informed him that the French preparations
+were intended to protect him against the Sultan of Turkey, who desired
+to convert Tunis into a Turkish Pashalic, and that, under these
+circumstances, it was very desirable that Tunis should be placed under
+a French Protectorate. It was quite in vain that the unhappy Bey urged
+that he had no reason to suspect the Sultan of any such intention and
+that he had not the slightest desire for a French Protectorate; he was
+informed that he was not the best judge of his own interest, and that
+French troops would shortly enter his country to chastise the Kroumirs,
+a race of whom nobody had yet heard, but who apparently constituted a
+serious menace to the French Republic.
+
+The obvious design of the French drew from Lord Granville an opinion
+that they could not be allowed to seize upon Tunis without the consent
+of Turkey, and the permission of other Powers; but to this opinion not
+much attention seems to have been paid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 5, 1881.
+
+ I have thought it necessary to instruct you to inquire into
+ the state of affairs at Tunis. You are not likely to do so in an
+ unnecessarily offensive manner.
+
+ I am told that the French are determined to establish their
+ Protectorate. This will be very awkward at the moment.
+
+ Pray look as mysterious as you can, as to what might be our
+ attitude.
+
+ We do not wish to follow the example of the foolish opposition
+ made to Algiers, but the French cannot be allowed to seize Tunis
+ without the consent of Turkey and communication with the rest of
+ Europe.
+
+ The Italians wish us to move vigorously in the matter; the
+ Italian Government seems alarmed at the excitement of their chamber.
+
+It was all very well to say that the 'French cannot be allowed to seize
+Tunis,' but when a big European Power decides to pounce upon a weak and
+decaying Oriental State, it is not of the slightest use to employ such
+language if merely moral suasion is contemplated. The recent action
+of the Italian Government with regard to Tripoli[33] was the exact
+repetition of French action with regard to Tunis, and remonstrances were
+of no more avail in one case than in the other. The Bey sent piteous
+protests and appeals for justice to all the Great Powers, but as Italy,
+the only Power which really objected, was not prepared to fight, his
+lamentations fell upon deaf ears. Meanwhile, in an attempt to justify
+their bare-faced aggression, the French Government apparently handed to
+M. Blowitz, the _Times_ correspondent at Paris, a despatch from Lord
+Salisbury written in 1878, which it had been agreed should be treated as
+confidential, and it was intimated in the press that further private
+and confidential communications would appear in a forthcoming Yellow
+Book. This produced a very justifiable remonstrance from Lord Salisbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Hatfield, April 24, 1881.
+
+ I am not sure that I am not irregular in addressing to you any
+ communication on public affairs. But I think I have been told that
+ a certain license is accorded to disembodied Foreign Secretaries,
+ of haunting the scenes of their former misdeeds.
+
+ My cause of writing is this. My eye caught a statement in one
+ or two English papers that St. Hilaire intended to print in the
+ forthcoming Yellow Book, Waddington's first despatch to d'Harcourt
+ on coming back from Berlin. I had a dim recollection that it was
+ undiplomatically phrased and had been withdrawn: but I could
+ remember no more.
+
+ Is it not rather a strong measure for a Government to withdraw
+ a despatch to which objection is taken at the time, when it might
+ be answered, and then to publish it three years later, when the
+ materials for answering it no longer exist? However, perhaps I am
+ wrong in assuming that the newspaper report is correct.
+
+Lord Salisbury was quite correct in his recollection, and the intention
+of publishing the despatch referred to was not carried out, but various
+attempts were made to fix upon him the responsibility for French action
+in Tunis.
+
+Lord Granville, although he confessed to disliking the process, had to
+content himself with ineffectual barking.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 22, 1881.
+
+ You will not like a despatch I send you, and I am rather sorry
+ to send it. But I do not see how we are to give France _carte
+ blanche_.
+
+ I dislike barking without biting, but if the result of not
+ barking (in contradistinction to all that was done under Louis
+ Philippe and Napoleon, when English remonstrances certainly stopped
+ the French) is the annexation of Tunis, or the creation of the
+ great port of Bizerta impregnable by naval force and neutralizing
+ Malta, we should look rather foolish.
+
+ Notwithstanding the present Chauvinism about Tunis, it would
+ not be a sweetmeat for the French to have England, Italy and the
+ Arabs inside and outside Algeria against her.
+
+ It is as well that she should not imagine that this is
+ perfectly impossible.
+
+ But, of course, I wish to ruffle her as little as possible,
+ and nobody will wrap up the warning of our doctrine as to the
+ Ottoman Empire better than you will.
+
+Undeterred by Lord Granville's just remonstrances and equally undeterred
+by the Sultan's assertion of his suzerainty claims, the French entered
+Tunis and occupied the capital on May 11, after little more than a
+mere promenade. On the following day the Treaty of the Bardo, which
+practically established a French Protectorate over the country, was
+extorted from the Bey, and declarations by the French Government made it
+clear that no intervention, direct or indirect, would be tolerated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 13, 1881.
+
+ Barthélemy St. Hilaire certainly foreshadowed the Tunisian
+ Treaty accurately when he said that it would very much resemble a
+ Protectorate. It is so like one that it would be difficult to point
+ out a difference. The guaranteeing the execution of the Treaties of
+ the European Powers is sufficiently impertinent. As in all these
+ French expeditions, there is a vast amount of dirty pecuniary
+ stockjobbing interests at the bottom, which have been the real
+ motive power.
+
+ The whole affair is of very bad augury. It will inspire the
+ French Public with a love of resorting to high-handed proceedings
+ which can be indulged in without any real risk. Gambetta said to
+ Dilke that his Cherbourg speech was the first glass of wine given
+ to the Convalescent France, good for her but somewhat startling to
+ her system. This Tunis expedition is the second. The patient has
+ swallowed it so complacently that she may soon wish for another,
+ and perhaps a stronger stimulant. They got Bismarck's leave for
+ this, and it will perhaps be a long time before they do anything
+ of the kind without his leave. But then he will be sure to push
+ them on to any undertakings which will occupy their minds and their
+ forces, and tend to put them on bad terms with other Powers. And
+ this is disquieting, for there are not wanting all over the globe
+ places and questions in which the French might make themselves very
+ inconvenient and disagreeable to us, and might, if encouraged by
+ Bismarck, come at last to a downright quarrel with us.
+
+ Add to this the state of feeling in the English manufacturing
+ districts which is likely to be produced by the Commercial
+ proceedings of the French, and their virulent Protectionism, and
+ the prospect looks gloomy enough.
+
+The actual proceedings of the French in Tunis were in reality of less
+importance as regards England than the spirit which they betrayed, for
+their reception by the French public indicated a state of feeling which
+might have dangerous consequences. The preparations for the expedition
+were not considered by impartial critics as particularly creditable
+to the skill or efficiency of the French military administration, and
+there had been nothing like serious fighting in the short campaign. The
+question had simply been one of bullying a defenceless ruler, and of
+carrying on a high-handed policy in the face of Europe. Nevertheless
+the whole affair was hailed with almost unanimous delight by the French
+people. Nor, apparently, was this delight diminished by the reflection
+that the expedition had not been undertaken without the approval and
+encouragement of the German Government, and that the favour had been
+acknowledged with almost humiliating gratitude.
+
+Gambetta had represented that his object was to emancipate France
+from the humiliation of having to consult Bismarck confidentially
+beforehand upon every step she took, but this humiliating precaution was
+certainly not neglected in the case of Tunis, and if there had been the
+slightest suspicion that the expedition would have involved France in
+any difficulty with Germany, public opinion would at once have declared
+against it. From the German point of view this was satisfactory enough,
+but scarcely reassuring as far as other Powers were concerned.
+
+The French had shown that they rejoiced in any high-handed proceedings
+which did not bring them into collision with Germany, and whilst it was
+not improbable that their rulers would seek popularity by gratifying
+this feeling, it seemed not unlikely that the policy pursued by
+Germany with regard to the Tunis expedition would be persevered in. To
+disseminate the forces of France and to divert the minds of the French
+from Alsace and Lorraine by encouraging them to undertake distant
+enterprises for the gratification of their vanity, was an obvious means
+of increasing the safety of Germany, and the more such enterprises
+tended to alienate from France the sympathies of other Powers, the more
+they would contribute to the security of Germany. Unfortunately there
+were scattered over the globe, numerous islands and other territories,
+the annexation of which by France might be prejudicial to English
+material interests or objectionable to English feeling; and there were,
+moreover, various countries in which the undue extension of French
+influence might be dangerous to England, and where France, if tempted
+or encouraged to resort to arbitrary proceedings, might, without
+deliberately intending it, become involved in a downright quarrel with
+England. These considerations made it desirable that especial caution
+should be exercised in the case of Egypt. The effect of the Tunis
+expedition upon Egypt had been twofold. On the one hand, it increased
+Egyptian suspicions of the insincerity and rapacity of European Powers;
+on the other hand, it increased the reputation of France in Egypt at the
+expense of the other Powers and of England in particular, and diminished
+any confidence in being effectively protected from French encroachments.
+The lesson of the Tunis expedition was obvious; it would clearly be
+folly, either by withholding the tribute or by any other step to weaken
+the connexion of Egypt with the Porte, for the French Government had
+taken elaborate pains to show that in dealing with Tunis it was dealing
+with an independent Power. This contention had naturally been resisted
+by the Porte, and there was little difficulty in proving that suzerainty
+had been effectually established by a Firman of 1871. But the Sultan of
+Turkey, who in the past had enjoyed the possession of more suzerainties
+than any other potentate, had seldom derived anything but embarrassment
+from this particular attribute, and in the case of Tunis it proved
+to be singularly inconvenient. Encountering no opposition from other
+Powers, the French flouted the claims of Abdul Hamid, and in order to
+signify their new position, announced that the French representative
+would thenceforth take charge of all foreign questions. In spite,
+however, of the flexibility of the European conscience with regard to
+the general principle of the Sultan's suzerainty, it was recognized
+that under certain circumstances that principle must be conscientiously
+upheld; and it was, therefore, intimated, more or less directly to the
+French Government, that although the Sultan's suzerainty in Tunis was a
+negligible quantity, the situation in Tripoli was quite different, and
+so, in a far greater degree, was that of Egypt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 17, 1881.
+
+ It is most true that the danger of bad relations between us
+ and the French arises from their proceedings not ours, and that
+ this makes the great difficulty in meeting it.
+
+ The change of their position with regard to Bismarck is
+ another great difficulty. A little while ago dread of Germany
+ made them unwilling to send a regiment or a ship to a distance
+ from France, but since the Tunis affair, they have gone into the
+ trap he has set for them with their eyes open. They feel sure of
+ his support and encouragement in any distant enterprises, and the
+ surer of it in proportion to the hostility which such enterprises
+ may provoke in England and Italy. They thus find a cheap way of
+ gratifying their vanity, and of advancing some of their apparent
+ interests. This coquetting with Bismarck does, moreover, divert
+ their thoughts from Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+ I don't think it would be prudent to make any special advances
+ to Gambetta at this moment. We might not please him and we should
+ very probably offend Grévy and Barthélémy St. Hilaire, and so
+ interfere with the practical treatment of present questions, such
+ as the Commercial Treaty, the West Coast of Africa, Newfoundland,
+ etc.
+
+ The anomalous position of the French in Tunis, and the
+ proceedings of Roustan[34] there, will keep up irritation in
+ England and Italy--and I suppose the French, annuente Bismarck,
+ will cut the Gordian knot, sooner or later, by annexing it. They
+ ought in consequence to acquiesce in some improvement of the
+ position of England in Egypt, but this is dangerous ground.
+
+The overbearing attitude of the French officials in Tunis caused
+considerable irritation in England, and something akin to exasperation
+in Italy. The Italians, had they felt strong enough to do so, would have
+resisted the French pretensions by force, but being without an ally at
+the time, had to content themselves with violent ebullitions in the
+press. The ill-feeling between the two countries was marked by serious
+riots at Marseilles and other towns in the South of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 24, 1881.
+
+ I did my best to impress upon B. St. Hilaire yesterday that
+ there was real bitterness of feeling among the public in England,
+ and that if the French Government and its agents persisted in a
+ series of irritating measures, the consequences might be very
+ inconvenient. The French had got all they could want, I said, and
+ I could not help wondering that it did not strike them that their
+ policy should now be to let the new system settle down quietly,
+ to avoid occasions of controversy about it, and in short, to let
+ Tunis be as little heard of as possible at present. It was an ill
+ return, I observed, for the great patience and friendliness shown
+ by our Government, to be perpetually springing upon them surprises
+ unpalatable to English public opinion. He professed to _abonder
+ dans mon sens_. I entreated him to keep his subordinates in order.
+
+ The French seem to have an unpleasant business in Western
+ Algeria, and there is beginning to be an outcry against the
+ military and civil management of the troubles there.
+
+ Good feeling between French and Italians will not be promoted
+ by late events at Marseilles. The feelings of the French towards
+ the Italians there are like those of the American workman towards
+ the Chinese at San Francisco, or of the Irish towards the negroes
+ at New York. There are said to be more than 50,000 Italians at
+ Marseilles, and they are apt to use their knives.
+
+ There are symptoms of a growing antagonism between Jules Ferry
+ and Gambetta, signs of the feeling between the Elysée and the
+ Palais Bourbon.
+
+After all, the Tunis expedition turned out to be a rather more
+troublesome affair than had appeared probable at first. At the end of
+June insurrections broke out at Sfax and other places, necessitating the
+recall of French troops who had been sent back to France; bombardments,
+and other severe measures of repression. The insurrection spread into
+Algiers on the western side, and on the eastern side the disturbances
+created the possibility of a violation of the frontier of Tripoli by the
+French troops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 5, 1881.
+
+ Retribution has come quickly upon the French for their
+ hypocritical seizure of Tunis. The Arabs seem to be upon them
+ in all directions. Although this serves them right, it is, I
+ think, much to be regretted for political reasons, independently
+ of the suffering it causes to un-offending Europeans of various
+ nationalities in Africa.
+
+ If the French have to send a large force to Tunis, they will
+ very probably, formally as well as virtually, annex the Regency.
+ Tripoli will then stand exactly in the same relation to them
+ that Tunis did before the assumption of the Protectorate. After
+ Tripoli would come Egypt; but happily there is, I believe, a very
+ impracticable desert tract between them.
+
+ How great must be the complacency of those who desire to
+ occupy French troops in distant countries, and to involve France in
+ difficulties with other Powers.
+
+If the action of the French in seizing Tunis was hypocritical, the
+contention that the case of Tripoli stood on an entirely different
+footing was equally unconvincing. The real truth, of course, was that,
+with the exception of the Italians, no one really objected to the French
+going to Tunis. They went there, under distinctly false professions,
+announcing that the expedition was intended solely to punish refractory
+tribes, and that the occupation was merely temporary. The disclosure
+of their real objects naturally caused irritation in England as well
+as in Italy, but all hostile criticism was met by the assertion of the
+Liberal Government that Lord Salisbury had himself invited the French
+to take Tunis at the time of the Berlin Congress. The French themselves
+were careful to represent that they had only followed Lord Salisbury's
+advice, and Lord Granville, in defence of his own policy, always
+maintained that the phrase attributed to Lord Salisbury, _Carthage ne
+doit pas rester aux barbares_, had cut the ground from beneath his
+feet, and rendered remonstrance useless. But to make Lord Salisbury
+responsible for this act of flagrant immorality seems, in the face of
+such evidence as is available, unjustifiable. All that he had done was
+to intimate that he had heard that the French were extremely anxious
+to go to Tunis; that if they did so, British interests would not be
+endangered, and that he should consequently look on with indifference.
+When M. Waddington, in 1878, construed this opinion as an invitation to
+France to appropriate Tunis, Lord Salisbury felt bound to remonstrate,
+and he wrote to Lord Lyons, as has been already shown. 'He (Waddington)
+makes me talk of Tunis and Carthage as if they had been my own personal
+property, and I was making him a liberal wedding present.' The real
+instigator of the Tunis expedition was not Lord Salisbury, but Bismarck.
+The latter, who was omnipotent in Europe at the time, could have stopped
+French action at any moment he pleased, but instead of doing so, he
+naturally encouraged an enterprise which was certain to lead eventually
+to difficulties between France, Italy, and England.
+
+While, however, it was convenient to overlook any French illegality
+with reference to Tunis and to its connection with the Turkish Empire,
+it would have been, as has already been shown, manifestly imprudent
+to allow Tripoli, which stood in a precisely similar position, to be
+menaced with a similar fate: besides which, Italy had already marked
+Tripoli down as her own prey. Accordingly the French Government were
+informed that 'in view of the unquestioned incorporation of Tripoli in
+the Turkish Empire, as well as its proximity to Egypt, Her Majesty's
+Government could not regard interference of whatever description on
+the part of the French Government in that province in the same manner
+as they viewed the recent occurrences at Tunis. That Her Majesty's
+Government should take this view of the question of Tripoli cannot, they
+feel assured, be a source of surprise to that of France, since they
+have, on all occasions when the question of the extension of French
+influence in the direction of Egypt has been under discussion, been
+perfectly frank in their explanations with the French Government on the
+subject.' In his reply to this communication, M. B. St. Hilaire (who
+had previously announced that to annex Tunis would be a great mistake),
+effusively stated that the French Government looked upon Tripoli as
+an integral part of the Ottoman Empire, over which it did not pretend
+to exercise a predominant or exclusive influence, and gave a formal
+denial to all rumours which attributed to France any designs upon that
+country. The British Government professed itself quite satisfied with
+these assurances, and the Porte, for once in a way, showed sufficient
+intelligence to make its suzerainty quite clear, by despatching troops
+to garrison the country, and by other precautionary measures. In
+consequence of these steps Tripoli remained immune from attack for
+another thirty-two years, and when, in 1912, the Italians, following
+the French example of 1881, fell suddenly upon it without any serious
+attempt at justification, they did not allege that they were attacking a
+semi or wholly-independent State, but declared war upon Turkey itself,
+and incidentally brought about the destruction of Turkish power in
+Europe. The future of Tripoli under Italian rule is still obscure, while
+the numerous prophecies of failure which attended the seizure of Tunis
+by the French have not been fulfilled, but in either case it would be
+difficult to justify the morality of the enterprise or to defend the
+policy of these two Great Christian Powers.
+
+The year 1881 witnessed the renewal of negotiations for a new Commercial
+Treaty between France and England, and in consequence of opinions
+expressed by M. Tirard, the French Minister of Commerce, it was
+determined to take the negotiations out of the hands of diplomatists.
+M. Tirard had declared that he believed that an understanding could be
+effected if the question could be freed from diplomatic dilatoriness,
+and that if he were brought face to face with a 'competent and
+well-disposed man,' the whole matter would be settled within a week
+by making a few mutual concessions. To meet these views, the late Sir
+Charles Dilke, M.P., was appointed principal British Commissioner with
+the late Sir Joseph Crowe, Sir Alfred Bateman, and other distinguished
+experts as his colleagues or assistants, but M. Tirard's prognostication
+turned out to be entirely incorrect. In spite of the great ability
+and indefatigable industry of Sir Charles Dilke and the other British
+Commissioners, the negotiations made a very unsatisfactory start,
+were constantly broken off, and were not even concluded by the end
+of the year, so that it must have been impressed upon M. Tirard that
+dilatoriness was not necessarily due to diplomacy. From the first, the
+negotiations were unpromising, for Free Trade had continually receded in
+France since the Empire, and the necessity of cultivating good political
+relations with England was evidently less in 1881 than it had been upon
+the last occasion.
+
+The representatives of the two nations met in London in June, and an
+inauspicious beginning was made by the French Commissioners repudiating
+the bases signed in 1880 by Lord Granville and M. Léon Say. By the
+middle of the month the breaking off of the negotiations was already
+being considered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Sir C. Dilke, M.P._
+
+ Paris, June 14, 1881.
+
+ I received last evening your letter of the day before, asking
+ me whether I had anything to say on the policy of breaking off the
+ commercial negotiations when you get to work.
+
+ I don't think we should lose sight of the fact that there will
+ in all probability be a thorough change of Government in France in
+ the autumn. We might _perhaps_ get a decent treaty from the new
+ Government if they found the negotiations in progress. It might
+ not be so easy to get negotiations reopened if they had once been
+ broken off, and the French had become accustomed to the idea of
+ having the general tariff applied to British goods.
+
+ Politically, it would, I think, be a great pity to begin
+ ill with the new Government, and I don't think we could possibly
+ begin well, in the state of feeling which would be produced in
+ this country, and still more I suppose in England, by a commercial
+ rupture.
+
+ The majority of the French would be very glad that the general
+ tariff, or still higher duties, should be enforced against English
+ goods, but they would none the less be irritated by our breaking
+ with them.
+
+ I confess, too, that I am alarmed, perhaps without sufficient
+ reason, at the effect which may be produced both at home and abroad
+ by the cry in England for retaliation.
+
+ My own plan would be, for the present, to pursue the
+ negotiation as seriously and as steadily as is compatible with
+ not committing ourselves to any decidedly objectionable duties so
+ definitely as to be hampered in subsequent negotiations if we find
+ the new Government more fairly disposed towards us.
+
+ If there was ever any possibility of concluding a Treaty in
+ time for it to be passed by the Chambers this Session, there is
+ certainly none now. Gambetta wanted to get the question out of the
+ way before the elections; but even if the Treaty were signed, I
+ don't think the Chambers could be induced to consider it under
+ present circumstances. Nor would they, I should think, pass a bill
+ to prolong the existing Treaties.
+
+ To my mind, our most prudent course would be to let the new
+ Chambers find the negotiations going on when they meet in the
+ autumn. I don't of course mean that you should go on sitting every
+ week from this time to the autumn: it would suffice that there
+ should not be any adjournment _sine die_, and that we should not
+ give any ground for an assertion that we are not really willing to
+ conclude even a moderately fair treaty.
+
+Lord Lyons, as has already been stated, was, like almost every British
+official of the time, a firm and almost bigoted Free Trader; and it
+is possible that his alarm at the prospect of retaliation was caused
+by the appearance of the Fair Trade League; that harbinger of Tariff
+Reform to which somewhat inadequate justice has been rendered by its
+imitators. But it is surprising to learn of these qualms, when he is
+found predicting that the smaller countries who were willing and able to
+retaliate on French goods, would obtain better terms than England. The
+very different spirit in which the smaller States approached commercial
+questions with France is shown in the following instructive account of
+the views of the Swiss Minister at Paris, M. Kern.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Sir C. Dilke._
+
+ Paris, June 25, 1881.
+
+ Last evening, after my letter to you of yesterday had gone, I
+ met Kern, who told me that in the course of the day he had had an
+ interview with M. Tirard, and also one with M. Gambetta. He had,
+ he said, declared most distinctly to both, first, that Switzerland
+ would not sign a Treaty placing her in a less advantageous
+ commercial position than that now existing; and secondly, that
+ if the general tariff were applied to Swiss goods, French goods
+ would be forthwith subjected to duties of precisely the same amount
+ in Switzerland. He had, he said, somewhat surprised M. Tirard by
+ informing him that the Swiss Government had power to impose such
+ duties at once, without waiting for legislative sanction.
+
+ The impression left upon Kern's mind by the two interviews
+ was, that as hard a bargain as possible would be driven by France,
+ but that in the end they would rather make moderate treaties than
+ no treaties at all, if they saw that this was the only alternative.
+
+ He is going to Berne to confer with his Government, and he
+ says that he is sure they will approve and confirm his language to
+ Tirard and Gambetta.
+
+ After these interviews, Kern was very positive that the French
+ Government were making a great fight to justify themselves to the
+ Chambers, but that if the Powers, and particularly England, were
+ firm, the French would yield rather than incur the political and
+ other inconveniences of not making any treaty at all.
+
+ I am not so sure as he seemed to be of this, but I think that
+ the French are alive to the political inconveniences of breaking
+ with England altogether; and it might therefore be worthy of your
+ consideration, whether, when you go back to the Articles you
+ reserved in the Tariff, you should not make a last effort to see
+ whether the French cannot be brought to consent to a Treaty which
+ would be better commercially than no Tariff Treaty at all. It might
+ interfere with whatever chance of success such an effort might
+ have, for the French to feel beforehand that they could get out of
+ the political difficulty by signing a simple Most Favoured Nation
+ Treaty.
+
+ Nevertheless I am not shaken in my opinion that it would be
+ advisable for you to sign a Most Favoured Nation Treaty, if better
+ may not be, before you break up the Commission, or adjourn it for
+ any long time.
+
+ Commercially we had better make sure at once of sharing the
+ concessions which may be made to other Powers under threats of
+ retaliation.
+
+ Politically we should, I think, find it most disadvantageous
+ to have even the appearance of being on bad terms with France.
+
+The British Government apparently still entertained the illusion
+that there were real French Free Traders. M. Challemel Lacour was
+the chief French Commissioner and Lord Granville welcomed him as a
+brother Free Trader. His brother Free Trader said it was true that he
+was _Libre-Echangiste_, but he was _Libre-Echangiste Français_, and
+recognized the necessity of paying due consideration to the interests of
+native industries. To this chilling response, Lord Granville was forced
+to retort that he must venture to doubt whether a _Libre-Echangiste
+Français_, in His Excellency's acceptation of the term, was not what
+in England was called a Protectionist. M. Waddington had once stated
+that he was a Free Trader 'bar cotton,' and whenever the French Radical
+Parliamentary candidates, who were then perambulating the country in
+view of an approaching general election, were asked whether they were
+Free Traders or not, they replied in the affirmative, but qualified by
+a reserve in favour of French industries which would be ruined by Free
+Trade. As a matter of fact, the spirit of Protection was becoming more
+and more ingrained in the French people, and the best chance of getting
+a reasonable Commercial Treaty lay in the hope that an election would
+bring Gambetta into power.
+
+The London negotiations which had been temporarily suspended were
+resumed at Paris in the autumn, and continued during the remainder of
+the year; but interest was diverted from commercial matters to the
+events which were occurring in Egypt and their probable effect upon
+Anglo-French relations.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 29: Subsequently Viscount Goschen.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Sir Francis Adams, Minister at Berne.]
+
+[Footnote 31: See Appendix by Mrs. Wilfrid Ward, "Lord Lyons in Private
+Life."]
+
+[Footnote 32: Afterwards Lord Alcester.]
+
+[Footnote 33: 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 34: French Consul-General at Tunis.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ARABI'S REBELLION
+
+(1881-1882)
+
+
+In September, 1881, the long-drawn-out Egyptian crisis culminated in the
+military _coup d'état_ of Arabi and the colonels, which resulted in the
+dismissal of the Ministry and the practical establishment in Egypt of a
+military dictatorship. From that moment European intervention, in some
+form, became inevitable, and it was the object of the British Government
+to continue to adhere honestly and consistently to the policy of working
+in conjunction with France, and to avoid carefully as long as possible
+any action which might necessitate the employment of force.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Sept. 30, 1881.
+
+ The article in the _Times_ has produced an anti-English
+ explosion on the subject of Egypt, and was certainly well
+ calculated to do so.
+
+ For my part, I think the best thing to be done is to take an
+ opportunity of distinctly manifesting at Cairo the continuance of
+ the Anglo-French understanding.
+
+ If we let either the Egyptians or Foreign Powers suppose they
+ can upset that, we shall not be able to maintain the English and
+ French Controllers, and if they disappear, the financial prosperity
+ will disappear with them, and we shall have the bondholders,
+ French and English, on our backs again.
+
+ If we let in other Foreign Powers, and at the same time try
+ to establish English predominance, we shall have those Powers
+ coalescing with France against us.
+
+ A split with us would very probably lead to France throwing
+ herself into the arms of Bismarck, and he would encourage all
+ her ambitious aims out of Europe, and, in particular, those
+ the prosecution of which would widen the breach between her
+ and England: or, in other words, be especially annoying and
+ inconvenient to us.
+
+ I hope things are so far calming down in Egypt, that we may
+ not be called upon to take any special measures this time; and
+ the best hope of avoiding them in future seems to be in making it
+ understood that England and France united will resist attempts to
+ overthrow the existing system.
+
+ I am all against letting the Turks thrust the smallest finger
+ into the pie. At this moment the French would never consent, and
+ would consider our bringing in the Turks a specially unfriendly
+ act, with a view to their Tunisian affairs. The less they merit any
+ consideration from us, the more sore they will be at not receiving
+ it. Besides which, where the Turkish hoof has trod, no grass grows,
+ and woe to the finances of any country with which the Turk can
+ meddle.
+
+ Of course, in what I have said about Egypt I have confined
+ myself to the present and the immediate future.
+
+The chances of being able to avoid active intervention were in reality
+non-existent; for temporizing measures taken in conjunction with France
+could not put off for ever the day when, moral pressure having been
+found insufficient, armed force would necessarily have to be employed.
+When that day arrived, the probability was that France would want to
+send troops in conjunction with ours, and our consent to that course
+might involve us in war with France in a very short time. If we had the
+courage to tell the French that our interests were paramount in Egypt,
+and that therefore all other European Powers must be kept out, then we
+must be prepared to back our words with force, and everything therefore
+pointed to the naval superiority of England in the Mediterranean as
+being our paramount necessity. With real naval superiority in the
+Mediterranean we were practically able to make the French do our
+bidding, if we chose. We had the power to shut up their navy in French
+ports, to stop their communications with Africa, to render powerless
+two millions of French soldiers, and to demolish Bismarck's schemes
+of elbowing us out of the Mediterranean. Such was the happy position
+which we enjoyed in 1881, and it was a great contrast to that which
+we occupy at the present day; but it did not tend towards promoting
+goodwill between the two nations, and Lord Lyons constantly urged
+that some joint understanding should be arrived at, in the event of
+another military outbreak in Egypt. The situation had been complicated
+by the despatch of a Turkish mission, and the general impression in
+France was that Arabi and the colonels would shortly be engaged in a
+conspiracy to dethrone the Khedive and to restore something like the old
+_régime_ in the country. A positive declaration from the English and
+French Governments that they would not tolerate the overthrow of the
+Khedive and the established system might have effected much if it was
+felt that the two Governments would interfere by force, if necessary,
+rather than permit it; but this would not be felt or believed unless
+the two Governments had really come to an understanding and had agreed
+upon details; and when it came to discussing details the question
+at once presented difficulties. These difficulties were not lessened
+by a French Ministerial crisis in the autumn, as a crisis usually
+produced a fit of petty Chauvinism, such an encouragement to Consuls
+in the East to _porter haut le drapeau de la France_, the bullying of
+local authorities, and a demand for the extortion of monopolies and
+concessions for French speculators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 4, 1881.
+
+ The Treaty of Commerce and Egypt will probably be the two
+ first questions we shall have to discuss with the new Government.
+
+ The Commercial negotiations seem to me to have been brought
+ exactly to the right point. Having obtained the three months
+ prolongation, we have resumed the negotiation on the day fixed, and
+ have continued it _bona fide_; and it now stands over in a manner
+ which will enable us to see in due time whether or no we can make a
+ treaty with the new Government.
+
+ As regards Egypt, the opinion gains ground here that at the
+ bottom of the agitation there is (or soon will be) a plot to
+ dethrone Tewfik and put Halim in his place as a 'National': _i.e._
+ anti-European, anti-French, and anti-English Control, Khedive. I
+ understand that de Blignières represented strongly to Gambetta that
+ the only way to produce quiet in Egypt and counteract intrigues
+ in favour of Halim at Yildiz Kiosk is for England and France to
+ declare positively at Cairo and Constantinople that they will not
+ stand it, but will resolutely support Tewfik and the existing state
+ of things. I do not know how far Gambetta assented to this, but I
+ am told he did not dissent from it.
+
+The result of much political manoeuvring was that in November, 1881,
+Gambetta was forced to take office and to exchange the irresponsible
+power which he had hitherto wielded in the background for Ministerial
+responsibility. As frequently occurs in similar cases, when the great
+mystery man was dragged out into the light of open day, his appearance
+was somewhat disappointing. His Administration, with one exception
+only, was composed entirely of men belonging to his own immediate
+following, and contained no one of any weight beside himself. Gambetta
+took the Foreign Office as well as the Presidency of the Council, and
+on the principle that _il vaut toujours mieux avoir affaire à Dieu qu'à
+ses anges_, this was an advantage, although it was believed that he
+entertained so great an admiration for Bismarck, that, following the
+latter's example, he would probably hand over the foreign diplomatist to
+an under secretary. The first impressions produced by the new Ministry
+were not favourable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 18, 1881.
+
+ I don't think the present Ministry is so far at all a success.
+ Among other inconveniences arising from the appointment of men of
+ so little personal importance is that there is no one in Gambetta's
+ party who does not think that he ought to have been a Minister;
+ or, in other words, who acquiesces in the superiority of any of
+ those chosen. The fact that Léon Say and Freycinet were offered
+ portfolios, but would not accept them on Gambetta's terms, tells
+ against the selection ultimately made. Gambetta's personal genius
+ must make up for all deficiencies. He appears to have a talent
+ in particular for parliamentary tactics, especially for making
+ the right move on the spur of the moment. I doubt his having
+ deep-matured plans. So far as I can see, he lives _au jour le jour_
+ like ordinary men.
+
+ I had a long visit yesterday from Spüller, but we did not get
+ much beyond generalities. Gambetta and I have exchanged visits, but
+ have not met.
+
+ I do not hazard conjectures on commercial matters, as Dilke
+ will ascertain to-morrow exactly how the land lies. ... As a
+ diplomatist, I cannot but feel that there is convenience in being a
+ bachelor just now.
+
+The last sentence does not refer to the fact that he had just been
+created a Viscount, but to the somewhat peculiar domestic circumstances
+attaching to certain members of the new Government.
+
+It had been assumed that Gambetta's accession to office would be
+marked by a more vigorous foreign policy, especially in the direction
+of acquiring fresh territories in distant regions; but this was not
+justified by his own language or bearing, and at his first interview
+with the Ambassador he abstained from pompous common-places about
+preferring England to all the rest of the world, and desiring peace at
+any price, which was looked upon as a good sign. At the same time, there
+was, in his speeches about Tunis and the Mediterranean, a slight flavour
+of Chauvinism which would not have excited remark before 1870, but which
+would not have appeared in 1880, and would certainly not have been
+applauded in 1881, unless it had become generally known that Bismarck
+had sanctioned and encouraged French enterprises away from the continent
+of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 6, 1881.
+
+ Gambetta gave the Diplomatic Body an excellent dinner last
+ Saturday, and played his part as host very successfully.
+
+ What may be at the bottom of his heart, nothing has yet shown.
+
+ The change which has come over the relations between France
+ and Germany opens to him the door for a comparatively safe yet
+ ambitious Foreign Policy. Will he resist the temptation?
+
+ During the years which immediately followed the war, the
+ feeling of France towards Germany was composed of furious hatred
+ and of mortal dread. The line taken, consciously or unconsciously,
+ by Germany tended to add bitterness to this feeling. She interfered
+ dictatorially with France even in internal matters. Her object
+ seemed to be not only to impede the restoration of French strength
+ and wealth, but to prevent the French recovering even prestige
+ anywhere. She was, or affected to be, convinced that a war of
+ revenge on the part of France was imminent. She was believed by
+ the French to be angry at their showing so much vitality and to be
+ preparing to give them the _coup de grâce_.
+
+ At this moment, however, neither France nor Germany appears
+ to apprehend an attack or to be prepared to make one. Each appears
+ to consider the other too strong to be attacked with impunity.
+ Certainly Gambetta would not find the nation in heart to follow him
+ in defying Germany. If therefore his policy or his passions incline
+ him to do something striking to flatter the national vanity, how
+ is he to find the means? The Tunis affair has given Bismarck an
+ opportunity of showing him. It has enabled the Chancellor to
+ convince the French that they will have the countenance of Germany
+ in any enterprise in which they may engage out of Europe.
+
+ How far this may be part of a great plan of Bismarck's
+ to secure German supremacy in Europe by pushing Austria into
+ the Levant, Russia into Asia, and France into Africa and the
+ Mediterranean, and by shutting up England in her own islands, we
+ need not inquire. In any case it must suit Prince Bismarck to see
+ France making acquisitions of territory or influence, which weaken
+ her military force in Europe, throw burthens on her finances, and
+ make ill blood between her and other Powers.
+
+ Unhappily if Gambetta is so short-sighted as to give in to
+ temptation of this kind, difficult questions are, more than with
+ any other Power, likely to arise with England, who is in contact
+ with France all over the world and especially in the Mediterranean.
+
+ I hope better things, and I am not at all willing to despair
+ of a thorough good understanding between France and England which
+ would avert danger from both, and enable both to do good to all the
+ world. Still one cannot but be anxious at this moment. Egypt may be
+ the ticklish point.
+
+The Parliamentary skill of Gambetta was seen to advantage during the
+short winter session, and compared favourably with the want of tact and
+vigour which had been displayed by his predecessors. He even obtained a
+success in the Senate, where he had not expected to find any sympathy
+at all, and some of the more sensible Conservatives became disposed to
+support him, more from fear of what might result if he fell than from
+personal attachment. Some of his appointments, however, aroused alarm,
+and he perturbed Lord Lyons by bestowing upon a journalist a most
+important post in the Foreign Office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 30, 1881.
+
+ I will not despair, but I am feeling very great anxiety
+ about the Commercial Treaty. I am afraid that on this side of the
+ Channel, much more than in England, the failure of the negotiations
+ would have a most undesirable political effect. In France and on
+ the Continent generally, it would be taken as a sure indication of
+ a coolness between the two Governments. Gambetta would be taunted
+ by the Opposition with having alienated England (Italy having been
+ alienated before). Gambetta's supporters in the press and elsewhere
+ would try to throw the blame upon England, the English press would
+ retort upon France, and a very unpleasant state of feeling would be
+ the result.
+
+ Gambetta has astounded people by appointing a flashy newspaper
+ writer, of no particular principles, to the post of Political
+ Director in the Foreign Office. The Political Director is almost
+ the most important person in the office, as he drafts all the
+ political despatches and notes. I hope the communications to the
+ foreign ambassadors are not to be in the style of 'smart' newspaper
+ articles. I confess that when I saw the appointment in the _Journal
+ Officiel_, it did not occur to me that the man could be the same
+ Weiss who had been writing in the _Figaro_.
+
+The friendly disposition of Gambetta towards England has already been
+noted, and beyond a certain tendency in his speeches towards Chauvinism,
+there was nothing in his conduct calculated to arouse alarm, but
+nevertheless a critical moment in Anglo-French relations appeared to
+be approaching at the beginning of 1882. The Government of France had
+passed into the hands of a Minister far more influential, more able,
+and more ambitious than any man who had taken part in public affairs
+since the retirement of Thiers, and the time was at hand when that
+Minister must decide on the line of policy to be followed with regard
+to Foreign Powers. The character and temperament of Gambetta naturally
+disposed him to endeavour to make his Foreign Policy more vigorous,
+more successful and more striking than that of his predecessors, and
+with that object he would probably take one of two courses. Either
+he would aim at emancipating France from her existing confidential
+servility towards Germany; or, despairing of that, he would continue the
+existing relations with Bismarck, and thus ensure the latter's willing
+acquiescence in aggressive proceedings on the part of France beyond the
+limits of Europe.
+
+In order to shake off the German yoke, Gambetta evidently considered
+it essential that he should be able to place himself on distinctly
+friendly and intimate terms with England, and if he failed in this, the
+probability was that he would be obliged to revert to the patronage
+which was felt to be so irksome. But the change which had come over
+the relations between France and Germany opened the door to a foreign
+policy which was comparatively safe and easy, and yet did not present
+the disadvantage of being unambitious. The period which immediately
+followed the war of 1870, was, as has already been pointed out, marked
+by a feeling in France towards Germany of fierce hatred combined with
+extreme fear, and German policy, whether consciously or unconsciously,
+tended to embitter this feeling. Germany interfered dictatorially and
+ostentatiously even in French internal affairs, and the object seemed
+to be not only to crush the reviving strength of France, but to prevent
+her recovering anywhere, or in any matter, the smallest portion of her
+lost _prestige_. The German Government professed to believe that a war
+of revenge was meditated, and was credited with the intention of finally
+destroying France before the latter should be sufficiently recuperated
+to resume the struggle.
+
+But with the lapse of time, a change of policy, and, to a certain
+extent, a change of feeling had taken place on both sides. Neither
+country was in any immediate apprehension of an attack from the other. A
+somewhat ostentatious interchange of courtesy had been substituted for
+their former reserve, and Bismarck had seized the opportunity of the
+invasion of Tunis to let the French understand that they would have the
+countenance of Germany in enterprises undertaken by them out of Europe.
+Apart from all far-reaching schemes for securing German supremacy in
+Europe, it was obviously in the interests of Germany that France should
+engage in enterprises and make acquisitions which dispersed her armies,
+disorganized her finances and created ill feeling with other Powers.
+
+Gambetta was much too intelligent a man not to see through this policy,
+but the temptation to direct the energies of France into the Colonial,
+rather than the continental direction, might prove too strong for him
+if he despaired of gaining credit for his Government in another way.
+Unhappily, in such a case, with no Power were difficulties so likely to
+arise as with England, which was more or less in contact with France in
+all parts of the world, and especially in the Mediterranean. Nor could
+it be forgotten that in the speeches lately delivered on the subject of
+Tunis, Gambetta had made strong appeals to national pride with regard to
+French possessions and interests beyond the seas.
+
+Still there was no reason to suppose that the so-called Colonial Policy
+was Gambetta's first choice. He was known to chafe under the practical
+subservience of France to Germany, and to feel deeply humiliated by it.
+At the bottom of his heart he cherished an ardent desire to recover
+the lost provinces, but he knew that neither the military strength of
+France nor the spirit of the people would warrant his attempting this
+within any assignable period. He did, however, aim at freeing the French
+Government from the sort of occult control which Germany had recently
+exercised over it, and at improving the position of France as a Great
+Power. He desired to present the Government over which he presided
+to France and to Europe as taking a dignified and important part in
+international questions, and feeling that these objects could best be
+attained by a real and visible friendship with England, he was evidently
+disposed to treat pending questions with a view to maintaining and
+manifesting a cordial understanding.
+
+The two most important questions of the moment were, of course, Egypt
+and the Commercial Treaty.
+
+As regards Egypt, there was so far complete unity between the two
+Governments--the strain having not yet arrived--but the conclusion of
+a Commercial Treaty appeared to be a more arduous affair. Gambetta
+was apparently ready to go as far towards making an acceptable Treaty
+as was possible without risking a defeat in the Chambers. But if the
+negotiations were to fail, he would probably despair of keeping up good
+feeling towards England in France. He would conceive that the failure
+would discredit him in the eyes of France and of Europe; that it would
+convey to foreign Governments an impression, which he could not remove,
+of there being a coolness between France and England, and that it would
+oblige him to seek for his Foreign Policy some other basis than union
+with England.
+
+Perhaps the fear that unsuccessful commercial negotiations would convert
+Gambetta into a foe was partly due to a communication from Sir Charles
+Dilke announcing that a commercial ultimatum was about to be hurled at
+the French Government. This communication is extremely instructive from
+the English Parliamentary point of view, for it recommended that in
+despatches the word 'bargain' should be carefully avoided, 'as it would
+strengthen the reciprocity argument.' In other words, although wine
+duties were to be utilized for the purpose of bargaining, the fact was
+not to be disclosed lest it might be construed as a departure from the
+sacred principles of Free Trade.
+
+Attention was, however, quickly diverted from the Commercial Treaty
+to Egypt. On January 8, the British and French Governments presented
+the so-called Dual Note, in which they declared their intention of
+'warding off by their united efforts all causes of external or internal
+complications, which might menace the _régime_ established in Egypt.'
+The Dual Note was by no means as successful as had been hoped, and it is
+clear that Gambetta was in favour of more decided and independent action
+than the British Cabinet. Within a few days Lord Granville was already
+writing to Lord Lyons and asking him whether it would not be advisable
+for England and France to ask permission from the Powers to appear as
+mandatories of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Jan. 17, 1882.
+
+ The news from Egypt is certainly not reassuring, and the
+ _mauvais quart d'heure_ may arrive at any moment.
+
+ M. Gambetta would probably desire joint intervention; the
+ objections to this are immense: I need not recapitulate them all to
+ you.
+
+ Single occupation, by England or by France, still more so.
+
+ I am not quite sure that Turkish occupation under proper
+ conditions and control by France and England, although a great
+ evil, would not be less bad than the three alternatives I have
+ mentioned. But it is not only bad in itself, but it would be
+ strongly opposed by the French, although it would be supported
+ by the German Powers. In these circumstances, an observation of
+ Malet's struck me as having some force. Talking of the intentions
+ of some of the other Powers to have their part in the question, he
+ said it would not be so objectionable, if they consented to allow
+ the English and French to be the mandatories.
+
+ The idea seemed to me to be worth considering, and I spoke to
+ Tenterden and Rivers Wilson (but to no one else) and requested them
+ to draw up a memorandum as to how this could be carried out. I send
+ you an extract, and I should like to have your opinion on it before
+ I submit it even to Gladstone as a possibility.
+
+ Gambetta of course would not like it. But his difficulty is as
+ great as ours if he were to understand that we will not agree to
+ joint occupation. There would be nothing humiliating to France if
+ the proposal was freely consented to by both countries and jointly
+ offered to Egypt.
+
+ For us it would only be acting on the Concert of Europe
+ principle, about which we have been making such a fuss.
+
+This somewhat half-hearted proposal met with no approval from Lord
+Lyons, who expressed his objections in more decisive terms than were
+usual with him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 19, 1882.
+
+ In your letter of the day before yesterday you ask me for
+ my opinion on a suggestion as to admitting other Powers to take
+ part in the Egyptian Question, on the supposition that France and
+ England should be their mandatories.
+
+ This would, _ipso facto_, be the abandonment of the
+ exceptional position which England and France have taken up in
+ Egypt. Whether this position can be, or ought to be, maintained for
+ a long time, is a question which I will not stop to examine.
+
+ That a proposal to abandon it, at this moment, would have a
+ very bad effect on our relations with France, does not, I think,
+ admit of a doubt. It would be taken as an abandonment of our
+ intention to give up, in the face of Europe, all special intimacy
+ with the French Government. It would give rise to suspicions
+ that we were trying to use the other Powers for the purpose of
+ ousting France from Egypt. The union of England and France on the
+ Egyptian Question is the principal symbol of there being a good
+ understanding between them, and to this symbol the French attach no
+ little importance.
+
+ I don't know that the designation of mandatories of Europe
+ would mend the matter. The other Powers would not commission
+ England and France to decide by themselves what measures should
+ be recommended for Egypt. They might depute England and France
+ to enforce the decisions of Europe, but this would only bring us
+ back to the joint intervention of the two Powers in a particularly
+ awkward and unmanageable form.
+
+ Practically, it would, I think, be found much more difficult
+ for us to keep well with France, if the other Powers were also to
+ have a voice in details. Hitherto England and France have managed
+ to come to an agreement with each other on the questions that have
+ arisen. It might be made more difficult for them invariably to side
+ with each other against other Powers. Political considerations as
+ to affairs distinct from Egypt might come into play. Setting aside
+ a natural and not improper jealousy on the part of each, lest its
+ associate should obtain separate and undue influence, the interests
+ of England and France in Egypt are very much the same. The main
+ interest of some Governments, and in particular that of the Porte,
+ might be antagonistic to cordiality between the two Western Powers.
+
+ A Commission appointed now to deal with questions relating to
+ the government and administration of Egypt would be a different
+ matter from the Commissions of 1878 and 1880.
+
+ In the first place, it seems probable that the Sultan would
+ protest strongly against it, and that he would do so whether or
+ no there were Turkish members of it appointed by him. His Majesty
+ might possibly acquiesce under strong pressure from all the Powers,
+ but would all the Powers put such pressure on him? In all matters
+ bearing upon the relations between the Porte and Egypt, it must, I
+ am afraid, be taken into consideration that neither France singly,
+ nor England singly, nor the two acting together, are likely at the
+ present time to exercise predominant influence at Constantinople;
+ and that, on the other hand, the Power which does exercise
+ predominant influence there shows no disposition to jeopardize that
+ influence by giving unpalatable advice, and is not supposed to have
+ any desire to promote cordiality between England and France.
+
+ Moreover, we have to consider not only the Sultan and the
+ Khedive, but the mutinous officers and the so-called National Party
+ in Egypt. From a telegram which Gambetta showed me yesterday,
+ it would appear that Arabi had expressed some idea of appealing
+ against England and France to the Great Powers collectively. But
+ would he and his party, whose watchword seems to be 'Egypt for
+ the Egyptians,' submit passively to the installation of a Foreign
+ Commission to settle all the important national questions? Would
+ they acquiesce in the subsequent enforcement of the decision of the
+ Commission?
+
+ The Commission might certainly sit at Alexandria, and it
+ might perhaps have the support afforded by the presence of an
+ Anglo-French squadron, or an International squadron. In either
+ case, would the squadron be provided with men to be landed in
+ case of need, and would the Commission be authorized to call for
+ the assistance and protection of a force to be put on shore? If
+ this were so, it might be merely a small beginning which might
+ ultimately render intervention in arms on a larger scale inevitable.
+
+ On the other hand, if the presence of the squadron were to
+ be merely a naval demonstration, would the fact of its being more
+ or less representative of all the Great Powers give it much more
+ weight than if it were made on behalf of England and France alone?
+ Would it, in either case, be safe to trust to the moral effect
+ of its being sufficient, and to its not rendering further action
+ imperative?
+
+ Gambetta seems to hope that firm and decided language, used
+ collectively now by France and England, may ward off a crisis.
+ If there be any chance of warding off a necessity for action, it
+ no doubt lies in this; but I suppose that with Gambetta the wish
+ is father to the thought. On the one hand, in face of the present
+ unpopularity of the Tunis expedition, it would be very awkward for
+ him to have to send another French force to Africa at the present
+ moment. But, on the other hand, he could not confront the mass of
+ enraged bondholders if he abandoned their interests; and public
+ opinion here, which is very sensitive about Egypt, would not
+ tolerate his letting France be openly set at naught in that country.
+
+ It is needless to add that the French Government would
+ bitterly resent it, if any hint were given to a third Power,
+ without their having been previously consulted, if there is any
+ idea on our part of withdrawing from our separate understanding
+ with them, and merging Egypt in the general Eastern Question. If
+ they were ever brought to consent to calling in the other Powers,
+ they would not readily forgive having their hands forced in the
+ matter.
+
+ For my own part, I would certainly, as regards Egypt, rather
+ have to deal with France only than with four or five more Powers.
+
+There can be no shadow of doubt that Lord Lyons's view was the correct
+one, but Lord Granville and Mr. Gladstone (no other member of the
+Cabinet is mentioned) seem to have hankered after the Concert of Europe,
+probably in consequence of the stroke of luck at Dulcigno.
+
+ 'Your very powerful letter,' Lord Granville wrote on January
+ 21, 'is gone to Gladstone. It is not easy to find an answer to all
+ your arguments. The question is whether there are not stronger
+ arguments against any other course. I think it is likely that I
+ shall write to you to ask you to speak to Gambetta.
+
+ 'On the imminence of the crisis: the importance of perfect
+ union between England and France: our strong objection to intervene
+ alone--giving as reasons:--opposition of Egyptians; of Turkey;
+ jealousy of Europe; responsibility of governing a country of
+ Orientals without adequate means and under adverse circumstances;
+ presumption that France would object as much to our sole occupation
+ as we should object to theirs.
+
+ 'Have carefully considered joint occupation; some of the
+ objections to sole occupation lessened, but others most seriously
+ aggravated.
+
+ 'Deprecate Turkish intervention, but think it a lesser evil
+ than the two to which I have alluded, giving some reasons.
+
+ 'Then propose the European element, as sketched out in my
+ private letter.
+
+ 'Any concessions to Europe after any demonstrations on the
+ part of the German powers and Italy would place us in a false
+ position; but if made spontaneously and jointly by France and
+ England, would not have that inconvenience.
+
+ 'Please reflect upon the way such arguments might best be put,
+ but let me have all your opinions upon it.
+
+ 'Such able letters as your last are very valuable.'
+
+Another letter written on the same day asks for advice as to what should
+be done 'if the crisis arrives, as is probable, in a week.' It was very
+evident that the Cabinet had no definite plan of their own, and were
+only too glad of the opportunity of consulting some one whose opinion
+was worth having.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, January 22, 1882.
+
+ I have received this morning your two letters of yesterday
+ about Egypt; and I have reconsidered the letters from me of the
+ 19th to which they are answers.
+
+ There exists at this moment one new difficulty, the
+ uncertainty whether Gambetta will still be in office this day week.
+
+ I do not, however, find in this circumstance any reason to
+ modify the views expressed in my long letter.
+
+ Whoever may be in office here at the time, if we proposed to
+ call in the other Powers, we should be held (to use Commercial
+ Treaty slang) to have 'denounced' our good understanding with
+ France. We should be reproached with deserting our comrade at the
+ critical moment, and I am seriously afraid that for a long time
+ the feeling in France towards England would be bitter, and the
+ relations of the French Government towards the English Government
+ more than cold.
+
+ In my communication to the French Government respecting Egypt,
+ there are some topics in particular which would require delicate
+ handling.
+
+ First of these, I should mention Turkish intervention. This
+ has been a subject of difference between France and England for
+ half a century, and the French have a traditional feeling on
+ the subject at all times. But at this moment they (rightly or
+ wrongly) think it a matter of vital importance to them with regard
+ to Algeria and Tunis, and they would go very great lengths to
+ resist the introduction of the Turkish Troops into Egypt, or the
+ increase of Turkish influence there. They always suspect us of
+ hankering after Turkish support against them, not reflecting that
+ our influence at Constantinople is not so predominant as when they
+ supported Mehemet Ali against the Porte and England.
+
+ Another topic on which the French might be sensitive would be
+ the question of governing a country of Orientals. This is a matter
+ on which I feel strongly myself, but it would need to be dealt with
+ very cautiously, or the French would see in it a sneer against
+ their own shortcomings in Tunis and even in Algeria.
+
+ The objections to joint dual occupation are strong, but almost
+ any statement of them would apply with equal force, or more, to
+ joint sextuple occupation, or to the occupation by two Powers as
+ mandatories of the rest.
+
+ Malet, I see, telegraphs that the Chamber would, he thinks,
+ listen to the united Great Powers, but would not listen to England
+ and France alone.
+
+ Admitting that Malet is right (and he generally is right),
+ there always remains the difficulty as to putting this cumbersome
+ six-wheeled waggon into motion in any reasonable time.
+
+ And this brings me to the question in your second letter, what
+ course should I recommend, if the crisis, as is probable, arises in
+ a week.
+
+ It seems to me that in that case either things must be let
+ 'slide,' or England and France must take some step together,
+ without waiting for the other Powers.
+
+All the anxious speculations which had taken place with regard to
+Gambetta's future foreign policy turned out to be quite unnecessary, for
+on January 27, after little more than two months of office, he resigned,
+having been defeated, like any ordinary political mediocrity, on a
+question of domestic interest. His place was taken by M. de Freycinet,
+who succeeded in forming a respectable Ministry, but whose policy with
+regard to Egypt was as vague and undecided as that of the British
+Government, and whose views with regard to a Commercial Treaty were
+supposed to be identical with those of his predecessor.
+
+Advantage was taken of the change by Lord Granville to again urge the
+substitution of the Concert of Europe for purely Anglo-French control in
+Egypt, and Freycinet showed himself much more amenable than Gambetta.
+As far as can be gathered, the attitude of both Governments was the
+reverse of heroic; the British Government was anxious to hand over its
+responsibility to other parties, and the French Government was not
+disposed to take any initiative at all. The French were, in fact,
+waiting for England to make a suggestion, and while perhaps ready to act
+in conjunction, wished that the responsibility of whatever proceedings
+were adopted in common, should rest primarily, if not exclusively, upon
+England. The Tunis enterprise had proved to be so much more troublesome
+and expensive than had been expected, that the Government shrank from
+becoming involved in anything of the same nature in Egypt. But the
+condition of affairs in Egypt was such that even the timid Freycinet
+Government might find its hand forced. An insult to a French functionary
+might produce an outbreak of Chauvinism which would force the Government
+to send a force to avenge it, and Gambetta would certainly have had a
+force ready for a contingency of this kind.
+
+Nubar Pasha was in Paris at the time, and his views on the Egyptian
+situation were not without interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 7, 1882.
+
+ I do not find the least diminution of the French opposition to
+ Turkish intervention in Egypt, even if it were only moral.
+
+ Nubar has been here for some months, and often comes to see
+ me. His first object in life seems to be to get Blignières out
+ of Egypt, and his second to get Tewfik deposed. I conclude that
+ he thinks that both are obstacles to his own return to power.
+ His language is, that the dictation of the English and French
+ Controllers in Egypt was more than any country could bear; that the
+ present state of things is much better; office and power being in
+ the same hands; that Arabi Bey and his compeers will do very well
+ if they are properly managed, and that two quiet, conciliatory
+ (perhaps we should read imbecile) Controllers would keep everything
+ straight. I think he inclines to the moral intervention of the
+ Sultan. He seems to be intriguing with Germany. He had an interview
+ with Freycinet, to whom, according to his own account, he held the
+ language I have described above. He talks more ably than any one
+ else about Egypt, but always with a view to his own interests.
+
+Any one who ever conversed with the late Nubar Pasha could not fail to
+be impressed with his ability, but like many other able Orientals, he
+was a consummate intriguer, and probably the predominant feeling in his
+mind was a desire to be reinstated in power. It should be explained
+that, at this time, Arabi was already practically at the head of the
+Government, although only occupying the post of Minister of War, and
+that M. de Blignières was still French Controller. M. de Blignières,
+however, resigned his post on March 12, and an open letter[35] from him
+to M. Clémenceau threw a lurid light on the tortuous and inexplicable
+course of French policy in Egypt.
+
+ 'Lorsqu'il (Cherif Pasha) a du quitter le pouvoir; lorsque j'ai
+ compris que les chefs du parti militaire, qui l'avaient renversé,
+ pouvaient compter sur la bienveillance de notre gouvernement,
+ ce jour-là, ne me faisant aucune illusion sur les conséquences
+ nécessaires de cette politique nouvelle, j'ai résigné mes
+ fonctions.'
+
+If, therefore, M. de Blignières was correct, the French were playing
+a double game; ostensibly acting in concert with England against the
+Nationalist agitation in Egypt, while secretly encouraging Arabi and his
+friends to persevere in their efforts. In one respect, however, they
+were consistent, namely in their opposition to Turkish intervention, and
+the traditional French opposition to Turkish influence in Egypt was
+accentuated in consequence of the recent events in Tunis and Algeria.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, April 4, 1882.
+
+ You will have seen by the despatches I sent you by post
+ yesterday that Freycinet has at last put the dots on his i's, and
+ distinctly proposed that Tewfik shall be deposed and Halim put
+ in his place. I cannot say I take to the idea. As you said to
+ Tissot, there might be some good in it if Halim had great moral and
+ intellectual qualities. But I don't see that we have any reason
+ to suppose he has such qualities. Nor indeed, if he had, do I see
+ how his mere appointment would at once set things straight in
+ Egypt. The removal of Ismail was a great blow to the prestige of
+ the Khediviate, and it would require a genius to re-establish its
+ authority, if another deposition takes place in so short a time.
+ I do not understand how Freycinet reconciles his present idea
+ with his objection to Turkish interference. If the Khedive is in
+ daily fear of being deposed by the Sultan, there will be abject
+ submission to Yildiz Kiosk and a constant flow of backsheesh to the
+ Porte.
+
+ Halim no doubt promises the French that he will be their man,
+ and if he becomes so, they may go great lengths to support him; but
+ how will this suit us? And how long will it be before it leads to
+ something very like armed intervention of the French in support of
+ him?
+
+ Then it seems to me that to depose Tewfik would be something
+ very like treachery, after the dual declaration made to him in
+ January.
+
+ It seems to me that the things to aim at should be: to keep
+ Tewfik; to give him some strength against military dictation, and
+ to preserve the Anglo-French Control, which means a reasonable
+ financial administration, and gives us at any rate some means of
+ knowing what the Egyptians (perhaps I ought to add) what the French
+ are about.
+
+The immoral proposal to depose Tewfik met with no encouragement from
+Her Majesty's Government, as was only to be expected, and the only
+conclusion to be drawn from the equivocal language of M. de Freycinet
+was that he felt armed intervention to be inevitable, but wanted the
+proposal to come from England. He tried to persuade Lord Lyons to
+propose a plan of his own which should be put forward privately, but
+this met with no approval at all. '"Private and between ourselves
+conversations," between Ambassadors and Foreign Ministers generally
+cause mischief.'
+
+As the situation in Egypt continued to get worse, the British Government
+was forced to take some action, and accordingly suggested that three
+generals, French, English, and Turkish, should be sent to Egypt 'to
+restore discipline to the Egyptian army.' As it was not proposed that
+these generals should employ anything but moral force, it is difficult
+to see how they could have succeeded, but Lord Granville appears to have
+considered that it would obviate armed interference, and the French
+Government having no plan of their own were presumably ready to accept
+almost anything, but caused considerable embarrassment by asking for a
+pledge that Turkish intervention by force of arms, in any circumstances,
+would not be tolerated. What Freycinet wanted, in fact, was to be able
+to declare to the Chamber that England and France were agreed not to
+allow armed Ottoman intervention.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 5, 1882.
+
+ Freycinet asked me just now to let him speak to me 'privately
+ and academically' about intervention in Egypt. He said his great
+ objection to Turkish intervention was that as matters now stand,
+ it would take place for a vague and indefinite object: that thus
+ it would be impossible to fix the exact time at which that object
+ would be accomplished, and that thus the Turks would have pretexts
+ for prolonging it indefinitely, for mixing themselves up in the
+ administration, for laying their hands on the Treasury, and what
+ not.
+
+ If the intervention was simply for installing a new Khedive,
+ his objections would be less. This would be a single definite
+ sovereign act of the Sultan. It might be accomplished in a week or
+ ten days, and the Ottoman troops would have no pretext for staying,
+ or for interfering in the administration. He should not object to a
+ Turkish, French, and English fleet going to Egypt to support some
+ single definite act of this kind, nor even, speaking solely for
+ himself personally, to Turkish troops being landed.
+
+ After some questioning from me, he said that, for a single
+ definite object, he personally might even prefer a Turkish
+ intervention, but that for any such vague purpose as supporting
+ Tewfik and restoring order, he thought Turkish intervention
+ absolutely inadmissible. If anything of that kind was to be
+ attempted, Anglo-French seemed to him the least open to objection.
+ Italian seemed to him to be worse than Turkish.
+
+ His idea was that we should set on foot some Government that
+ could stand by itself. Under Tewfik no such Government would in his
+ opinion be ever possible. He had no predilection for any particular
+ individual as Khedive: all he wanted was to have some reasonably
+ efficient man at the head of the Government.
+
+ He begged me to consider all this as strictly confidential,
+ personal, private, and academic; and he said that except in a
+ conversation of this character, he could not even have mentioned
+ the possibility of France consenting under any conceivable
+ circumstances to Turkish intervention; for he was by no means sure
+ that it would ever be agreed to by his colleagues or borne by
+ public opinion.
+
+The 'confidential, personal, private, and academic' character of M. de
+Freycinet's conversation was, of course, merely intended to conceal
+his own vacillation and fear of having to communicate to the Chambers
+any announcement that he had sanctioned Turkish intervention in any
+shape whatever. A little later, however, he nerved himself to make a
+proposal that there should be a joint Anglo-French Naval Demonstration
+off Alexandria. An allied squadron consequently proceeded to that
+port, and its appearance produced a temporary panic in the ranks of
+the Nationalists; the latter, however, speedily recovered when it was
+realized that there were no troops on board, and that the Sultan, far
+from approving of the demonstration, had protested against it. The
+ultimatum of the allies was practically rejected, and Arabi, who had
+been compelled to resign, was reinstated in office nominally as Minister
+of War, in reality as dictator. To make Freycinet's position still
+worse, he got into difficulties in the Chamber.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 26, 1882.
+
+ The explosion has come, and if the irritation that prevails
+ in Paris to-day continues, Freycinet will be out of office, or
+ will, _per fas et nefas_, back out of his proposal that Turkish
+ intervention may be resorted to in Egypt. His Chauvin speech in the
+ Chamber about French preponderance, and what not, is now of course
+ turned against him.
+
+ There is an impression here that in order to keep Gambetta out
+ of office, Bismarck may help Freycinet to eat his words.
+
+ I am afraid that now, whether Freycinet stays in or goes out,
+ it will be next to impossible to have any comfortable understanding
+ with France about intervention in Egypt.
+
+ Even supposing all the other Powers cordially united with
+ us, to repeat the experiment of 1840 would be dangerous, and would
+ produce a scarcely ever to be remedied coldness (to call it by a
+ mild name) between us and France.
+
+ Then I share all Dufferin's misgivings as to the possibility
+ of either controlling the Turks if they set foot in Egypt, or of
+ ever getting them out. I have also a very strong fear of my own as
+ to the mischief they would do to the country. Even if they went
+ with the acquiescence of France, I think we should be constantly in
+ hot water with the French as long as they stayed.
+
+ If Gambetta comes in he will no doubt again propose joint
+ Anglo-French intervention. Unless the Porte is backed up very
+ strongly indeed, he will very likely make its intervention in Egypt
+ something like a _casus belli_ with Turkey--or in fact do as the
+ French did with regard to Tunis--declare that he will oppose by
+ force the despatch of Turkish troops to Egypt.
+
+The Anglo-French Naval Demonstration had been intended as a compromise
+between the two Governments over the question of Turkish intervention,
+but when it was seen to be useless, it was agreed that the Sultan should
+be asked to send a Special Commission to Cairo, and communications were
+made to the other Powers with a view to convoking a European Conference
+on Egypt; M. de Freycinet, who had for three months opposed the English
+proposal for Turkish intervention, suddenly discovering that there was
+no danger about it, if requested jointly by England and France. The
+Turkish Commission which proceeded to Egypt was not more successful in
+restoring order than the Anglo-French Naval Demonstration. It consisted
+of three persons; one of whom, Dervish Pasha, was instructed to support
+the Khedive and to threaten the Nationalist leaders; the second
+Commissioner was instructed to support Arabi and his associates; and
+the duty of the third Commissioner was to spy upon his two colleagues.
+In order to make everything quite safe, the latter was accompanied by a
+fourth official, whose duty it was to spy upon him, and it was perhaps
+owing to these over-elaborated precautions that the mission proved to be
+a complete failure.
+
+On June 11, the massacre at Alexandria took place, and armed
+intervention became more and more inevitable, but some Governments still
+entertained the hope that diplomacy might yet be successful, and the
+Conference assembled at Constantinople towards the end of the month.
+The chief advantage of the Conference was that it disclosed the views
+of the various Great Powers, and the conditions which were to govern
+the despatch of Turkish troops to Egypt were of so engrossing a nature
+that they were still being discussed when the battle of Tel-el-Kebir
+was fought two months subsequently, and the victorious British troops
+entered Cairo.
+
+The vacillations and dilatoriness of M. de Freycinet irritated even the
+easy-going Lord Granville, who complained of having twice been put in
+a hole by him, and was justifiably anxious as to how he could defend
+his Egyptian policy successfully in Parliament if the French Government
+could not be relied upon for any consistent line of action. But while
+admitting that nearly everything had gone wrong up till now, and that
+the failure of the Sultan's Special Mission made the outlook still more
+gloomy, he consoled himself with the reflection (which was shortly
+afterwards shown in one respect to be quite erroneous) that, 'we have
+avoided a rupture with France, a rupture with Europe, and a possible
+war.' Within a few weeks, the error of this last assumption was to be
+conclusively established.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 20, 1882.
+
+ I do not hope much from the Conference: certainly I have very
+ little expectation of its forwarding the strong measures which the
+ Alexandria massacres seem to me to call for imperatively.
+
+ I think Germany will be very little inclined to urge the
+ despatch of Turkish troops. Bismarck's great object appears to be
+ to keep Freycinet in, and he fears, not without some reason, that
+ when the first Turkish soldier sets his foot in Egypt, Freycinet
+ will fall at Paris.
+
+ The Freycinet Ministry would probably be succeeded by a
+ Cabinet in which Gambetta would not actually have a seat, but
+ over which he would exercise very great influence. Bismarck very
+ probably exaggerates the strength of that influence and looks for
+ more direct hostility to Germany than it would really provoke. But
+ he is perhaps right in thinking that, under Gambetta's influence,
+ France would coquet with the Anti-German party in Russia, and would
+ lose no opportunity of fostering enmity to Germany whenever she
+ could find an opening for doing so. At all events, it would be
+ impossible for Germany to feel as much at her ease as she does now,
+ if Gambetta were the virtual director of French policy.
+
+ Freycinet's strength lies partly in the disinclination of the
+ nation for anything like what it calls adventures, but mainly in
+ the dread which the present Chamber has of Gambetta, the Scrutin de
+ Liste and a dissolution.
+
+ Meanwhile general dissatisfaction with the whole state of
+ things, and despondency do not diminish. People who looked to
+ Gambetta as the man to set things straight are directing their eyes
+ to other quarters, and there is even a sort of revival of Orleanism.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A few hours after this letter reaches you, you will in
+ all probability receive from me by telegraph the French answer to
+ the proposal to them to concert measures with us for the protection
+ of the Suez Canal. I don't think Freycinet likes the idea of
+ anything which may tend towards sending French troops to Egypt.
+ He seems to me to want to lean on the Conference in the hope that
+ by so doing, he may be able to stand quite still. Strange to say,
+ the Chamber and the public seem to be in the same mood. They like
+ to think that it is more upon England than upon them that the
+ discredit of putting up with the Alexandria massacre and the recent
+ patch up in Egypt would fall. Their present pusillanimity seems so
+ unnatural that I cannot think it will last. Gambetta will rouse
+ them from it, if he has the chance.
+
+They are full of suspicions of designs on our part to seize the Suez
+Canal with or without the assistance or connivance of Turkey. You will
+see by a telegram I have just sent, that Freycinet has asked me a
+question about this. I imagine the French would object very much less to
+our acting entirely alone than to our acting in any way with the Porte.
+
+The Sultan seems to tell de Noailles all kinds of stories against
+England and Dufferin. It is not, however, from Freycinet that I hear
+this.
+
+In Lord Lyons's opinion, the French, at this stage, were quite prepared
+for England acting alone in Egypt, but he considered that it was most
+important to be very frank with them, to afford them every opportunity
+of joining us, but to do it in such a way that other Powers should not
+be given too much time in which to raise objections.
+
+It was not apparently until June 27, 1882, that the British Government
+seriously considered the probability of having to employ 'material
+force' in Egypt, whether alone or in concert with other Powers; but
+in consequence of the danger of the situation and of the necessity of
+acting quickly, they then applied to the War Office for information as
+to what forces were available for an expedition. In view of our alleged
+military capacity at the present time, it is of interest to learn what
+the War Office was prepared to do thirty-one years ago. The military
+authorities stated that they were prepared to embark within twenty-four
+hours, 3500 infantry, and 500 garrison artillerymen, with a small siege
+train, from Malta and Gibraltar, with necessary camp equipage and
+reserves of food and ammunition. These troops could be conveyed in the
+ships of the Channel Squadron now in the Mediterranean. A force of about
+12,000 fighting men, complete in infantry, cavalry, and field artillery,
+with forty-eight field guns, was also available, to embark from England.
+The first 5000 of the infantry could sail within a week, and the whole
+force could leave England in a fortnight from the date of the order,
+with complete supplies for an army in the field. The force from England
+would be made up partially by the First Class Army Reserve, and a
+Brigade was also available to be sent from Bombay to Suez. Such was the
+purport of a most confidential communication to Lord Granville from the
+War Office, dated June 27, 1882.
+
+On July 11, the bombardment of Alexandria by the British fleet took
+place; the departure of the French ships marking, in an unmistakeable
+form, the refusal of the French Government to incur further
+responsibility, and foreshadowing the permanent renunciation of the old
+French position in Egypt.
+
+The news of the Alexandria bombardment, which, owing to the absence
+of troops for landing, could hardly be described as a very effective
+operation, was received without much excitement in Paris, and Freycinet
+stated that the Chamber would certainly not have sanctioned the
+co-operation of the French fleet. The main point on which sensitiveness
+was shown was the Suez Canal. The French seemed disposed to resent any
+landing of English troops alone at Port Said, and to insist, if not
+on joining with us, on sending a 'lateral' expedition of their own.
+It was important, therefore, that they should be given a _bona fide_
+invitation to join in anything we might determine to do, and the French
+were accordingly invited by Lord Granville to concert measures at once
+for the protection of the canal; questions of detail being left to
+the Conference at Constantinople. Upon the whole the bombardment of
+Alexandria had tended to improve rather than to impair Anglo-French
+relations, and the chief danger seemed to lie in the projected Turkish
+intervention, which would alienate public opinion and provoke strong
+opposition from Gambetta and his followers. Extraordinary French Naval
+Credits were voted and Lord Granville appears to have thought that joint
+action was secured after all, at least as far as the Canal was concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 19, 1882.
+
+ I wish you and ourselves joy of the renewed _entente
+ cordiale_. It will not be popular in many quarters here, but it is
+ an immense national advantage, and ought to relieve us from many
+ dangers.
+
+ I am not in the least jealous of the dual action in the Canal,
+ though I should prefer its being triangular. But I own I dread it,
+ if we are obliged, as is probable, to intervene in Egypt itself.
+
+ I hope they do not think we are pressing them too fast. I
+ believe the Cabinet will settle to send 15,000 men to Malta. If so,
+ I will let you know.
+
+ Remember I am always grateful for suggestions and criticisms.
+ I hear Bismarck is really ill and cannot sleep at night. The
+ preparation of his own financial measures does not act as an
+ anodyne.
+
+ I am told that the debate in the Commons last night did us
+ good and not harm. I suppose we shall have a more formidable one in
+ the Lords.
+
+ It is rumoured that the Peers will pass the Second Reading of
+ the Arrears Bill, and mutilate it in Committee.
+
+The voting of the extraordinary French Naval Credits, which had caused
+it to be supposed that the French Government intended to take some
+decided action, was soon shown to mean nothing at all. Freycinet, whose
+position had been much shaken, was in the uncomfortable situation of
+being blamed by the Chamber for doing too much and denounced in the
+Senate for not doing enough. On July 19, an important debate took place
+in the Chamber, during which Gambetta, with his accustomed eloquence,
+adjured the Government to adhere to the English alliance at all costs,
+and urged that to quarrel with England would be the most fatal of
+mistakes. The Credits asked for were agreed to, and the Government
+obtained a large majority; but when Freycinet appeared in support of his
+modest proposals before the Senate, he was obliged to admit that the
+Conference at Constantinople had refused to entrust France and England
+with a Mandate, and that in consequence of this refusal the French
+Government would leave England to act alone, and would confine their own
+action to the protection of the Suez Canal. A fresh credit amounting to
+about £350,000 was asked for with this object, but met with formidable
+opposition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 26, 1882.
+
+ When I saw Freycinet this afternoon he seemed in absolute
+ despair. There are two modes of escape which are supposed to be
+ still open.
+
+ Though the majority of the Chamber are strongly opposed to
+ military intervention in Egypt, they may still hesitate to turn
+ Freycinet out, lest by showing it to be impossible to make their
+ own existence compatible with anything like a stable Government in
+ France, they may bring about a dissolution.
+
+ It is said that they are casting about for some means of
+ refusing the Credit and yet not turning out Freycinet; and the
+ second device, which might enable Freycinet to stay in, is the
+ singularly undignified one of his playing into their hand, by
+ declaring that he does not make the Credit a Cabinet question, and
+ that if it be refused, he will bow to the will of the Chamber and
+ withdraw from the protection of the Canal.
+
+ So long as it is undeniable that we have _bona fide_ invited
+ and pressed France to take part in all our operations in Egypt, I
+ shall not break my heart if she chooses to decline to do so.
+
+ I believe that Freycinet would have been in a better plight
+ if he had taken a decided course either way; if he had distinctly
+ refused all intervention, or if he had boldly joined England in all
+ her operations.
+
+On July 29, the question of voting the fresh Credit was brought forward
+in the Chamber and made one of confidence in the Ministry. Every one
+by this time was much alarmed at the prospect of France being dragged
+into some vague and desperate adventure; the Credit was refused by an
+overwhelming majority; Freycinet resigned office, and France definitely
+retired from the scene of action.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 30, 1882.
+
+ Among the innumerable Ministerial crises which I have seen
+ here, I do not recollect one in which there has been so much
+ uncertainty as to who would be the new Prime Minister.
+
+ Grévy, in conformity with his own views, and with those of
+ the great majority of the Chamber and indeed of the country, is
+ trying to form an absolutely non-intervention Cabinet. But such a
+ Cabinet might have difficulties with the Senate. Léon Say and Jules
+ Ferry, the most able members of the late Ministry, were for full
+ intervention and the English Alliance.
+
+ Freycinet very unwisely began with a perfectly idle dispute
+ with Gambetta as to whether the English Government would, or would
+ not, have consented to armed intervention with France only, if
+ Gambetta had remained in power. Gambetta did not speak yesterday,
+ but he and his followers voted against Freycinet.
+
+ Hohenlohe seemed, I hear, dreadfully put out by the result of
+ the division yesterday. It was Bismarck's communication which gave
+ Freycinet the _coup de grâce_. Hohenlohe had evidently hoped that
+ it would save him, by giving him an excuse for withdrawing the Bill.
+
+ I was very much disappointed to hear from Freycinet that
+ Russia had gone back to the Conference. I hoped her retirement
+ would have given us a good opportunity of freeing ourselves from
+ that cumbrous clog.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Aug. 1, 1882.
+
+ All is still uncertain as to who the new French Ministers
+ will be. Grévy is doing his best to keep Freycinet, and Hohenlohe
+ is working in the same direction, which is not wise. Hitherto
+ Freycinet has positively declined, but he is a man who sometimes
+ changes his mind. He will be in an extraordinarily false position
+ if he does come back. Grévy may, perhaps, manage to appoint a
+ warming-pan sort of Ministry, just to keep the offices warm during
+ the recess and to make room for something more serious in October.
+
+ The French are in very good disposition towards us at this
+ moment. The way to keep them so will be to endeavour to make their
+ present position comfortable to them, without being humiliating,
+ and, above all, not to crow over them, as part of our press seems
+ too much inclined to do. Their fleet, next to our own, is the most
+ important factor in the Mediterranean question. We can do as well
+ or better, without any aid from France or other countries, but we
+ ought to have the field to ourselves.
+
+ I wish we were well rid of that dangerous Conference. I had
+ a sort of hope that just now it might have a sort of use, as a
+ means of letting the other Powers talk while we were acting. But in
+ fact, as worked by Bismarck and by the Turks under his direction,
+ it seems merely to supply the machinery for formally placing us in
+ opposition to the so-called European Concert, and for embarrassing
+ France. I think the French would be glad to be delivered from it.
+
+ Public opinion in France is at this moment friendly to us, but
+ it is in a very susceptible state.
+
+A new Ministry was in course of time formed under M. Duclerc, one of
+the many uninteresting mediocrities who have governed France during the
+last forty years, and a sort of formula was agreed upon that there was
+no 'solution of continuity in the Entente,' which was not intended to
+commit the French to anything in particular.
+
+A vast amount has been written respecting the events in Egypt in 1882;
+much of it by persons who occupied responsible and important positions
+at the time; but the reasons for the inaction and eventual retirement
+of the French have never been clearly explained. Probably the French
+themselves would be unable to give a satisfactory explanation, and
+would attribute their inglorious attitude to the Freycinet Government,
+which did not know its own mind. But it may be assumed that a variety
+of reasons were responsible for the French refusal of co-operation with
+England. Had the invitation been received some months earlier, it would
+probably have been accepted with enthusiasm; but the Tunis expedition,
+which had opened with so much success and enthusiasm, had proved a much
+more troublesome and unsatisfactory business than had been anticipated,
+and had created a decided disinclination for further enterprises in
+North Africa. In the second place, the difficulties of an Egyptian
+campaign were greatly over-estimated; the French calculation was that
+no less than 60,000 men would be necessary, and the ordinary French
+Minister would not venture to allow so many men to leave the country.
+Lastly, the French were quite unable, rightly or wrongly, to get it out
+of their minds that they were being deliberately led into a trap by
+Bismarck, and this by itself was sufficient to daunt a Government of the
+Freycinet type.
+
+France having now definitely declined, the British invitation was
+transferred to Italy.
+
+ 'We have asked the Italians to join us,' Lord Granville wrote
+ on July 27, 'but we have not pressed them. They also will try to
+ _se faire prier_, and will be too late. I told Menabrea I could not
+ delay operations.
+
+ 'I hope they will decline, but I myself was not very hot for
+ even the offer. But the balance of argument seemed to be in favour
+ of it, and you did not raise any objection to it.
+
+ 'Please explain that the _Times_ is entirely off the track as
+ to our wish for a protectorate.'
+
+The refusal of the Italians was welcome and not unexpected, and as
+no other Power was in the least inclined to co-operate, the British
+Government was able to set about the task of smashing Arabi with a clear
+conscience, in its own way, and unhampered by allies; for the Turks, who
+had agreed to send troops, protracted the negotiations with regard to
+their employment to such an extent, that the campaign was finished long
+before an agreement was arrived at.
+
+Lord Cromer in his well-known work 'Modern Egypt,' has exposed with
+much skill and lucidity the futile nature of many of the proposals
+put forward by the British and French Governments during the period
+that they were acting together. But the really remarkable fact is,
+that each Government succeeded in bringing about the result which it
+least desired. The policy of the British Government was governed by a
+sincere, if mistaken, determination not to be dragged into assuming
+sole responsibility for Egypt, and in particular to avoid the necessity
+of military occupation. The efforts of the French Government were
+chiefly directed towards the prevention of Turkey or any other Power
+establishing its predominant influence in Egypt, and that French policy
+should have unconsciously and involuntarily thrust England into this
+unsought and unwelcome position is one of the real ironies of recent
+history.
+
+Perhaps the most fortunate event for England during the crisis which
+preceded the Egyptian expedition was the fall of Gambetta early in the
+year. Had that statesman remained in office he would certainly have
+never consented to remain a supine and indifferent spectator; he would
+undoubtedly have insisted on France taking an active part: a joint
+expedition would have taken place, and the sequel might have followed
+the Schleswig-Holstein precedent.
+
+It was hardly to be expected that the skill and rapidity with which the
+campaign against Arabi was conducted would evoke much enthusiasm in
+France, nor could the French reasonably expect that upon the restoration
+of peace and order the old state of things would be renewed. Before the
+end of October Lord Granville informed the French Ambassador in London
+that the Control would not be restored; and when the French Government
+objected, on the ground that such an alteration must be submitted to the
+Powers, it was pointed out the matter was one for the Khedive to decide
+himself. In order to soothe wounded French feelings various compromises
+in the shape of posts in the Egyptian administration were offered in
+vain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 3, 1882.
+
+ I thought it simpler and better to let Duclerc have a copy of
+ your despatch, as you had no objection to my doing so. He has not
+ yet given any sign of life since he received it.
+
+ The argument that the Financial Adviser will have only a small
+ position in Egypt, or at all events a less important position than
+ the Controllers, cuts both ways here. Duclerc's line is to say that
+ we are making a distinction without any real difference: that in
+ practice the adviser will have all and more than all the powers of
+ the Controllers; and that thus virtually France is to be deprived
+ of her share in the Control without receiving, even nominally, any
+ compensation.
+
+ A complaint of a very different kind is made by the 'Haute
+ Finance.' They say that the only real compensation which could be
+ given to France, if she is to be ousted from the Control, would
+ be the establishment, under the auspices and responsibility of
+ England, of such a strong practical supervision of the Egyptian
+ Administration as would make the regular payment of the Debt
+ and the maintenance of the commercial and other interests of
+ foreigners secure. They pretend that the proposed establishment
+ of the Financial Adviser is in form injurious to the dignity of
+ France, while in substance it does not sufficiently provide for the
+ control by any one of the Egyptian Government. These seem to be the
+ opinions of a very influential body here. It is quite consistent
+ with them that Dufferin's mission should be looked on with favour
+ by those who hold them.
+
+ Clémenceau's views seem to be confined to himself.
+
+ The thing most favourable to our coming to an understanding
+ with France, is the very general belief among Frenchmen that
+ Bismarck is egging indirectly both England and France on to a
+ quarrel.
+
+ In the meantime the alarm caused by the anarchists is enough
+ to keep the minds of the great majority of the French fixed
+ on their own internal affairs. People are sending away their
+ securities and other valuables to foreign countries. I suppose an
+ absolute outbreak in force enough to resist the Government, if the
+ Government be resolute, is not to be expected. But there may be
+ explosions of dynamite here and there, and the employment of the
+ other new-fangled means of creating panic which the French seem to
+ be inclined to adopt from the Russians.
+
+ The competition of America and other causes are producing
+ a curious change in the French peasantry, and a change not
+ favourable to peace and order. The tenacity with which the very
+ small proprietors have hitherto clung to their land is visibly
+ diminishing. They now offer their land for sale to an extent
+ hitherto quite unprecedented. They say that they can get better
+ interest by putting the price of the land into the funds or other
+ speculations, and can thus lead a pleasant life, instead of
+ slaving from morning to night to get a bare subsistence out of
+ their fields. The tendency of all this is to reduce the numbers
+ of the hitherto ultra-Conservative laborious class, and to fill
+ the towns more and more with idle and very often disappointed and
+ discontented speculators, who form a material ready to the hand of
+ anarchists.
+
+The letters from Lord Granville show that although the British
+Government had embarked most unwillingly upon the Egyptian enterprise,
+and viewed additional responsibility with so much horror that some
+members of the Cabinet were even opposed to the office of Financial
+Adviser to the Egyptian Government being given to an Englishman, yet
+that the Cabinet was at all events unanimously against the maintenance
+of the Control, and of the old dual arrangements. The French Government,
+with an entire absence of logic and common sense, was quite indisposed
+to recognize the complete change in the situation which had taken place,
+and continued to claim that England and France should remain on an
+equality as regarded themselves, and in a superior position as far as
+the other Powers were concerned. The difficulty lay in discovering some
+means of satisfying French vanity without yielding on the essential
+point of equality, and efforts to ascertain what would be considered
+satisfactory did not meet with much success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 14, 1882.
+
+ I tried to make Duclerc see yesterday that the practical way
+ towards obtaining some satisfaction for French _amour-propre_ was
+ to enter upon the discussion of details as to the Boards in Egypt.
+ I went as far as I could without running the risk of provoking
+ lofty language, which might have been an obstacle to moderate
+ arrangements hereafter.
+
+ However, at the moment Duclerc did not go back from his old
+ grounds. He does not insist upon a literal re-establishment of
+ the Control, but he does claim a virtual return to the _status quo
+ ante_, and he interprets that status as equality between England
+ and France and superiority of the two jointly over other Powers.
+
+ The single Financial Councillor pleases no one here. As
+ he must of course be an Englishman, the sticklers for French
+ _gloriole_ declare that whether his functions be great or small,
+ he will simply be a symbol of English supremacy and French
+ decadency. To the _haute_ and _petite finance_, the mode of his
+ appointment and the smallness of his powers seem an additional
+ cause of complaint, as not giving sufficient security for a proper
+ administration of the finances of Egypt. I shall be very anxious to
+ hear how it all strikes Dufferin.
+
+ In fact, at the present moment, the French are too uneasy
+ about their internal affairs to pay much attention to Egypt. But
+ they may fire up if any special event comes to irritate them. It
+ is more, however, future lasting ill will than violence at the
+ moment which I apprehend. If we leave them bitterly discontented
+ with arrangements in Egypt, I hardly see when we shall be able to
+ withdraw our troops and still maintain the influence which is a
+ necessity to us.
+
+The idea that the British occupation of Egypt was anything more than
+a temporary expedient does not seem to have been considered a serious
+possibility by any English Minister so far. Partly by luck, partly
+by the skill of Sir Garnet Wolseley and Lord Dufferin, we had found
+ourselves in possession of Egypt, unhampered by association with any
+European Power or with the Turks; but for a time it looked as if the
+brilliant results achieved were to be thrown away because the British
+Government had no clear idea what its policy was to be. Fortunately for
+all concerned, the step was taken of sending Lord Dufferin on a special
+mission to Cairo, and unlike most special missions of more recent date,
+the experiment proved a complete success, and quickly destroyed the
+mischievous delusion entertained by a section of English politicians
+that an evacuation of Egypt was possible at any early date. This
+delusion had never been shared by the French, who naturally judged the
+action of others in the light in which they themselves would have acted
+under similar circumstances, and who made little effort to conceal their
+annoyance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 1, 1882.
+
+ I don't succeed in making Duclerc _coulant_ about Egypt. He
+ rather implied that it was not from Tissot that he had heard that
+ you were going to send him a favourable communication, and that you
+ were thinking of sending an expert to discuss details. He did not,
+ however, say who it was that told him. Perhaps d'Aunay may have had
+ something to do with it. Duclerc went on to hint at there being two
+ currents in the English Cabinet, one more favourable to the French
+ than the other, but I declined to listen to this. He talked as if
+ he had some special source of information as to your intentions and
+ sentiments. He seemed to take to the idea of a discussion between
+ experts.
+
+ He was amiable about Madagascar, but we shall see what
+ his written answer will be. He represented himself as having
+ overwhelmed the Ambassadors with kindness, and then as having
+ broken off the negotiation on the point of the leases being for 99
+ years.
+
+ In the meantime prospects at home do not brighten. Railroads
+ and other public works have been begun, with very little system, in
+ all kinds of places to please Deputies and their constituents. The
+ Government dare not stop them for fear of what the workmen would do
+ if large numbers of them found themselves out of work. To go on,
+ is ruinous to the finances. There must be a limit to the floating
+ debt. The Government are again negotiating with the railway
+ companies. People are beginning to talk of Saviours of Society.
+ The names most mentioned are those of General Chanzy and the Duc
+ d'Aumale. Gambetta would have been everybody's man, if he had never
+ been Minister. However, I don't think that we are very near any
+ violent change.
+
+ Grévy is certainly not brisk, but he may grow old without
+ things coming to an early catastrophe.
+
+ There is a not unaccredited rumour that it was in wresting
+ the revolver from a female hand that Gambetta got wounded. The
+ bulletins at the office of the _République Française_ are that he
+ is going on as well as possible.
+
+The last paragraph refers to the wounding of Gambetta by a pistol shot.
+The accident (which terminated fatally) occurred at his villa outside
+Paris, and was surrounded by a mystery which has never been dispelled,
+but it may be assumed that a lady really was involved.
+
+The allusion to Madagascar relates to the mission despatched by the
+Queen of the Hovas to Europe in the autumn in the vain hope of coming to
+some agreement with the French Government, which had raised questions
+ominously resembling those which had, in the previous year, formed
+the prelude to the Tunis expedition. The Hovas, like the Kroumirs,
+constituted 'a serious danger' to the French Republic, and demands were
+put forward which involved general French rights over the whole of
+Madagascar, and a protectorate over the northwest coast. The unhappy
+Hova envoys proceeded from Paris to London, but met with little
+encouragement there, and before long a semi-official announcement
+was made in which the stereotyped statement, with which small and
+defenceless states are so painfully familiar, appeared: 'The Cabinet is
+resolved to enforce the respect of the rights and interests of France
+in Madagascar, and orders in conformity with the situation have,
+therefore, been sent to the Commander of the French naval station.'
+Signs of the same ominous activity were also beginning to manifest
+themselves in Tonquin; and the only compensating factor was that
+Madagascar and Tonquin served to distract a certain amount of French
+attention from Egypt, although the tone of the press, and especially of
+the _République Française_, the organ of Gambetta, became increasingly
+hostile to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 19, 1882.
+
+ There are reports afloat that Gambetta's cure is not going
+ on as steadily as it ought. At all events there is no change for
+ the better in the tone of the _République Française_ respecting
+ England in Egypt. I don't like the idea of having the French there
+ in bitter opposition to all we do. It may make it very difficult
+ for us with safety to ourselves to give any large measure of
+ independence to the Egyptian Government. At all events, the less we
+ are able to sacrifice to satisfy French _amour-propre_, the more we
+ must do to give security to legitimate French material interests by
+ providing for a really good honest financial administration. If the
+ French take the protection of their material interests exclusively
+ into their own hands, they may go very great lengths indeed to
+ protect them, if they are seriously threatened; and, besides, the
+ pretext that the credit, property or persons of Frenchmen are
+ threatened, will always be at hand to sanction interference.
+
+ At present it looks as if the Duclerc Government would be
+ glad to back out of its expeditions to Tonquin, etc., etc. The
+ proceedings of the Hova Ambassadors and their supporters in England
+ may make it difficult for the French Government to be as reasonable
+ as it might otherwise wish to be about Madagascar.
+
+ The prevalent feeling of depression and uneasiness about
+ the general condition of France does not seem to diminish. There
+ seems to be a profound distrust of the abilities, if not of the
+ intentions, of the men who so rapidly succeed one another in
+ office, and no one seems to know where to turn for something better.
+
+It was somewhat unfortunate that French aggression in Tonquin and
+Madagascar was unconsciously stimulated by the English press. 'The
+English press is driving the French public wild on the subject of
+Tonquin, Madagascar, and other beyond sea questions, which the
+Government would probably have been glad enough to back out of if they
+had been let alone.'[36]
+
+Until the end of the year private negotiations continued between Lord
+Granville and the French Government with reference to the abolition of
+the Control with completely unsuccessful results.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 26, 1882.
+
+ I hear, not from himself, that Duclerc's present intention
+ is to make a very strong protest if we abolish Control without
+ coming to a previous understanding with France; and that our making
+ our own Control, or that of Europe in general, over the Egyptian
+ finances weak, would not mollify him. On the contrary, he would try
+ to make a point of what he would call our abandonment of French
+ material interests--and deduce from it an argument that France is
+ bound to protect them herself. While we are absolutely at two with
+ France, we shall find it very difficult to relax our material hold
+ on Egypt. Egypt for the Egyptians is only too likely to become
+ Egypt for the French.
+
+ Gambetta's illness seems to have rather strengthened his
+ position. The anxiety of his opponents in the press to make out
+ that he is worse than is really the case and the disgusting
+ statements they have in consequence put forward, have served to
+ impress on friends and foes his importance. According to the best
+ information I have been able to get, he is not at this moment
+ seriously ill, though his recovery is too slow to be satisfactory.
+
+ Confidence and tranquillity do not appear to revive in France,
+ and the disappearance of Gambetta would increase uneasiness. People
+ do not exactly know what they are afraid of, but there is a general
+ vague uneasiness. Perhaps the most definite cause of fears or hopes
+ is the intrigue in which certain officers of the army are said to
+ be engaged with a view of putting the Duc d'Aumale at the head of
+ the state.
+
+The childish frame of mind in which the French Government of the day
+considered the question of the Control may be judged from the fact that
+Duclerc in private conversation had admitted in the autumn that, if
+for form's sake, the _status quo ante_ could be restored for only five
+minutes, he would agree subsequently to its immediate abolition. In
+December, however, he was in a more intractable mood, and, at the end
+of the year, Lord Granville found it necessary to break off all private
+negotiations on the subject, observing that it was very painful and
+disadvantageous to be on bad terms with the French, but that it was, at
+the least, equally disadvantageous to them.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 35: 'Egypt and the Egyptian Question,' Sir D. Mackenzie
+Wallace.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Lyons to Granville.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+ANGLOPHOBIA
+
+(1883-1885)
+
+
+The first day of 1883 was signalized by the announcement of the death of
+Gambetta, and those who were present at the Elysée on the occasion of
+President Grévy's New Year's Day reception will remember the singularly
+embarrassed demeanour of that uninteresting personage; an embarrassment
+which might have been accounted for on various grounds. Gambetta's
+death was followed in a day or two by that of General Chanzy, an event
+which caused consternation amongst the Monarchical and Conservative
+parties, as he was looked upon as the only man capable of stopping the
+too rapid progress of the Republican car. It was doubtless with the
+view of anticipating other pretenders, that Prince Napoleon seized the
+opportunity to issue a Proclamation denouncing the Republic, which
+resulted in his immediate incarceration in the Conciergerie.
+
+For some months there had existed in France a feeling of uneasiness
+and of distrust in the maintenance of orderly government, and this
+feeling was greatly increased by the double loss of Gambetta and Chanzy.
+Gambetta was the only man in the Republican party whose ability and
+popularity were sufficient to induce the country to acquiesce in his
+wielding great power, and who was believed to have the will and the
+courage to exercise that power energetically in case of need. Chanzy
+was looked upon as the only man whose military reputation and influence
+qualified him to keep the army united and to use it with effect, in the
+case of grave political troubles.
+
+As for the President of the Republic, M. Grévy, his energy and influence
+continued to diminish; the Chamber of Deputies was becoming more and
+more discredited, and the professedly anarchical parties were certainly
+increasing in violence, and apparently in numbers and influence as well.
+The public generally, even amongst the lower orders, showed few signs
+of great attachment to the Republican Government. That Government had
+not augmented their material prosperity, had not raised their social
+position, and had not realized their dreams of absolute equality with,
+or rather of predominance over, the rich and the educated. Every form
+of Monarchical Government was repugnant to them, but nevertheless a
+moderate Republic excited no enthusiasm whatsoever. The upper classes
+were alarmed and discontented; they did not believe that their property
+was secure, and they considered the work of administration was
+deplorably carried on by the various obscure Ministers who succeeded
+each other so rapidly in office; their religious feelings were daily
+shocked, while bad harvests, bad trade, and an unpromising financial
+situation added to the general feeling of dissatisfaction.
+
+On the other hand, the 'spirited Colonial Policy,' which was now so much
+in evidence, did little to counterbalance this feeling, and the attempts
+which had been made to pander to the national vanity by the overbearing
+policy adopted towards Madagascar; the extension of French predominance
+in Tunis; annexations on the Congo; and the consolidation of the French
+Protectorate over Tonquin and Annam, had met with little success. The
+disquieting fact from the English point of view was that ill-feeling
+towards England, chiefly with regard to Egypt, had risen to a high
+pitch, and that each successive step taken by the British Government,
+and each declaration made by it, seemed only to increase the irritation.
+It was in this direction that, Lord Lyons feared, attempts would be made
+to divert public discontent by those who might be in power; and the
+procedure of the new French Government certainly justified the fear.
+The position which the French Government took up, was that of defending
+French influence and French interests in Egypt by its own independent
+means. It declared that by the abolition of the Control, a deep wound
+had been inflicted upon French dignity, while the principal security
+for the regular payment of the sums due in regard to the loans had been
+taken away. It did not hesitate to declare that any tampering with
+the Law of Liquidation, or with the lands and revenues pledged to the
+loans; or any failure to provide for the charges on the loans, would
+be regarded as a breach of international obligations on the part of
+Egypt, which would warrant the active interference of France. It hardly
+made any pretence of concealing its intention to work against English
+influence in Egypt by every means in its power, and unfortunately it was
+evident that in this anti-English policy it could reckon on the support
+of public opinion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 9, 1883.
+
+ Blowitz's[37] intelligence certainly comes from the French
+ Foreign Office, sometimes, I dare say, directly, but often only
+ through the _Temps_. The _Temps_ is published the afternoon before
+ the day on which it is dated, and some hours before Blowitz's
+ letter goes to the _Times_. Blowitz's letter always goes by
+ telegraph, the _Times_ having the exclusive use of a line for some
+ hours every night.
+
+ It seems that Ferry will succeed Gambetta in the leadership
+ of the largest portion of the Republican party. I do not think he
+ is hostile to Duclerc, but if he attains to anything at all near
+ to Gambetta's position, Duclerc will only hold office during his
+ sufferance. Probably neither would be willing to serve under the
+ other.
+
+ If, as seems likely, the death of Gambetta leads to the
+ decay of the spirit of revenge upon Germany, this will (as I
+ have said before) increase the danger of all other Powers from
+ the restlessness of France, and will in particular increase our
+ difficulties in Egypt. If any modification of the arrangement of
+ the Law of Liquidation is proposed or any other step taken which
+ can give France a pretext for interfering in defence of French
+ interests, we may have trouble. If we leave a door open for French
+ intrusion, France may get so far in, that her _amour-propre_ may
+ force her to push on at all risks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 16, 1883.
+
+ Prince Napoleon's Proclamation and his arrest have put all
+ other things out of people's heads here for the moment. He was
+ arrested, very roughly I understand, at 3 o'clock, as he drove up
+ to his own door in the Avenue d'Autin, and his papers were examined
+ and seized in the usual way on such occasions. There is not so
+ far any appearance of his having anything behind to back up the
+ Proclamation. It is said that he has rendered himself liable to
+ very severe penalties as a conspirator against the State. What
+ seems to be more generally expected is that the law enabling the
+ Government to exile the members of any family that has reigned in
+ France will be revived. If it is to be the beginning of political
+ proscriptions, in however mild a form, it will be a calamity and
+ perhaps a prelude to revolutionary times and ways.
+
+ The only good I can see in it is that it may divert attention
+ here from Egypt, for the French were getting excessively cross with
+ us on that subject. I should not have been surprised if Duclerc's
+ Declaration and Yellow Book had been much more unfriendly than they
+ are. The Declaration was, it seems, received with icy coldness in
+ the Chamber. It is creditable to Duclerc that he did not fish for a
+ cheer by a Chauvin wind up, as Freycinet used to do. But if Duclerc
+ had been popular and had been thought to be firm in the saddle, he
+ would have met with a better reception.
+
+Prince Napoleon's Proclamation did not in reality cause any great
+commotion or alarm, as it was obvious that he had no backing of
+importance; but it served as an excuse to introduce a preposterous
+Exclusion Bill directed against the members of all ex-reigning families.
+This measure created great indignation amongst the French Conservatives,
+more especially the provision which deprived the Princes of their
+Commissions in the army, and in consequence of modifications which were
+introduced. Duclerc and his colleagues resigned office, giving place to
+an ephemeral Cabinet under M. Fallières, subsequently President of the
+Republic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Feb. 2, 1883.
+
+ Everything is at sixes and sevens here, and no one knows
+ to whom to turn in the absolute dearth of any man of decided
+ superiority since the death of Gambetta. It is curious that he
+ should come to be regretted as the mainstay of Conservatism.
+
+ I send you by the messenger a despatch from Villiers[38]
+ which seems to me to give a very clear and correct account of
+ the state of feeling in the French Army. I don't think it at all
+ overrates the dissatisfaction that exists among the officers. For
+ my own part I do not believe there is any organized movement,
+ Legitimist, Orleanist, or Bonapartist, actually in preparation
+ at this moment. But I do see that confidence in the duration of
+ the present institutions is diminishing, and that, as a cause or
+ a consequence, dissatisfaction and disquietude are increasing.
+ Something subversive may happen with very little warning beforehand.
+
+ Barring accidents, the probabilities seem to be that the
+ present Ministry may last about ten days, and that then Jules
+ Ferry may come in for some months and _après lui le déluge_.
+ Challemel Lacour is talked of as Minister for Foreign Affairs. As a
+ diplomatist you know him better than I do. The little social (so to
+ call it) intercourse I have had with him has been pleasant enough,
+ but he has the reputation of being irritable and cross-grained.
+
+ The proceedings against the Princes are bad enough in
+ themselves, and they are of evil augury. The Reds having once
+ tasted blood, may become ravenous for more, and who can say where
+ they may look for the next victims?
+
+ Notwithstanding the critical state of home affairs, the
+ French papers find room occasionally for bitter articles against
+ us about Egypt. The great point to attend to, in order to prevent
+ the smouldering irritations bursting into a blaze, seems to be to
+ avoid touching the Law of Liquidation, or the administrations of
+ the Daira and Domains. Any alteration, however great an improvement
+ it might be in reality, would give rise to unlimited suspicion and
+ dissatisfaction here.
+
+The Prince of Wales had intended visiting Paris about this period, but
+in consequence of the violent feelings aroused by the Exclusion Bill
+and of the bitterness of the extremists against constituted dynasties,
+he was advised to keep away.
+
+ Their newspapers would have no scruple in attacking any
+ personage, however exalted, whom they believed to be opposed to
+ their deplorable bill. Indeed, the more exalted the personage,
+ and the more entitled to respect, the greater might be their
+ scurrility. Nothing can be more lamentable than all this, and I
+ am obliged to add that the general feeling towards England is not
+ particularly cordial. Taking everything into consideration, I have,
+ though very reluctantly, come to the conclusion that it is my duty
+ to report to Your Royal Highness that I cannot feel quite sure that
+ if you were at Paris something unpleasant might not happen, or that
+ at least very improper language might not be used by a portion of
+ the press; and I cannot conceal from Your Royal Highness that the
+ present moment is far from an opportune one for a visit.[39]
+
+The increasing bad feeling produced a complaint from Lord Granville,
+who considered that 'it is hard upon me, that being probably, of all
+English public men, the one who for various reasons is most attached to
+France, we should always have such difficult moments to pass when I am
+in office.'
+
+After all the fuss that had been made about Prince Napoleon's
+Proclamation, it came as a distinct anti-climax that his arrest was
+discovered to be illegal. He was accordingly released, and nothing more
+was heard of him; meanwhile it was generally believed that General
+Billot, the late Minister of War in the Duclerc Government, had actually
+made all preparations for a _pronunciamento_ in favour of the Duc
+d'Aumale, and that his project was only foiled on account of the want
+of enterprise shown by the Orleans princes themselves. General Billot
+was superseded by a certain General Thibaudin, who was considered to be
+especially well adapted for the purpose of carrying out the dirty work
+in connection with the dismissal of the Princes from the army.
+
+After a period of much uncertainty, during which for more than a month
+there was no one at the French Foreign Office to whom the Foreign
+Diplomatists could speak on foreign affairs, or even any subordinate who
+could express an opinion or give an instruction, M. Fallières was got
+rid of, and a new administration was formed under M. Jules Ferry, M.
+Challemel Lacour becoming Foreign Minister.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 20, 1883.
+
+ I suppose Ferry must have made his Ministry by to-morrow or
+ the next day. I will not bore you with the innumerable conjectures
+ as to who his colleagues will be. It is said Thibaudin is to be
+ kept as Minister of War, long enough at all events to take the
+ measures against the Princes which a more respectable general would
+ shrink from.
+
+ I only hope the new Ministry will not try to divert public
+ attention from home difficulties by a 'spirited' Foreign or
+ Colonial Policy. Egypt is always a source of trouble ready to their
+ hand, if they want to produce excitement. I think the great thing
+ is to avoid touching the Law of Liquidation or the administration
+ of the securities for the loans; in short, to avoid giving them
+ any pretext for saying that the material interests of France are
+ injured, and the guarantee she held weakened. But it is premature
+ to speculate on these matters in ignorance of who the incoming
+ Ministers may be and what policy they will adopt.
+
+The urbane M. Challemel Lacour, in his new capacity as Foreign Minister,
+was not likely to begin by making gushing protestations of deep
+affection for England, but Lord Lyons was disposed to consider this a
+hopeful symptom. 'I know by long experience that ardent professions
+of love for England on the part of an incoming Minister are not to be
+trusted to as good signs.' Mr. Gladstone was in Paris at the time and
+paid visits to the President, Challemel Lacour, and Jules Ferry; but
+much to the relief of the Ambassador, he avoided the subjects of Egypt
+and of Commercial Treaties, and no harm was done.
+
+The Ferry administration possessed the advantage of attracting a better
+class of French politician than had lately been the case, and M.
+Waddington now reappeared upon the scene.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ March 6, 1883.
+
+ Jules Ferry appears to have hinted to Waddington that he would
+ be offered the Embassy in London, if he voted with the Government
+ on the interpellation in the Senate on the Decree putting the
+ Orleans Princes _en non-activité_. The Embassy at Vienna has, I
+ understand, been actually offered to and refused by him. He would
+ not, under any circumstances, take any Embassy but London, and
+ moreover he would in no case serve a Government of which Thibaudin
+ was a member.
+
+ Waddington asked Rivers Wilson if he could not suggest some
+ offer which might be made to France in order to place her once
+ more in cordial union with England in Egypt. There is, moreover,
+ a notice in the Havas, purporting to come from London, but very
+ likely put in more or less on authority here, to the effect that
+ France cannot, and England ought to, take the initiative of
+ proposing something. I entirely agree with you that the matter had
+ better lie still for the moment. I suppose you don't want to make
+ any such concession to France as would satisfy her, and certainly
+ matters would not be mended by our making another unsuccessful
+ proposal. I hope Waddington spoke entirely on his own hook and
+ not in concert with Challemel Lacour. It would be intolerable
+ if Challemel Lacour tried the system of indirect irresponsible
+ communications, the delight of Duclerc, which produced so much
+ annoyance and inconvenience, and in fact rendered any real
+ understanding impossible.
+
+ Jules Ferry is believed to be contemplating a conversion of
+ the 5 per cents. If he makes the attempt, it will bind him over
+ to keep things quiet abroad and at home, in order to secure the
+ success of the operation.
+
+ It is very provoking that the French should have put down the
+ New Hebrides among the places to which to transport their relapsed
+ criminals.
+
+Lord Granville, who owned that he had nothing to propose about Egypt,
+even if he wished to do so, was not at all enthusiastic at the prospect
+of Waddington coming to London, 'I am not particularly anxious to
+have Waddington instead of Tissot, he would be burning to distinguish
+himself, and very _agissant_.' Lord Granville's fears of Waddington's
+activity were founded upon the fact that he had been selected as the
+French Representative at the Coronation at Moscow, and that, therefore,
+he would find it impossible to settle down quietly at the London Embassy
+without burning to distinguish himself, after 'flourishing about Europe.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 23, 1883.
+
+ It is whispered, at least by Waddington's friends, that it is
+ intended that his special Embassy to Russia shall be a prelude to
+ his becoming regular Ambassador in London: that the idea is that he
+ shall offer a Commercial Treaty to us; that he shall by this means
+ enlist the support of some members of Parliament and influential
+ manufacturers in England, and that then he shall obtain concessions
+ for us about Egypt, on the plea that, without such concessions,
+ the Chambers could not be brought to ratify a Commercial Treaty
+ favourable to us. The statements in the newspapers about the
+ assumption of Commercial negotiations between England and France
+ are stated to be _ballons d'essai_ to see how the wind sets with
+ regard to such a policy.
+
+ I just give you all this for what it may be worth. I doubt
+ very much whether formal negotiations or a stirring French
+ Ambassador in London would be likely to lead just now to cordiality
+ between France and England. The French could hardly do anything
+ that would satisfy us about trade, and we should find it very
+ difficult to do anything that would satisfy them about Egypt. My
+ hope would rather be that we might glide back into cordiality by
+ avoiding critical questions.
+
+ In talking to me about his Embassy to Russia, Waddington
+ mentioned, amongst its advantages, that it would bring him into
+ contact with important personages of various countries, and he said
+ he should probably visit Berlin and Vienna on his way home.
+
+With Challemel Lacour at the Foreign Office there did not appear to
+be much prospect of 'gliding back into cordiality,' judging by the
+following account of an interview between him and some members of the
+Rothschild family who were frequently employed as intermediaries between
+the two Governments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 30, 1883.
+
+ Alphonse de Rothschild and his cousin Sir Nathaniel came to
+ see me yesterday and told me that they had had an interview with
+ Challemel Lacour on the subject of the proposed sale of the Domain
+ Lands in Egypt. They told me that they found Challemel Lacour
+ extremely sore about the whole Egyptian Question. He appears to
+ have distinctly refused to forward in any way the sale of the
+ Domain and to have alleged as his reason that he would not help to
+ do away with any board of management in which a Frenchman still had
+ a seat; that this would tend to diminish the number of Frenchmen
+ holding influential positions in Egypt, while his object was to
+ increase, or at all events, to maintain the existing number. As
+ indeed might have been foreseen, he was very far from desiring
+ to facilitate any financial or other arrangements required by
+ England. We shall no doubt find the French very inconvenient
+ and embarrassing in Egypt at every turn. I hope they will not
+ be dangerous, unless some disregard of positive international
+ engagements affecting French interests gives the Chauvinists the
+ pretext they are looking out for, and drives the sensible men into
+ a corner, in face of their public declarations and of popular
+ irritation.
+
+ I understand Louise Michel has been arrested. The Government
+ may gain ground by showing vigour, but unless it finds means of
+ convincing the officers in the army that it will secure their
+ position against the Radical endeavours to undermine it, things may
+ end in that fatal solution, a military _pronunciamento_.
+
+The arrest of Louise Michel had taken place as the result of one of the
+numerous riots which occurred at Paris in the spring of 1883; they were
+not of much importance, but possessed some significance as being the
+first appearance of disturbances in the streets since the suppression of
+the Commune, and were due largely to the distress caused by bad trade,
+and to artificially stimulated expenditure on building, and other modes
+of finding employment. The result of the latter expedient was to raise
+the price of labour artificially and consequently to drive manufactures
+to other places, thus creating unemployment in Paris itself. In
+connection with these disturbances there was one singular peculiarity
+in the attitude of the so-called Conservative classes. Not only the
+Royalist and Imperial parties, but a considerable number of the richer
+people who were without any strong political bias, sympathized rather
+with the people in the streets than with the Government. The upper
+classes were, in fact, so dissatisfied with the existing state of things
+that they appeared willing to run the risk of seeing the Republican
+Government discredited and ultimately overthrown by popular tumult.
+
+The following letter is an admirable illustration of the spirit in
+which the French viewed all English action in Egypt. Lord Dufferin,
+in the course of a despatch, had spoken in most appreciative terms of
+the friendly attitude adopted towards him by M. de Raindre, the French
+Agent and Consul-General at Cairo, and the British Government naturally
+supposed that it would be agreeable to the French Government if the
+despatch were communicated to them. Lord Lyons, however, who was much
+better acquainted with French opinion, thought otherwise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 15, 1883.
+
+ I am rather frightened by the praises given by Dufferin in his
+ despatch of April 29th to the 'very correct and loyal attitude of
+ M. de Raindre, the French Agent and Consul-General, and of all the
+ French officials in Egypt.' If this despatch came to the knowledge
+ of the French Government or the French public, it might do de
+ Raindre a serious injury, and lead to the immediate substitution
+ for him of an Agent whose attitude would be more correct in the
+ French sense. I am afraid also that the claim Dufferin makes
+ to have considered the interests of the French in the Egyptian
+ service, however true it is, would provoke a howl of contradiction.
+
+ I do not mean to imply that Raindre's conduct has been at
+ variance with his instructions. I don't think it is the policy
+ of the French Government at this moment to get up irritating
+ discussions with us on small everyday matters, either in Egypt or
+ in other parts of the world. The French Foreign Office seems to
+ me to be, on the contrary, more conciliatory than usual in its
+ answers respecting such matters. I mark this with satisfaction
+ because I hope that in this way, provided we can avoid irritating
+ controversies, we may return insensibly to satisfactory relations.
+ But we are far enough from such relations in reality at this
+ moment. Challemel Lacour is not given, as you know, to talk about
+ general diplomatic policy, but others do not hesitate to let us
+ understand that while they are civil about small matters, they are
+ only biding their time till an opportunity comes of opposing us in
+ effect with great ones.
+
+The course of affairs in Tonquin had not tended to restore the French
+to good humour by providing a compensation for their eclipse in Egypt,
+and the attempt to indulge in Chauvinism on the cheap had turned out
+to be a costly and unsatisfactory experiment. Had it not been for the
+provocations of the foreign press, it is possible that the spirited
+Colonial Policy with regard to Tonquin, Madagascar, etc., would have
+been abandoned quietly; but it was found intolerable to endure the daily
+administration of threats, ridicule, and supercilious advice showered
+from abroad. As it was, these expeditions did serve one useful purpose,
+namely, that of temporarily diverting attention from Egypt.
+
+The reputation of the French Republic was not enhanced by a most
+discreditable incident which occurred at Paris in the autumn. The young
+King of Spain who had been visiting some of the European capitals,
+arrived at Paris on September 29, shortly after having been created
+by the German Emperor an Honorary Colonel of an Uhlan regiment at
+Strasbourg. On the strength of this honorary distinction he was met by
+a howling mob, which proceeded to demonstrate its patriotism by insults
+such as have seldom been offered to any foreign potentate, and for which
+the President of the Republic was forced to make an apology on the
+following day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 5, 1883.
+
+ I do not remember any moment at which affairs here have
+ appeared to me so gloomy. The more I learn of the proceedings of
+ the French authorities, no less than those of the mob, the more
+ unpardonable do they appear. I have never felt the same repugnance
+ (and I have had my trials in this way) to the people with whom I
+ have to deal. It is a comfort to contrast the bearing of the King
+ of Spain with that of His Majesty's so called hosts. Jules Ferry
+ himself appears to have behaved decorously. I will forbear from
+ speculating on the ultimate effect of this deplorable affair on
+ French institutions. So far as I can see, Ferry and Wilson both
+ calculate on obtaining the advantage in a battle in the Chambers,
+ if they put off the fight till the session opens on the 23rd. In
+ the meantime, decency (if decency were at all taken into account
+ here at this moment) would seem to require that Thibaudin should
+ resign or be dismissed.
+
+ Our own political questions with the French Government do
+ not seem in a much more hopeful state than the general political
+ condition of things here.
+
+Not content with having by carelessness allowed the King of Spain to be
+insulted, the French Government prevented a correct and complete report
+of President Grévy's apology from being published in the _Journal
+Officiel_, this action being on a par with the whole disgraceful
+proceedings. As, however, the only alternative to the existing
+Government appeared to be a thoroughgoing Intransigeant Cabinet, and
+there was no telling what the latter might do both at home and abroad,
+it was hoped that Jules Ferry and his colleagues would succeed in
+holding their own.
+
+In the autumn, Challemel Lacour, who had become unpopular owing to the
+unsatisfactory campaign in Tonquin, resigned office, and his place at
+the Foreign Office was taken by Jules Ferry himself. Towards the end of
+November there arrived the news of Hicks Pasha's disaster in the Soudan,
+and although this event was not by any means unwelcome to the French,
+the chances of a speedy termination of the British occupation of Egypt
+naturally grew more remote.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 23, 1883.
+
+ I suppose there can be no hope that the disaster which has
+ overwhelmed Hicks's army is less serious than is reported. It seems
+ to be a grievous misfortune which has come at a most inopportune
+ moment for us. It is far from causing sorrow to our friends here.
+
+ I quite understand your not being keen to arbitrate between
+ France and China, and I don't think the French will be willing to
+ accept the arbitration of anybody. What they understand by our good
+ offices, is that we should help them to carry all their points
+ against the Chinese. It is supposed that the Committee will press
+ on the Government a larger vote for Tonquin than the Government has
+ asked for.
+
+ In the mean time things at home are looking gloomy in
+ France. There is likely to be a stagnation of trade and generally
+ much distress during the winter. People of all classes are
+ getting irritable, and seem to seek to vent their irritation on
+ foreign Powers. Add to this that the depression and pusillanimity
+ which followed 1870-1871, seem to be giving place to the former
+ overweening opinion of the strength of France and consequently to
+ Chauvinism.
+
+ I wrote a despatch to you by the last messenger as to the
+ effect the lowering the wine duties for Spain would have here. I
+ am never quite at ease when I think of our holding Most Favoured
+ Nation treatment at the pleasure of the French. The lowest class
+ who are gaining power are certainly not Free Traders.
+
+In consequence of the Soudan disaster the Egyptian Government became
+anxious to call in the Turks to their assistance, and this project
+excited a strong feeling in France against the admission of the Sultan's
+troops, or of any Turkish fighting men into Egypt, to take part in the
+defence against the Mahdi, that feeling being founded on the old ground
+of danger to the French position in Tunis and Algeria. But, for the same
+reason, the French were disposed to throw a heavy responsibility upon
+England for taking precautions that the Mahdi should be effectually
+stopped somewhere or other. Everything, in fact, that England did in
+Egypt was wrong in French eyes, and there was a fresh outburst over an
+arrangement made between Lesseps and the English shipowners with regard
+to the Suez Canal.
+
+In January, 1884, the British Government decided definitely upon the
+evacuation of the Soudan, and Gordon was despatched to carry out the
+operation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 19, 1884.
+
+ I do not know that in the main any marked change in public
+ opinion in France about Egypt has taken place since I wrote ten
+ days ago; but as the state of things there remains unchanged
+ for the better or becomes changed for the worse, excitement and
+ reproaches against England increase. A catastrophe with regard to
+ the garrison of Khartoum or that of Sinkat, or any massacre of
+ Europeans, would probably produce a violent outcry against us, of a
+ much more intense character than the present general upbraiding as
+ to our allowing the advance of the Soudan towards civilization to
+ be stopped, and the slave trade to be revived.
+
+ I am told confidentially that Barrère, the French Agent at
+ Cairo, writes to urge his Government to decide upon some distinct
+ line of policy, in view of the present crisis. His own idea
+ would seem to be to ingratiate himself with the Egyptians at the
+ expense of the English, to lead them to attribute all the present
+ misfortunes to England and to teach them to look to France for
+ ultimate deliverance from them. I hear that he rates Baring's
+ ability very highly, but writes very disparagingly of the other
+ Englishmen in office in Egypt. One of his topics in decrying
+ England is said to be the sum charged by her on the Egyptian
+ Treasury for the occupying troops. He is said not to be averse to
+ touching the Law of Liquidation, because he conceives that, if this
+ is done, France will get her finger into the pie again.
+
+ Tonquin is, at this moment, secondary to Egypt in interest
+ here, but the French are getting impatient for news from Admiral
+ Courbet.
+
+ Nothing particularly critical has yet taken place in the
+ Chamber.
+
+Lord Granville's reply seems to show that General Gordon was almost as
+great an optimist as himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Jan. 19, 1884.
+
+ Many thanks for your important private letter about Egypt. The
+ information may be of use to Baring.
+
+ Barrère is a very clever fellow, and has persuaded Baring that
+ he is very friendly.
+
+ Gordon went off yesterday, in a very good humour, determined
+ to help us in carrying out our policy of evacuation in the best
+ manner.
+
+ He is wonderfully optimistic, with a great contempt for the
+ Mahdi and disbelief in Arab fanaticism or love of real fighting. He
+ is not much afraid of a massacre. I trust he may be right.
+
+A fresh disaster in the Soudan--Baker Pasha's defeat--encouraged the
+idea that these reverses were symptoms of weakness on the part of
+England, and gave France a reason for desiring to interfere, and a
+_locus standi_ for asserting a claim to do so.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 11, 1884.
+
+ The large majority obtained by the Government against the
+ coalition of the extreme Right and the extreme Left on Paul Bert's
+ extravagant proposals relative to the salaries of schoolmasters and
+ schoolmistresses, has strengthened their hands and has given some
+ confidence to the Union Républicaine Party, on which they mainly
+ rely. They also succeeded in defeating a very mischievous motion
+ made by Clémenceau in the Committee of 44 to send a deputation to
+ Anzin in order to inquire into, or more properly to foment the
+ troubles in the Anzin coal districts. Nevertheless, the state of
+ the country and of Paris in particular is far from comfortable.
+ The distress of the workmen, and the folly and unreasonableness of
+ their demands and expectations are on the increase. I send you by
+ this messenger a good despatch by Crowe[40] on the violent cry for
+ protection from the competition of foreign workmen as well as that
+ of foreign goods, which has been one of the consequences.
+
+ I am afraid all this does not tend to make the Government
+ more conciliatory on foreign affairs. They are hourly expecting
+ to hear of the fall of Bac-Ninh, and if they are quite successful
+ there, they are only too likely to turn their thoughts to getting
+ a little glory out of the Egyptian question, as well as out of the
+ Madagascar, Congo, and other matters in which they are more or less
+ opposed to England.
+
+ So far as we are concerned, the effect the reconciliation
+ between Russia and Germany has had upon the French is not good.
+ So long as they had any hopes of a quarrel between Germany and
+ Russia, they felt bound to reserve their strength in order to take
+ advantage of it, and to cultivate good relations with other Powers,
+ in order to secure at least their non-interference. Now they have
+ given up the hope of a break between Russia and Germany, and are
+ at the same time confident that all the Continental Powers are
+ determined on peace. They think therefore that they may expect to
+ be _tête-à-tête_ with us and to be free to act as suits them in
+ affairs in which we are concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 12, 1884.
+
+ Your letters are most interesting, though not comforting. The
+ difficulty of keeping on friendly terms with France is not to be
+ underrated.
+
+ I await with almost equal interest the news which we shall
+ probably get this evening from [illegible] and that which I suppose
+ will come in a few days from Bac-Ninh.
+
+ I am afraid victory will make the French Government very
+ difficult to deal with; on the other hand, a defeat, which is not
+ likely, will make the Chinese intolerable.
+
+ Our own troubles, especially in the Soudan, are great. If
+ things could settle there, I am confident that Egypt would soon
+ recover the state in which she was before Hicks's defeat, and this
+ notwithstanding all the intrigues which are going on there.
+
+ Bismarck says he shall give us no trouble about the Law of
+ Liquidation, but that other nations will. What will be the best way
+ of approaching the French Government when we have made up our own
+ minds?
+
+ As to protection, it will create a very angry feeling here.
+ It will ruin the French and it will make us the monopolists of the
+ neutral markets of the world so long as we can keep at peace.
+
+ The Egyptian blister has diverted public attention from Merv.
+ The question was treated in excellent speeches in the Lords, but
+ the debate was dull and flat.
+
+ We do not make you a very handsome present in Mohrenheim. He
+ is like a diplomatist on the stage.
+
+Baron Mohrenheim, a diplomatist of a very conventional type, had just
+been transferred to Paris from the Russian Embassy in London, and was
+generally credited with strong anti-English sentiments.
+
+On the question of the financial condition of Egypt, the British
+Government finally decided to propose a European Conference, and the
+decision was communicated to the French Government. As was only to be
+expected, the English proposal produced a conflict of opinion in France.
+Some approved of calling in Europe generally, but others denounced the
+proposal as a new proof of the treachery of England, who, according
+to them, was bound to treat with France alone, and called loudly upon
+the French Government to refuse to go into a Conference on equal terms
+with other Powers. All seemed to think, however, that the moment had
+come for France to reassume a position equal with that of England, if
+not superior to it. The attitude of the French Government itself was
+more moderate. Jules Ferry accepted the Conference 'in principle,'
+and endeavoured to show that two absolutely false notions prevailed
+in England which seemed to be the great obstacles to an understanding
+between the two countries. One was that if the English withdrew their
+troops from Egypt, France would send hers in; the other, that France
+sought to re-establish the Control.
+
+The position in which Gordon now found himself in Khartoum began to
+cause Her Majesty's Government serious misgivings, and many expedients
+were suggested for relieving Ministers from their embarrassment. Amongst
+them appears a serio-comic proposition from the Baron de Billing, a
+well-known figure in Anglo-French society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 4, 1884.
+
+ I send you copies of a letter written to me by Baron de
+ Billing yesterday and of a memo annexed to it. I don't know what
+ you will think of the offer to rescue Gordon which they contain,
+ but I deem it right to lay it before you. Billing made it to me
+ verbally yesterday, and I begged him to put it in writing. The
+ inclosed papers are the result.
+
+ Billing did not tell me who the persons were by whom the
+ rescue was to be effected, but I understand that they were Arab
+ Sheikhs or something of that kind. Apparently they are in Paris,
+ for he professed to go to consult them before he sent me the memo.
+
+ He says you have known him from a boy.
+
+ '_Il se porte garant de l'honorabilité des personnes en jeu._'
+ For my part '_Je ne me porte garant de rien_' in the matter.
+
+ Billing insisted much on the importance of his receiving a
+ speedy answer.
+
+ MEMO.
+
+ '_Gordon Pasha sera remis aux autorités egyptiennes ou
+ anglaises à un des ports de la Mer Rouge ou aux avant-postes de
+ l'armée anglo-egyptienne moyennant:_
+
+ 1°. _le paiement immédiat par Lord Lyons d'une somme de deux
+ mille livres sterling à une personne désignée par le Baron de
+ Billing, ancien chargé d'affaires de France à Munich, Tunis et
+ Stockholm._
+
+ 2°. _Le versement d'une somme de 48,000 livres sterling au
+ credit du Baron de Billing chez Messrs. Coutts, ses banquiers
+ ordinaires, le jour même où parviendra à Londres la nouvelle
+ officielle de la remise de Gordon Pasha entre les mains des
+ autorités anglo-egyptiennes._
+
+ _N.B._--1°. _Un compte détaillé sera rendu à Lord Lyons de
+ l'emploi des deux milles livres sterling immédiatement exigibles._
+
+ 2° _Gordon Pasha devra prendre l'engagement écrit de quitter
+ sur le champ l'Egypte et de s'en tenir éloigné pendant une période
+ de 10 ans._ (_Je crois qu'il sera possible de faire modifier cette
+ dernière prétention qui semble bien peu pratique._)
+
+ _Le Baron de Billing se porte garant vis-à-vis de Lord Lyons
+ de l'honorabilité des personnes en jeu, et il ajoute que vû son
+ expérience de l'Afrique, il croit à de sérieuses chances de succés._
+
+ _Un permis de séjour en blanc pour l'Egypte sera remis au
+ Baron de Billing pour un Musulman à désigner par lui._'
+
+ (_Très important._)
+
+In spite of Lord Granville's life-long acquaintance with the Baron, the
+proposal (which bears a striking resemblance to some of the incidents
+in the Dreyfus case) was declined, and nothing more was heard of him in
+connection with the rescue of Gordon.
+
+The French military operations in the Far East were terminated
+temporarily by a Treaty with China, concluded in May, under which the
+Protectorate of France over Tonquin and Annam was recognized, and there
+was some uncertainty at first as to how the commercial terms would
+be interpreted. When the Prince of Wales, who was then in Paris,
+called upon President Grévy, the latter dilated effusively upon the
+satisfaction which all nations must feel at the new opening of trade to
+them in Tonquin and Annam. On the other hand, the _Temps_, a newspaper
+of considerable authority, talked of the _ouverture au commerce
+exclusif de la France des Provinces de l'Empire celeste limitrophes de
+nos possessions de l'Indo-Chine_. 'I have observed,' Lord Lyons wrote
+sadly, 'no symptoms lately in France of anything like a decently liberal
+commercial spirit.' Nor when M. Jules Ferry was congratulated upon the
+Tonquin settlement, did that statesman let fall any hint of an intention
+to open to the rest of the world the commercial advantages which France
+had secured for herself. In fact, the chief result of the French success
+in Tonquin seemed to be, that, having at all events, got rid temporarily
+of this difficulty, a more unconciliatory line of policy than ever would
+be adopted as far as Egypt was concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 27, 1884.
+
+ You may have observed that, contrary to my usual habit, I
+ have been sending you lately a great many extracts from French
+ newspapers. My reason is of a very painful kind. I have thought it
+ necessary to give you specimens of the ill will towards England,
+ the suspicions of her, and the irritability respecting her which
+ seem to become more and more prevalent here. To these unpleasant
+ symptoms I might add that exclusive and illiberal commercial views
+ and extreme Protectionist ideas are in the ascendant: and that thus
+ the spirited Colonial Policy now in vogue, becomes a danger instead
+ of an advantage to foreign commerce, which it might be if it opened
+ new areas to the trade of all nations.
+
+ The Ferry Government is wafted along by the pleasant breezes
+ from Tonquin, but they must be on the look out for squalls as they
+ near the revision of the Constitution and the discussion of the
+ Budget of 1885.
+
+ The _Gaulois_ is hardly looked upon here as a serious paper,
+ but the calumnies upon Sir J. Drummond Hay which it professes
+ to have derived from a report made, I suppose _viva voce_, by
+ Ordega[41] to Ferry, are too bad. Menabrea says that the Italian
+ Minister at Tangier is a man of herculean strength and fierce
+ temper, and that he is as likely as not to wring Ordega's neck if
+ he catches him. _Libre à lui de le faire._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 28, 1884.
+
+ We must be very clumsy to invite so much indignation in France
+ and at the same time to run the risk of being turned out next month
+ for being so subservient to her.
+
+ Waddington seems in earnest to bring about a good
+ understanding, but our press, over which the Government has
+ absolutely no control, will be most offensive, until the vote of
+ censure against the Conference, which is almost sure to be brought
+ on, is decided one way or the other.
+
+ It will require all Salisbury's want of caution to try to come
+ in upon a quarrel with all Europe upon the Egyptian question.
+
+The Egyptian policy of the Gladstone Government, subsequently to the
+successful campaign of 1882, never met with much favour in any quarter
+in England, but it was not surprising, on the whole, that Lord Granville
+should be pained by French hostility, since nothing whatever had been
+done to warrant it. Had we behaved ill to France, there might have been
+a chance of returning to favour by altering our procedure; as it was,
+there was no reasonable ground of offence whatever, and therefore the
+prospect of restoring friendly relations appeared to be all the more
+remote.
+
+Lord Hartington, then a prominent member of the Gladstone Government,
+was in Paris at the beginning of June, and Lord Granville seems to have
+been much alarmed as to the language which he might use with reference
+to Egypt in conversation with French Ministers. Lord Hartington was
+probably not in the least desirous of conversing with French Ministers
+upon Egypt or upon any other subject, and wished to go _incognito_, 'as
+he was constantly in the habit of doing;' but it was represented to him
+that unless he called upon Jules Ferry it would be believed that he was
+engaged upon a secret mission, and Lord Lyons was therefore asked to
+give him some preliminary coaching.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 3, 1884.
+
+ I sent Lord Hartington your letter yesterday, and I had a long
+ visit from him in the afternoon.
+
+ As matters stand, what seems to me most to be dreaded with a
+ view to our relations with France is a vote of the House of Commons
+ censuring an arrangement made by Her Majesty's Government with the
+ French Government. Such a vote, and the debate by which it would be
+ preceded, would, I cannot but fear, have a truly lamentable effect.
+
+ I understand that Jules Ferry is having a memorandum on the
+ Finances of Egypt drawn up by Blignières, and that it will dispute
+ the accuracy of Mr. Childers's information and represent that the
+ Finances were in a flourishing condition, and that there were
+ surpluses even during Arabi's rebellion, up to the time at which
+ England took the thing in hand. The memorandum will probably deny
+ there being any necessity for reducing the interest of the debt, if
+ the Finances be properly managed.
+
+ I do not know whether such a reason will be assigned to us,
+ but in fact it seems that the French object to any large loans
+ being guaranteed by England, on account of the lien, so to speak,
+ which it would give England upon Egypt. The French would prefer a
+ simple fresh issue of Unified stock.
+
+ In the meantime, the French bondholders are bestirring
+ themselves and protesting against any arrangement being made
+ without their being consulted.
+
+ Jules Ferry, however, himself thinks little of any other
+ consideration in comparison with the political success which it
+ would be to him to give France again a political footing in Egypt,
+ and as a means to this, to get a time fixed for the departure of
+ our troops. I do not think he is afraid of much disapproval here
+ of his counter-concession--the engagement that French troops shall
+ not enter Egypt, either on the departure of the English troops or
+ afterwards. Unless the engagement were very formally made and very
+ peculiarly and stringently worded, it would be felt here that it
+ did not amount to much. For though it would preclude the occupation
+ of Egypt by the French to preserve order and promote reforms in the
+ same way we occupy the country now, it would not be interpreted
+ here as preventing France using force to avenge an insult or
+ protect distinct French interests in cases which would constitute a
+ _casus belli_ as regarded any ordinary country.
+
+ I do not quite understand the exact position in which stands
+ the suggestion that the Financial question should be first
+ settled by England with the several Powers separately, and then a
+ conference be held for a day or two only to ratify what had already
+ been settled. Does this afford an opening for purely financial
+ negotiations, and admit of dropping the French political proposals
+ which appear to be so unpopular in England? I believe Jules Ferry
+ is in some tribulation about the difficulties his proposals have
+ met with in England, and is half inclined to be sorry he made them
+ so strong, though I doubt whether Waddington has made him fully
+ aware of the violence of the opposition they encounter in England.
+
+ Generally speaking, I am very unhappy about the growing
+ ill-will between France and England which exists on both sides
+ of the Channel. It is not that I suppose that France has any
+ deliberate intention of going to war with us. But the two nations
+ come into contact in every part of the world. In every part of it
+ questions arise which, in the present state of feeling, excite
+ mutual suspicion and irritation. Who can say, when and where, in
+ this state of things, some local events may not produce a serious
+ quarrel, or some high-handed proceedings of hot-headed officials
+ occasion an actual collision?
+
+The variety and number of questions upon which Lord Lyons was requested
+to pronounce an opinion have already been commented upon; now he was
+asked to consider the effect of a hypothetical vote of the House of
+Commons.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Trentham, June 4, 1884.
+
+ Many thanks for your important and pregnant letter. I quite
+ agree that the relations between England and France will be
+ disagreeable if the House of Commons rejects our proposals; but
+ this, though possible, is not so probable as Hartington thinks.
+
+ The M.P.'s neither desire a Salisbury administration; still
+ less a dissolution.
+
+ But how will our relations be, if we previously break off
+ with France? and what can you suggest for the settlement of the
+ financial difficulties of Egypt, if we obtain no sanction for a
+ change of the Law of Liquidation?
+
+ Do you think that the House of Commons would allow us to take
+ the whole debt upon ourselves, in order to save the bondholders? I
+ should be really grateful for your suggestions on this last point.
+
+From the above letter it is plain that Her Majesty's Government had no
+definite Egyptian policy, and were merely stumbling along concerned
+only, as frequently happens with British Cabinets, with the possible
+result of a division in the House of Commons. The only evidence of
+policy was a strong inclination to evade responsibility; to hand it over
+to a collection of Powers; and to fritter away such advantages as had
+been so hardly won, in the hopeless attempt to recover the goodwill of
+the French Government.
+
+Lord Lyons's reply was to the effect that nothing would have a worse
+effect than a bitter debate in the House of Commons followed by the
+censure of terms agreed upon by the French and English Governments. But
+as there was no doubt whatever that the French Government intended to
+take advantage of the Conference to place France in the same position in
+Egypt as that which she formerly held, a firm policy on the part of Her
+Majesty's Government might have a better effect than an over-yielding
+one.
+
+The Egyptian Conference met in London at the end of June and continued
+its sterile discussions for upwards of a month before finally breaking
+up, while the tone of the French press grew more and more hostile, and
+anything in the nature of a concession on the subject of the interest of
+the debt or on any other matter affecting French material interest was
+denounced in the fiercest terms. Even the craven British proposals with
+regard to the limitation of the military occupation were treated with
+contempt, and no person came in for greater abuse than M. Waddington,
+who was now established as Ambassador in London, and was constantly
+denounced for subservience to England, solely because he owned an
+English name.
+
+The Conference broke up in August, and the Cabinet, which was now being
+continually denounced on all sides for its feeble and procrastinating
+policy, decided upon despatching Lord Northbrook on a special mission
+to Cairo. Before Lord Northbrook started he had a long interview with
+Lord Lyons, who did his best to impress upon him the views, interests,
+and susceptibilities of France, and the great importance of not running
+counter to them if possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 17, 1884.
+
+ I opened my first conversation with Ferry, the day after my
+ return, with a message from you as to your desire to be on good
+ terms, and to avoid unpleasantness in treating matters between
+ the two countries all over the world. I enlarged upon this theme,
+ and made it as plain to him as I could, without letting the
+ conversation degenerate into recrimination, that if France were
+ perpetually irritating us, we on our side had the means, and should
+ not always be able to abstain from using them, of making ourselves
+ very disagreeable too. The subject was treated in the most friendly
+ way by me, and Ferry was profuse in his acknowledgments to you, and
+ in assurances; but I should have been glad if I could have brought
+ him to more practical advances towards intimacy and good fellowship
+ than I was able to do. However, the conversation may perhaps have
+ done some good.
+
+ As regards the Congo Conference, I came away with the
+ impression that there is more or less a tacit, if not very
+ explicit, understanding between France and Germany, in addition to
+ what appears in the Yellow Book; and that this understanding may
+ prove inconvenient to us.
+
+ The session has not opened very favourably for the Government.
+ The Finance Minister's hocus-pocus expedients for balancing the
+ Budget have been unanimously rejected by the Budget Committee. The
+ recent 'glories' in Tonquin hardly outweigh in public estimation
+ the growing expenses of the operations there and in China. Ferry
+ told me he disliked the protective duties on cattle and corn, but
+ that the Government could not altogether resist them, though it
+ would endeavour to make them as moderate as possible. Rouvier,
+ the new Minister of Commerce, is less Protectionist than his
+ predecessor, Hérisson; but I have no confidence in the so-called
+ Free Trade principles of any Frenchman. Duties on manufactures
+ are sure to follow in the wake of duties on food, and I can never
+ forget that we hold our Most Favoured Nation treatment only at the
+ good pleasure of the French Government. The proceedings of the
+ Lyonnais are socialist and revolutionary, and a great impetus has
+ been given to Socialism by the journeyings during the recess of the
+ sub-committees of the General Committee appointed by the Chamber
+ of Deputies to inquire into the distress of the working classes.
+ Nevertheless the chances still seem to be that the Ferry Ministry
+ will weather the storms of the autumn session.
+
+ Ferry complained bitterly of the English press. He said in
+ particular that the irritating lecturing tone of the _Times_ goaded
+ the French to madness; though he himself observed that it used the
+ same tone towards the Government of its own country. I said that
+ the press on both sides of the Channel seemed to work as if for the
+ express purpose of producing ill-will between the two countries;
+ but that certainly the English Government had no power to restrain
+ it. A good understanding between the two Governments and friendly
+ proceedings on their parts to each other, would in time act upon
+ public opinion; and saying this, I preached a little more on the
+ text of the importance of the French Government's not making itself
+ unnecessarily disagreeable.
+
+Her Majesty's Government were at this time involved in domestic as well
+as external difficulties, and Lord Granville's reply to the foregoing
+letter contained a renewal of the old importunity to come over and vote
+in the House of Lords on a party question. It is quite obvious that
+Lord Granville was impelled to do so by Gladstone, and the typical
+Gladstonian reasoning is shown in the argument that Lord Lyons ought to
+vote, because being an Ambassador he was a non-party man; whereas on
+previous occasions his vote had been applied for, because he distinctly
+ranked as a party man in the Whip's list.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Walmer, Oct. 18, 1884.
+
+ Gladstone writes to me earnestly, but I think reasonably,
+ respecting your vote at the present important crisis.
+
+ He says that you must be aware of the estimate we hold of your
+ judgment and independence. But to save the House of Lords from a
+ tempest which must strain and may wreck it, some Tory Lords will
+ be moved to vote for the Franchise Bill, and he asks why the same
+ motive should not operate upon men like our Ambassadors, who he
+ believes are of no party.
+
+ I own I think that the same majority, or possibly a larger one
+ in the Lords, would be a great disaster.
+
+ If the Liberal Party take up hostility to the House of Lords
+ itself as its leading question--whether led by Gladstone himself,
+ or not,--and with a leader of the Lords who is personally in favour
+ of getting a larger career of power and utility for himself in the
+ Commons, it is difficult not to foresee the result.
+
+ With regard to immediate politics, supposing Salisbury
+ succeeds in forcing a dissolution, and with the help of the Irish
+ turns us out, what chance is there of his not being turned out in
+ six months by nearly the same process?
+
+ The Waddingtons came here to luncheon. I guessed that they
+ funked being reported as being here. He was very civil, and his
+ talk was not altogether unpromising.
+
+No one with the slightest practical acquaintance with politics could
+possibly be taken in by the Gladstonian phrase about the 'estimate of
+your judgment and independence.' Ministers when urging their docile
+supporters either in the Lords or the Commons to support a party
+measure, are not in the habit of boasting that some eminent person,
+whether an Ambassador or not, is going to give a silent vote in their
+favour, and even if they did, it would not produce the slightest effect.
+One peer's vote is as good as another's, and in the division list an
+Ambassador counts no higher than the most obscure of backwoodsmen.
+
+Anglo-French relations were not improved by the occurrences in the
+Far East, where the French, in consequence of the Tonquin expedition,
+had drifted into war with China. The Chinese fleet, composed of small
+obsolete vessels, was destroyed at Foochow by the heavily armed French
+ships in August; but as the Chinese Government showed no signs of
+yielding, the French Admiral, Courbet, was ordered to seize part of
+the island of Formosa, where valuable coal mines were known to exist.
+In order to effect his object, Admiral Courbet, with a magnificent
+disregard of all neutral Powers, proclaimed a paper blockade of Formosa,
+which naturally provoked a protestation on the part of the British
+Government. During the remainder of the year hostilities between France
+and China continued, although from time to time recurrence to the
+friendly offices of Her Majesty's Government was suggested but found
+impracticable.
+
+Egypt, however, remained the centre of interest, and the prospects of
+any amicable arrangement appeared to recede further into the distance.
+Upon the return of Lord Northbrook, the new proposals of Her Majesty's
+Government were put before the French Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 26, 1884.
+
+ I suppose Waddington's private statement to me that we must
+ not expect an answer to our Egyptian proposals before the end of
+ the year was intended to imply that we _should_ get an answer about
+ that time.
+
+ I pressed Ferry strongly on the subject the day before
+ yesterday. He assured me that he had studied our papers and was
+ occupying himself without intermission on the subject, but I could
+ not bring him to book as to the exact time we might look for an
+ answer, nor could I extract from him any hint as to what the answer
+ was to be.
+
+ I am afraid that the draft of it has gone, or is going, to
+ Berlin, and I augur anything but good from this. It seems to
+ me that without being driven to anything of the kind by German
+ interests, Bismarck has lately taken a sort of malicious pleasure
+ in treating matters in a way calculated to embarrass and discredit
+ us.
+
+ You may be quite sure that I shall leave no stone unturned
+ to get an answer as soon as possible. I don't think threats of
+ Tunisifying Egypt, or of bankruptcy, or other strong measures,
+ would tell upon the French. They would not believe that we
+ should have recourse to such measures, in face of the opposition
+ of France, Germany, Austria, and Russia, even if we had the
+ thoroughgoing support of Italy. I should hesitate to bring matters
+ to a point at which we could only execute our threats by a very
+ large display of military and naval force, or back out of them.
+ The best card in our hand, and it is not a high trump, is the
+ reluctance of the French to be thrown irretrievably into the
+ clutches of Bismarck by a distinct quarrel with us.
+
+ Ferry seemed grateful to you for the way in which you
+ sounded him through Waddington about new proposals from China,
+ but he appears to think that any eagerness on his part to receive
+ new proposals would be looked upon by the Chinese as a sign of
+ weakness, and short of absolutely giving in on the part of China,
+ an _action d'éclat_ on the part of the French forces would answer
+ best for him with the Chambers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 30, 1884.
+
+ I put your letter myself into Errington's hand this
+ morning.[42] He starts for Italy this evening.
+
+ You will see by the despatch I send with this that Ferry
+ promises an answer on the Egyptian Finances on the 15th of next
+ month, and that he intends to make counter-proposals. I cried out
+ at his mentioning so distant a date as the 15th, but he would not
+ name a nearer one. If, as I cannot but surmise, he is consulting
+ Berlin, I fear that neither speed nor conciliation to us will be
+ recommended from that quarter. I confess I cannot think of any
+ threat which would be likely to mend matters. The French would
+ probably rejoice at any crisis which might array distinctly against
+ us the three Emperors, as well as this Republic. I doubt the
+ Tonquin affair being very much of a safeguard. I should feel safer
+ if France were not getting into the habit of sending out distant
+ expeditions.
+
+ I report officially this evening Ferry's language about the
+ new Chinese proposals. The Chambers were all in favour of an
+ _action d'éclat_. I don't think Ferry could face them with another
+ doubtful negotiation on his hands which would suspend military
+ action. At any rate he does not seem to wish to hear anything of
+ Chinese proposals, short of actual surrender.
+
+At the beginning of 1885 Her Majesty's Government were confronted
+with the unpleasant fact, that whereas hitherto they had only had
+French opposition to reckon with in respect to Egypt, Bismarck had
+now engineered a European combination against them in consequence of
+dissatisfaction at the English attitude towards his colonial policy.
+The English financial proposals, more especially those which suggested
+that the interest on the debt should be reduced, and the Anglo-French
+Administration of the Daira and Domain Lands should be abolished, were
+denounced in unmeasured terms in France. Nor did it seem easy to devise
+any efficacious means either of reconciling the French to the proposals
+or of putting pressure on them. The time for putting pressure on France
+was past; earlier in the day, a representation that a refusal to consent
+to measures necessary for the well being and good administration of
+Egypt would oblige the British Government to take the country formally
+under their protection, after the fashion of Tunis, would have met with
+little opposition; but now France might go to any extremities to resist
+such an arrangement, feeling sure that in so doing she would have the
+support of Germany, Austria, and Russia. Under these circumstances the
+prospect of a financial crisis, or even of bankruptcy, produced little
+alarm, because it was felt that the support of the three Empires would
+be forthcoming in demanding that the Egyptian financial administration
+should be placed under the joint control of the Powers; and it was in
+fact only too probable that the intractability of the French Government
+would increase in proportion with the support obtained from Germany and
+the Powers which followed the German lead.
+
+It was hardly credible that the patronage of Germany was acceptable to
+the French public or entirely satisfactory to the French Government,
+as the danger, not to say the humiliation, of falling altogether into
+the hands of Bismarck, could not quite be lost sight of. The French
+Government no doubt had two objects in view; the first, to make use
+of the support of Germany and the Powers, in order to guard French
+pecuniary interests, and to improve as far as possible the political
+position of France in Egypt; the second, to avoid severing themselves
+so entirely from England as to be left wholly at the mercy of Germany.
+Unfortunately for England the second object appeared to be the one to
+which the lesser importance was attached.
+
+In short, the probabilities were, that unless we succeeded in coming to
+some arrangement with France, we should find arrayed against us all the
+European Powers, except Italy, the position in which we were placed at
+the moment, in consequence of the expedition to Khartoum, having been
+taken into account in calculating the means at our disposal to withstand
+such a coalition. It should be mentioned that the friendship of Italy
+had been purchased by an arrangement under which she was to take
+possession of Massowah and the adjacent coast.
+
+The French counter-proposals respecting Egyptian Finance were
+communicated in the middle of January.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 20, 1885.
+
+ I earnestly hope that a settlement of the Egyptian Financial
+ Question may be the result of the Cabinet to-day. That question
+ seems to me to have a disastrous effect on our foreign relations
+ everywhere.
+
+ Bismarck and Ferry are _jouant au plus fin_ with each other at
+ our expense. Each seems to think that he can use the other to help
+ in thwarting us, without risk to himself. But Bismarck has the best
+ of the game. He occupies the French thoughts, and to some extent
+ their forces, at a distance from Europe: he keeps up irritation
+ between them and us, and some of the acquisitions he encourages
+ them to make (Tonquin for instance) will in all probability
+ be a permanent cause of weakness to them. At the same time he
+ neutralizes opposition from us to his childish colonial schemes,
+ which I cannot help suspecting are founded as much on what, for
+ want of a better word, I must call spite against us, as on any
+ real expectation of advantage to Germany. Ferry hopes, by means of
+ Bismarck and the Powers who follow Bismarck's lead, to carry his
+ immediate points in regard to Egypt and other parts of the world,
+ and so increase his reputation at home for the moment; and he
+ trusts to his skill to enable him to stop before he has so entirely
+ alienated us as to be quite at Bismarck's mercy. It is the natural
+ disposition of almost all Europe to side against us, as matters
+ stand, on the Egyptian Financial Question, which makes this pretty
+ game possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 3, 1885.
+
+ I am provoked by Ferry's tardiness in sending Waddington the
+ instructions to proceed with the Egyptian Finances Question. He
+ has evidently been waiting for the approval of Berlin. I am more
+ than ever impatient to get this question disposed of. One, and not
+ the least of my reasons, is the desire to get rid of this habit of
+ referring every moment to Bismarck.
+
+ The Tonquin and China affairs seem to get more perplexing
+ and more expensive to the French in men and money every day. It
+ seems very doubtful that Ferry will get the _action d'éclat_ he is
+ looking for there, in time for the election; and if he do not, it
+ may go hard with him in the new Chamber.
+
+ The _Gaulois_ announces that a great Anglo-French meeting is
+ to be held in Paris in the month of March, at which a resolution
+ is to be voted that England and France must remain united in the
+ interests of liberty in Europe. According to the _Gaulois_, 'Mr.
+ Cremer, secrétaire general de la Workmen's Peace Association,' is
+ in communication about it with M. Clémenceau, who is to organise
+ the meeting in conjunction with Mr. Burns, _Membre de la Chambre
+ des Communes_, who would come to Paris with a delegation of English
+ workmen. If there be any truth in the story, the object of the
+ French promoters of this demonstration is probably to embarrass the
+ Ferry Government.
+
+The Mr. Burns referred to was presumably the present President of the
+Local Government Board, but the description of him as an M.P. was
+premature.
+
+Negotiations between the French and English Governments over the
+financial proposals were resumed, and eventually some sort of
+arrangement was arrived at, but in the meanwhile all interest had been
+transferred to the Soudan. The battle of Abou Klea took place on January
+19, and on February 5 there arrived the news of the fall of Khartoum
+and death of Gordon. The French were not wanting in appreciation of
+the gallantry shown by the British troops, but were prodigal of gloomy
+forebodings with regard to the future prospects of the expeditions.
+Prominent amongst these prophets of evil were Lesseps and Jules Ferry.
+Lesseps (on the strength of having once been on a tour in the Soudan
+with the ex-Khedive) considered that an attempt to advance would be
+madness, and that the army was in great danger of being surrounded.
+He thought that the only prudent course would be to concentrate the
+forces and keep them behind walls and entrenchments until the autumn.
+But even then he did not see how the army could ever get away if it
+were stoutly opposed by the Arabs, as the scarcity of water and other
+difficulties would make the Berber-Suakim route impracticable; and in
+short he was convinced that the only practical plan was to come to
+terms with the Mahdi, and that the only means of making terms with the
+Madhi would be to reinstate Ismail as Khedive and utilize his influence.
+This surprising conclusion was due to the fact that Lesseps had for a
+long time been exerting himself in every possible way to bring about the
+restoration of Ismail.
+
+M. Jules Ferry was also full of condolences upon the British position in
+the Soudan, but was, at the same time, not at all enthusiastic about the
+French position in the Far East. He admitted that the troops in Tonquin
+were sickly and that the climate was odious; that neither in Tonquin
+nor Formosa could any blow be struck which China would really feel, but
+that nevertheless 'in the interests of civilization as represented in
+those parts by France and England, it was necessary to deal a stunning
+blow (_coup foudroyant_) at the huge Empire of China.' This might be
+effected by landing an attacking force in China proper, or by blockading
+the ports, but either of these methods would involve great difficulties
+with other Powers, and the only thing that remained to be done was
+to dismember the Empire. Once China was broken up into three or four
+provinces she would become comparatively harmless. M. Jules Ferry's
+views were expressed after a dinner at the Embassy, and Lord Lyons in
+reporting the conversation remarked that his wine must be more heady
+than he imagined.
+
+Before long, however, a crisis in another part of the world temporarily
+distracted attention from Egypt and brought home to every thinking
+person the indefinite and multifarious responsibilities of British rule,
+as well as the singularly inadequate military resources available.
+Prominent British statesmen had long derided the absurdity of supposing
+that England and Russia could ever become involved in disputes in
+Central Asia, but, profiting by our embarrassments in Egypt, the
+Russian Government had adopted so aggressive a policy, that even the
+peace-loving Gladstone Government found itself on the brink of a
+collision before the end of February. This critical situation and the
+possibility of a conflict between England and Russia, far from giving
+satisfaction to the French, afforded them just cause for anxiety.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 13, 1885.
+
+ The critical state of things between England and Russia has
+ come more home to the French mind during the last few days, and
+ is looked upon with increased alarm. Whatever may be Bismarck's
+ feelings and plans, the French cannot help feeling that it would
+ be a great danger to them for him to be without counterpoise in
+ Europe. Those who believe that they see far ahead, declare that
+ Bismarck's ultimate object is Holland, and that Belgium, or a part
+ of Belgium, is to be given to France as a compensation for the
+ annexation of Holland to Germany. To this end they conceive that
+ Bismarck has aimed at embroiling Russia with England, so that the
+ one may paralyse the other; at separating England and France, and
+ at setting up an alliance between France and Germany. It is to
+ be hoped that many Frenchmen would shrink from taking part in an
+ iniquity which would be equalled only by the partition of Poland.
+ It is to be supposed that none can be so blind as not to see that
+ Bismarck will never make a territorial arrangement which would
+ increase the relative strength of France as compared with that of
+ Germany. It can hardly be doubted that Bismarck must be well aware
+ that so far from the gift of Belgium reconciling the French to the
+ loss of Alsace and Lorraine, any additional power that gift might
+ confer upon them would certainly be used, on the first opportunity,
+ for the recovery of the two lost Provinces.
+
+ To people who incline to more simple and obvious explanations
+ of political conduct, Bismarck himself seems to be rather old to
+ indulge in any hope of executing schemes of this kind. Moreover,
+ the character of the Emperor would in all probability prevent his
+ sanctioning such proceedings, while His Majesty's death would,
+ in all probability, greatly diminish, if not put an end to,
+ Bismarck's influence. Bismarck may in fact be working in order to
+ attain smaller and more immediate objects, and to gratify personal
+ feelings.
+
+ However all this may be, the French decidedly wish to prevent
+ a rupture between England and Russia. They do not relish the
+ effect upon the position of Bismarck in Europe which would be
+ the consequence of France herself, England and Russia, being all
+ hampered by being engaged in wars in the extreme East.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 14, 1885.
+
+ I doubt the Russians going quite to extremes, but the risk is
+ great.
+
+ Bismarck is behaving as ill as possible--after the mission of
+ peace and a complete making up, creating difficulties at the last
+ moment about Egyptian finances, concerning which he promised that
+ no objections would be raised by Germany, if France and England
+ were agreed. It is supposed to be with a view to getting a decree
+ against us at Cairo before the settlement.
+
+The military preparations for a possible struggle with Russia were
+typical of the manner in which British statesmen occasionally prepare
+for the worst. In order to strike terror into a Power which could
+dispose of millions of soldiers, two army corps of 25,000 men each
+were ordered to be mobilized in India, and as 'a time of emergency had
+arrived,' it was announced that the first-class army reserve and militia
+reserve would be called out; their total numbers amounting to the
+stupendous figure of about 70,000 men. By these steps it was hoped that
+the greatest military Power in the world would be overawed.
+
+From one embarrassment Her Majesty's Government were fortunately
+relieved, the basis of an arrangement with France having been arrived
+at with regard to Egyptian Finance. Mr. Gladstone, with whom Lord Lyons
+had been requested to communicate direct, wrote expressing his relief,
+but was obviously far more concerned to demonstrate the turpitude of his
+political opponents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Mr. Gladstone to Lord Lyons._
+
+ 10, Downing St., March 21, 1885.
+
+ When you so kindly wrote to me about Egyptian Finance, I did
+ not reply. Not because I was insensible or forgetful, but because
+ the unsatisfactory condition of the question made it so difficult.
+ Now, thank God, we are through, as far as Foreign Powers are
+ concerned; and we have thus far escaped from a position the most
+ hopeless and helpless that it is possible to conceive.
+
+ It remains a subject of regret, and of some surprise, that
+ the Opposition are pressing for time before we take the vote, in
+ a manner quite unusual, with almost a certainty of bankruptcy and
+ financial chaos in Egypt, and the likelihood of consequences more
+ than financial if we comply; and all this, as far as we can make
+ out, because of the disorganized condition of the Tory party. It
+ seems that the mutinous followers have exacted this condition from
+ their leaders, as some reparation for the agreement about the Seats
+ Bill, and for their other offences.
+
+ To be defeated on the agreement would be _most_ convenient
+ for the Government (for me priceless) but somewhat ruinous or
+ mischievous, I think, to all the rest of the world.
+
+ We must of course hold our ground.
+
+The rooted belief of Ministers that their continuance in office is
+absolutely essential to the welfare of the universe as well as to that
+of the British Empire is, of course, a well-known phenomenon which has
+manifested itself in more recent times in the case of both political
+parties. In 1885 the difficulties of the Gladstone Government continued
+to grow, and it was fortunate for Lord Granville's peace of mind that he
+was an optimist by nature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 25, 1885.
+
+ The incorrigible Turk has not yet sent instructions to
+ Musurus. We have tried the most serious threats, which Musurus
+ believes will be successful.
+
+ But if we do not take care, we shall soon be at war with the
+ Mahdi, with Turkey, and with the Russians.
+
+ I do not know how the latter question will finish. Being of
+ a sanguine disposition, I hope for the best. We are determined to
+ take a firm stand.
+
+ Do you believe that the French have many tricks in hand for
+ the Suez Canal Commission?
+
+Early in April there arrived the news of the fight at Penjdeh, where,
+to use Gladstone's own expression, the attack of the Russians upon
+the Afghans 'bore the appearance of an unprovoked aggression.' A
+financial panic took place, consols fell 3 per cent., Russian stocks 9
+per cent., and for a short time the impression prevailed that war was
+inevitable. In the House of Commons, Mr. Gladstone made one of those
+eloquent statements which were so widely accepted by his followers as a
+satisfactory solution of any outstanding difficulty, but which failed to
+reassure the more intelligent; and even the optimistic Lord Granville
+felt some uncomfortable qualms.
+
+ 'It is too dreadful,' he wrote on April 10th, 'jumping from
+ one nightmare into another.
+
+ 'Once at war with Russia we shall be obliged to toady Germany,
+ France, and Turkey.
+
+ 'But I cannot believe that it will come to war. It cannot be
+ a good move of the Russians to have created a blood feud with the
+ Afghans.
+
+ 'Not having a genius for war, I do not know how we are
+ effectively to carry it on against Russia, although it is not off
+ the cards that it may break her up.'
+
+Probably Lord Granville was not singular in his inability to see how a
+war on land was to be effectively carried on against Russia.
+
+In the meanwhile the French were not without their own foreign troubles.
+M. Jules Ferry had spoken of the necessity of inflicting a _coup
+foudroyant_. The _coup foudroyant_ fell in a totally unexpected fashion
+upon his own head, in the shape of a defeat of the French forces at
+Lang-Son. The news of the reverse arrived in Paris on March 25, and
+created so absurd a panic and so strong a feeling against Spirited
+Colonial Policy that Jules Ferry at once bowed to the storm and resigned
+on the 31st. He had been in office for the unprecedented period of two
+years and one month, which alone was sufficient cause for disappearance;
+nor could it be said that his administration had been colourless, for he
+had passed an important Education Bill, established the Protectorate of
+France in Tunis, and annexed Tonquin and Madagascar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 31, 1885.
+
+ Ferry was certainly at work quietly with negotiations for
+ peace with China, and no doubt he calculated on playing it as a
+ high trump at the Elections; and a great card it would have been
+ for him, for the war in Tonquin is extremely unpopular. The reverse
+ at Lang-Son has changed all this; the extreme Right have always
+ had a special hatred of Ferry on account of the suppression of the
+ religious communities, and Clémenceau and the extreme Left have
+ become bitterly hostile to him personally. Not many of his own
+ party cared to stick to him when their own popularity would have
+ been risked by doing so. And, besides, he had been in office for
+ two years; a very unusually long period of late, and people were
+ tired of him.
+
+ Freycinet is now trying to form a Cabinet. It is not certain
+ that he will succeed, and if he does succeed, it is very doubtful
+ whether his Cabinet will last. His idea seems to be to take into it
+ Republicans of all shades, not excluding deep Red. The Republicans
+ have been rather startled by the progress, far from great though
+ it has been, of the Conservatives and Monarchists (Orleanist and
+ Imperialist) in the constituencies; and the notion seems to be that
+ the importance to them of resisting this, may keep them together
+ and prevent them quarrelling with each other, at all events until
+ after the Elections. But anyway, each change of Ministry produces
+ a further step towards the Left, and there is a foundation for the
+ fear that there may be socialist legislation against property and
+ proprietors, and that the Government may by degrees throw away all
+ the means of resisting anarchy.
+
+ Freycinet's own tendencies would be towards peace. Now there
+ is nothing but flame and fury against the Chinese, but considering
+ the general unpopularity of the war this may to a certain extent
+ subside. He would, I think, desire to be on good terms with all
+ countries. He would hardly be so subservient to Bismarck as Ferry
+ had lately become. It so happens that personally he and I are
+ particularly good friends.
+
+Towards the end of April the British Government asked for a credit
+of eleven millions, and the eloquence of Mr. Gladstone worked his
+faithful followers up to a belief in verbiage which is almost pathetic.
+'Gladstone's magnificent speech had a great effect here,' wrote Lord
+Granville. 'It will hasten the _dénouement_ one way or the other in
+Russia.
+
+'I understand that the Emperor is decidedly pacific; but he believes his
+father lost himself from want of firmness, that he himself is determined
+to be firm, and that the particular firmness which appeals to him, is
+not that which goes against the wishes of his army.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 1, 1885.
+
+ A war between England and Russia is much dreaded by the
+ French. They fear that it would leave Bismarck without any
+ counterpoise in Europe. Any influence they may have will no doubt
+ be exercised in favour of peace, but their influence at this moment
+ does not count very much. I do not know that they would have any
+ strong sympathy with Russia if hostilities broke out, but such a
+ feeling would be produced by anything which irritated them with us
+ on account of Egyptian or other matters. Anyhow we must be prepared
+ to find them exacting and susceptible.
+
+ The consequences of the war as regards the money market here
+ would be disastrous; but it is believed they would be still more
+ disastrous at Berlin.
+
+ The dangerous point is considered here to be the notions of
+ military honour, of a peculiar kind, which prevail in the Russian
+ as much as, or more than, in other Continental armies.
+
+ These military notions in the armies do not at all require
+ that the rulers of the armies should keep their words to
+ foreigners, or abide by their international engagements; but they
+ do require that, right or wrong, the rulers should not allow the
+ _amour-propre_ of the army to be wounded. The Emperor of Russia
+ probably shares these feelings, and at any rate he would certainly
+ be afraid to run counter to them. Those here who profess to
+ understand Russia declare that she has no desire to take Herat or
+ to annex any part of Afghanistan. They think that the ultimate
+ object at which she is really aiming is to extend her possessions
+ to the Persian Gulf, and that she would be tractable enough about
+ the Afghan frontier, if that question were separated from military
+ honour, or rather vanity.
+
+ I met Freycinet and Herbette at dinner yesterday. They seemed
+ to be much relieved at having got rid of the _Bosphore Egyptien_
+ difficulty, and to be really much obliged to you for the help you
+ had given to them.
+
+The _Bosphore Egyptien_, a French newspaper in Cairo which continually
+attacked the British administration in Egypt with unparalleled
+malignity, had at length worn out the patience of Sir Evelyn Baring, and
+been temporarily suspended.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 15, 1885.
+
+ The symptoms apparent here indicate that Bismarck is busily
+ employed in getting up a European coalition against England on the
+ Egyptian question. He has very nearly succeeded, if not quite, in
+ isolating us in the Suez Canal Commission. He would seem to have
+ put great pressure for this purpose upon Italy, who was disposed to
+ side with us, and to have frightened or cajoled Holland and Spain.
+ With Russia and Austria he seems to have made a regular cabal. It
+ has required great tact and firmness on Pauncefote's part to have
+ resisted the endeavours to turn the Commission into a political
+ conference on the whole Egyptian question, and at the same time
+ to have avoided breaking it up prematurely. Another circumstance
+ which Bismarck is using as a lever against us, is the levying by
+ the Egyptian Government of the tax upon the coupon, before the
+ Financial Convention has been ratified by all the parties to it.
+
+ He has sent Courcel here from Berlin to seduce or terrify
+ the French Government, and is said to have charged him with large
+ offers relative to establishing an international administration in
+ Egypt, and assigning to France a preponderant influence in such an
+ administration. What the real offers may be, of course, I cannot
+ say, but I think the French are half afraid of them. Probably, like
+ all Bismarck's demonstrations in so-called support of France, they
+ contain the essential elements--the employing a considerable number
+ of French troops at a distance from France, and the promoting
+ ill-will between France and England.
+
+These suspicions as to Bismarck's motives were confirmed by Lord
+Rosebery, who at the time occupied a minor post in the Gladstone
+administration, and had lately paid a visit to Germany.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 30, 1885.
+
+ Rosebery has not yet written out the report (which Blowitz
+ saw), but he has given me a full account from his notes.
+
+ Bismarck acknowledged that he had been thwarting us in every
+ way; but at the last conversation (influenced, Rosebery thought,
+ by an unsatisfactory conversation with Courcel) he was much more
+ conciliatory.
+
+ He was exceedingly civil to Rosebery; hostile to Gladstone,
+ and especially to Derby.
+
+ He is a great man, but he sees through a great many
+ millstones.
+
+ The Emperor is certainly unwell. Rosebery is convinced that
+ Bismarck will retire for a time on his death.
+
+Judging from the material available, no statesman ever disliked so many
+persons as Bismarck, and the objects of his antipathy were not confined
+to his own sex. Busch's book and the works of other authors contain
+frequent references to the grievances which he entertained towards women
+who were alleged to have interfered with his policy, and, whether these
+charges were well founded or not, he made no secret of his animosity
+against even so important a personage as the Empress Augusta. In fact
+there can be little doubt that it was owing to the despotic influence
+exercised by the Chancellor that the Empress, who had had the misfortune
+to incur his displeasure, was forced to leave Berlin and to reside for a
+considerable period at Coblentz.
+
+Apparently the man who inspired him with the greatest aversion was
+Gortschakoff, but it is easy to understand that from the Bismarckian
+point of view, Mr. Gladstone and Lord Derby represented a singularly
+futile type of statesman. Lord Rosebery's prophecy with regard to his
+retirement was only partially correct. In private conversation, Bismarck
+is understood to have calculated upon three years of office under the
+present German Emperor; whereas he only succeeded in remaining for two,
+and his retirement was compulsory and not voluntary.
+
+One of the notable events in Paris in 1885 was the death of Victor Hugo.
+His funeral was made the occasion of a great ceremonial, and Queen
+Victoria, who was always much interested in functions of this nature,
+desired that she should be furnished with a special report. Any one
+who happened to have been a witness of the Victor Hugo funeral would
+corroborate the accuracy of the following account, which is probably in
+striking contrast to the word pictures of the newspaper correspondents
+of the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, June 4, 1885.
+
+ Lord Lyons presents his humble duty to Your Majesty and
+ in obedience to Your Majesty's commands, proceeds to state the
+ impression made upon him by the funeral of Victor Hugo.
+
+ There was nothing striking, splendid or appropriate, either in
+ the monstrous catafalque erected under the Arc de Triomphe, or in
+ the trappings of the funeral. There was nothing mournful or solemn
+ in the demeanour of the people. The impressive part of the scene
+ consisted in the vast crowds from all parts of France and from many
+ other countries. As decorations of the scene, were the innumerable
+ wreaths, some conveyed in cars and some carried in the hands of
+ those who offered them.
+
+ The aspect was that of a vast assemblage of people gathered
+ together for some ordinary demonstration, or from curiosity. On
+ the other hand, perfect order was preserved. Both those who joined
+ in the procession and those who lined the streets through which it
+ passed, maintained the good humour and civility which are seldom
+ wanting to a Paris crowd. At some points attempts were made to
+ raise anarchical or socialistic cries, but met with no response.
+ The distance from the point of departure to the Arc de Triomphe is
+ about three miles by the route taken, which was through some of the
+ finest avenues of Paris. The procession began at 11 o'clock in the
+ morning and went on until after 4 in the afternoon.
+
+ The general impression left upon Lord Lyons by the day was one
+ of weariness and unconcern. The orderliness of the people was a
+ satisfactory symptom, but the total absence of strong feeling was
+ chilling, and the studied avoidance of any recognition of religion
+ did away with all solemnity.
+
+On June 12, the Gladstone Government, having been defeated during a
+Budget debate, resigned, and left to the Conservatives the ungrateful
+task of facing an accumulation of difficulties while in a minority in
+the House of Commons. Lord Salisbury took Lord Granville's place at the
+Foreign Office and the transfer was marked by a double compliment to
+Lord Lyons. Lord Granville, who was always extremely popular with all
+those with whom he was in any way connected, with habitual kindliness
+and generosity expressed his obligations to the Ambassador. 'An ordinary
+letter of farewell and of thanks would very inadequately express my
+feelings to you. I cannot say how much I have valued the loyal and
+important assistance you have given me in most difficult circumstances.'
+
+Lord Salisbury showed his appreciation by at once asking him to come
+over to England in order to discuss the general situation, and upon
+his return to Paris in July, he was able to report that the change of
+Government in England appeared to have had a beneficial effect upon
+Anglo-French relations. 'The statement you made in the House of Lords
+has made an excellent impression. Freycinet seems to be really disposed
+to abstain from endeavouring to thwart us or to raise difficulties for
+us with regard to Egyptian Finance. He also appears to be inclined to
+come to terms with us about Newfoundland and other matters.'
+
+'I think he is sincerely desirous to put the relations between the
+two countries on a good footing, but I cannot yet say that he will be
+willing to make sacrifices for this purpose.'
+
+As Freycinet, however, showed few symptoms of being willing to retire
+from the position he had taken up with regard to the eventual British
+evacuation of Egypt, and to the resumption by France of an influence
+equal with our own, his professions of friendship did not appear to be
+of much value. Some apprehension too was caused by the ostentatious
+announcements in the French press, that the numerous military forces in
+the Far East released in consequence of the conclusion of peace with
+China would return by the Suez Canal and would therefore be 'available
+for other purposes in the Mediterranean.' What was perhaps more
+encouraging, was the increasing distaste for Spirited Colonial Policy
+combined with renewed distrust of Bismarck's intentions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 14, 1885.
+
+ I have been rejoiced by your telegram announcing that Germany,
+ Austria, and Italy agree to the issue of the Egyptian Loan Decree.
+ It looks as if you were on the eve of settling the question most
+ pressing in point of time (that of the money for Egypt), and I
+ hope it augurs well for the disposition generally of the German
+ Chancellor. The National Fête here puts a stop to all business for
+ to-day, but I shall see Freycinet about the issue of the Decree
+ to-morrow.
+
+ The debate on the Budget for 1886 elicited some curious
+ speeches in the Chamber of Deputies three days ago on the
+ 'Expéditions lointaines.' There was no difficulty in showing that
+ they had all cost more than they were worth. They were plainly held
+ by the Deputies to be unpopular in the country, and condemnation of
+ them is likely to be one of the election cries of the extreme Left.
+ But hardly any one seemed to see the way to bring them to an end.
+ In fact, it looked as if France had got into the groove which by a
+ fatality leads to annexation and conquest by strong and civilized
+ nations when they once begin to establish themselves amongst weak
+ and barbarous peoples. All this may delight Prince Bismarck,
+ whose avowed object is to find an outlet for what he calls French
+ vanity and restlessness, and a gulf to swallow up French troops
+ and treasures at a distance from Europe. From a certain point of
+ view this may not be without its advantages to other nations; but
+ it is not without danger to the good relations between France and
+ England--between whom awkward questions may arise all over the
+ world. In the present I am uneasy about Siam and more so about
+ Burmah. It is not a pleasant speculation to consider the change
+ which may be produced in no very remote future, in the condition
+ of our Indian Empire, if it be in contact with a great European
+ Power both on the north and on the east.
+
+In August, 1885, a prodigious outburst of Anglophobia occurred in Paris
+in consequence of mendacious statements published by Rochefort in his
+newspaper, charging the British military authorities in the Soudan
+with the assassination of a certain Olivier Pain. Olivier Pain was an
+ex-Communist and French journalist who had accompanied the Turks in
+the campaign of 1877, and who was reputed to be occasionally employed
+by the Turkish Government as a secret agent. In the spring of 1884,
+he had set off to join the Mahdi, and having completely disappeared
+from view, and being presumably dead, Rochefort took the opportunity
+to announce that Lord Wolseley had procured his death by offering a
+reward of fifty pounds for his head. The enterprise had been allotted to
+Major Kitchener[43]: 'un sinistre gredin nourri de psaumes et abreuvé
+de whisky qui a eu le premier, l'idée de mettre à prix la tête de celui
+qu'il appelait "l'espion français."'
+
+As, however, it was impossible to reach Lord Wolseley and the
+'sinistre gredin,' Rochefort urged that vengeance should be taken upon
+'l'Ambassadeur Lyons.' 'A partir d'aujourd'hui il est notre ôtage!
+Sa vieille peau est le gage de la satisfaction qui nous est due.'
+'L'Ambassadeur Lyons' was, however, also beyond reach, as he happened to
+be on leave, and it was, therefore, suggested that the few secretaries
+(of whom I was one), who were then in Paris, should be forthwith strung
+up to the lamp-posts in the Rue du Faubourg St. Honoré. The astonishing
+thing was that these ravings were actually taken more or less seriously,
+and that for some time the French authorities found it necessary to
+protect the Embassy with numerous police detachments.
+
+It has always been one of the inscrutable mysteries that Rochefort,
+ever since the Commune, was allowed a toleration accorded to no one
+else, on the ground of his alleged exceptional wit and humour, whereas
+his effusions consisted almost entirely of gross personal abuse of the
+lowest type, levelled indiscriminately at prominent individuals of any
+description, and largely directed against England, whose hospitality he
+enjoyed during many years of exile.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 37: _Times_ correspondent in Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Col. the Hon. George Villiers, Military Attaché at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 39: Lyons, Feb. 1883.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Sir Joseph Crowe, K.C.M.G., Commercial Attaché at the
+Paris Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 41: French Minister at Tangier.]
+
+[Footnote 42: Mr. G. Errington, M.P., had been despatched by Mr.
+Gladstone on a secret mission to the Vatican in connection with the Home
+Rule agitation.]
+
+[Footnote 43: Now Lord Kitchener.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE LAST YEAR'S WORK
+
+(1886-1887)
+
+
+The sudden and unexpected declaration in September of the Union of
+Bulgaria and Eastern Roumelia which caused so much perturbation in
+Europe, and resulted in a war between Servia and Bulgaria, left the
+French quite indifferent; but the imminence of hostilities between
+England and Burmah provoked French ill-humour, which was all the
+more inexcusable because no protest had ever been made against
+French proceedings in Tonquin and Madagascar. The truth was that the
+Burmese resistance to the Indian Government was largely due to French
+encouragement. As far back as 1883 a Burmese Mission had arrived in
+Paris, and kept studiously aloof from the British Embassy; and although
+every opportunity had been taken to impress upon the French Government
+the peculiar relations between Burmah and British India, there was not
+the least doubt that the object of the Burmese had been to obtain from
+the French Government such a Treaty as would enable them to appeal
+to France in the event of their being involved in difficulties with
+England. How much encouragement they actually received is not known, but
+it was probably sufficient to effect their undoing.
+
+ The papers are abusing us about Burmah, and being quite
+ innocent of any aggression themselves in that part of the world,
+ are horrified at our holding our own there. Nevertheless, I hope
+ the Indian Government will finish the thing out of hand, for an
+ ugly state of feeling about it is growing up here.
+
+The rapidity with which the operations against Burmah were conducted
+left nothing to be desired. The campaign was over within a few weeks;
+on January 1, 1886, the annexation of Burmah was proclaimed, and the
+affairs of that country ceased to be of any further interest to the
+French Government.
+
+Lord Salisbury's tenure of the Foreign Office, which had been marked
+by so successful a policy that even Mr. Gladstone had expressed
+satisfaction, came to an end early in 1886, and he was succeeded by Lord
+Rosebery. 'The irony of events,' wrote the latter to Lord Lyons, 'has
+sent me to the Foreign Office, and one of the incidents of this which
+is most agreeable to me, is that it brings me into close relations with
+yourself.'
+
+Although the Paris press had circulated a ridiculous fiction that Lord
+Rosebery (presumably because he was personally acquainted with Bismarck)
+was anti-French by inclination, the change of Government in England was
+received in France with perfect equanimity, as had been the case in the
+previous autumn.
+
+The new Foreign Secretary, however, could not fail to be painfully
+impressed by the unsatisfactory feeling which obviously existed in
+France towards England, and found it difficult of explanation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Rosebery to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 3, 1886.
+
+ I am rather anxious about the attitude of the French. In
+ my short tenure of office they have brought up three or four
+ questions, all in the highest degree distasteful to us.
+
+ 1. The Consul at Suakim: as to which they say, with accuracy
+ which is disputed, that they had gone too far and could not
+ withdraw the appointment.
+
+ 2. Arbitration on the Somali coast troubles: as to which they
+ declare that Salisbury promised it, which Salisbury, I understand,
+ denies.
+
+ 3. The revival of the Suez Canal Commission.
+
+ 4. The announcement made to me by Waddington yesterday that
+ they should be obliged shortly to send a cargo of recidivists to
+ the Isle of Pines. I remonstrated strongly with him, and indeed
+ I cannot foresee all the consequences, should they carry their
+ intention into effect. One, however, I do clearly perceive, which
+ is that we should have to denounce the Postal Convention of 1856,
+ which gives the Messageries privileges in Australian ports, which
+ could not be sustained, and which the colonists would not for a
+ moment, under such circumstances, respect.
+
+ But these are details. What I want to point out is the
+ apparent animus displayed in these different proceedings. I shall
+ not mention them to my colleagues until I hear your view of them,
+ and anything you may be able to collect on the subject.
+
+ What does it all mean? These things did not occur during the
+ late Government? Are they directed against the new Administration?
+ I cannot view them as a chapter of accidents.
+
+ As for myself, I have entered upon this office with the most
+ sincere wish to be friendly with France. There can be no earthly
+ reason why we should not be so. It is a pity, therefore, that our
+ cordiality should be poisoned at its source.
+
+ I wish you would let me know what you think of all this. You
+ can pick up much directly, and perhaps even more indirectly, on
+ these points. Pray forgive the length of this letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, March 5, 1886.
+
+ I have naturally been on the watch since you came into office
+ for indications of the feelings of the French Government respecting
+ the change. In answer to your letter of the day before yesterday,
+ asking my opinion, I can only say that I think the French are quite
+ as well disposed towards the new Government as they were to the
+ late one--indeed, of the two, I should say better. We come so much
+ into contact with the French all over the globe that questions
+ more or less unpleasant are always arising in smaller or greater
+ numbers, according to circumstances; and French feeling is in a
+ chronic state of irritability about Egypt.
+
+ The four subjects you mention are certainly annoying, but I do
+ not believe that the French proceedings respecting them have been
+ actuated by any animus against the present English Ministry.
+
+ I shall be somewhat staggered in this opinion, however, if the
+ French Government proposes to substitute arbitration by any third
+ Power for the understanding that the Somali coast questions shall
+ be treated by friendly negotiations between the two Governments,
+ and that meanwhile the _status quo_ shall not be disturbed. With a
+ view to proceeding with the negotiation, M. Waddington proposed to
+ Lord Salisbury on Jan. 20th, and by a written note the next day,
+ that an inquiry should be made on the spot by two Commissioners,
+ one English and one French. Lord Salisbury received the verbal
+ proposal favourably, but did not at the moment give a definitive
+ answer.
+
+ The proposal to reassemble the Suez Canal Commission is simply
+ the renewal of a proposal made by M. Waddington to Lord Salisbury
+ at the beginning of January.
+
+ The most serious of the affairs you mention appears to me to
+ be the imminent despatch of a cargo of _récidivistes_ to the Isle
+ of Pines. I have seen from the beginning the importance of this
+ _récidiviste_ question as regards public feeling in Australia,
+ and there is hardly any question about which I have taken so much
+ trouble. I have attacked successive French Ministers upon it in
+ season and out of season, but I have never succeeded in obtaining
+ any promise that _récidivistes_ should not be sent to the Pacific.
+ As I reported to you, I remonstrated with Freycinet about the
+ intention actually to send off a batch, as soon as I became aware
+ of it. I did not perceive any difference in his manner or language
+ from what they had been when some other Ministers had been in
+ office in England, but my remonstrances were equally ineffectual. I
+ am glad you had an opportunity of speaking strongly to Waddington.
+ I see troubles ahead, for the Australians have before now
+ threatened to pass Dominion laws against French ships found to have
+ escaped convicts on board, which seem to go a good deal beyond
+ international usage, not to say law.
+
+ It is time, however, for me to wind up this long story. My
+ answer to your question is that I am far from thinking that there
+ is any _malus animus_ against Her Majesty's present Government on
+ the part of Freycinet and his Cabinet. Nor do I know that there is
+ more than the usual irritability towards England among the French
+ public; but still I feel strongly that it behoves us to tread
+ cautiously as well as firmly, when we are coming upon French ground.
+
+The spring of 1886 was noticeable for another Government onslaught
+upon such members of ex-reigning families as were then residing in
+France. Of these the most conspicuous were the Orleans Princes. There
+was nothing in their conduct to cause alarm to the Republic, as they
+confined themselves to taking part in social functions, at which they
+maintained a kind of semi-state, being always attended by ladies and
+gentlemen-in-waiting after the manner of recognized Royal personages.
+This innocent procedure was sufficient excuse to work up an agitation
+against them, and to introduce an Expulsion Bill.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, May 25, 1886.
+
+ The question of the day is the expulsion of the Princes. The
+ measure, if taken, will be quite unjustifiable, discreditable to
+ the Government, and, I should say, not at all injurious to the
+ cause of the victims. Considering the people and the institutions
+ with which they had to deal, the partisans of the Orleans Princes
+ have not been so prudent and correct as the Princes themselves.
+ They have gone about twitting the Republicans with weakness for
+ permitting the very mild demonstration made by the Royalists, and
+ declaring that such want of vigour was simply a sign of the decay
+ of the Republic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The general opinion is that the Expulsion Bill will pass in
+ its present, or even in an aggravated form, and that if it does,
+ the Government will proceed to expel the Comte de Paris at least,
+ if not the Duc de Chartres, and some others. On the other hand, it
+ is not expected that the Bill confiscating the property, real and
+ personal, of the Orleans and Bonapartes will be adopted.
+
+ Much anxiety is felt respecting Boulanger's goings on with
+ respect to the army. He seems to think of nothing but currying
+ favour with the lowest ranks in the service, and with the mob
+ outside. It is believed by many people that he would not act
+ vigorously, as Minister of War, against any disturbances, but would
+ try to turn them to account and set up for himself as dictator or
+ what not.
+
+ The financial situation is very bad, and if common scandal is
+ to be listened to, the very short duration of French Ministries is
+ having the effect of making most of the individual Ministers very
+ unscrupulous and very impatient to make hay during the very short
+ time that the sun shines.
+
+The above letter contains one of the first allusions to the enterprising
+impostor Boulanger, who very nearly succeeded in making history, and
+of whom much was to be heard for some considerable space of time. His
+popularity was due in great measure to the vague discontent which
+was then prevalent in France. People thought that they saw the same
+inefficiency in the Government, the same relaxation of authority, the
+same financial difficulties, and the same venality which marked the last
+days of the Second Empire. There seemed to be no individual, in or out
+of the Royal or Imperial Dynasties, capable of exciting any enthusiasm
+or of inspiring any confidence, and public feeling was in that state of
+lassitude and dissatisfaction which might give a reasonable chance for a
+bold stroke for power.
+
+The scandalous Expulsion Bill passed both Chambers, and the Princes took
+their departure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, June 25, 1886.
+
+ The departure of the Comte de Paris from Eu has been
+ accompanied by many very sad circumstances, but I cannot help
+ thinking that his political position is improved by his expulsion.
+ His own partisans are much pleased at its having elicited from
+ him a distinct assertion of a claim to the throne, and of a
+ determination to work for the restoration of monarchy.
+
+ It is less easy to give an opinion on the position of the
+ Princes who have remained in France. It seems to be hardly
+ compatible with dignity and comfort, considering the unabated
+ hostility to them of the Reds, who seem generally to end in
+ overpowering all generous and conservative feelings in the Chambers
+ and in the Government.
+
+ Prince Napoleon and his son Prince Victor went off in opposite
+ directions, one to Geneva, the other to Brussels. The departure of
+ neither seems to have made much apparent sensation in Paris when
+ it took place, but I am far from certain that Prince Victor is not
+ really a more formidable opponent to the Republic than is the Comte
+ de Paris.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, July 2, 1886.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The topic of the day here is the conduct of the Minister of
+ War, General Boulanger. He was supposed to be an Orleanist. Then
+ he went round to Clémençeau, and was put into Freycinet's Cabinet
+ as a representative of the Clémençeau party, which though not the
+ most Red in the Chamber, is more Red than the Freycinet section.
+ Since he has been in office Boulanger has lost no opportunity of
+ ingratiating himself with the Radicals, and he has been travelling
+ about the country making speeches, the object of which has
+ evidently been to gain personal popularity for himself without
+ regard to his colleagues.
+
+ He has also by degrees put creatures of his own into the
+ great military commands. A crisis was produced, during the last
+ few days, by his quarrelling with General Saussier, the military
+ Governor of Paris, and provoking him into resigning. He is also
+ said to have used strange language in the Council of Ministers. At
+ any rate, President Grévy and the Ministers seem to have thought
+ they would be more comfortable at Paris without having a satellite
+ of Boulanger as Governor, and they have insisted upon declining
+ Saussier's resignation. From the way people talk, one would think
+ that the questions were whether Boulanger is aiming at being a
+ Cromwell or a Monk, and if a Monk, which dynasty he will take up.
+
+ There is a good deal of alarm here about foreign affairs. The
+ reports of a large concentration of Russian troops in Bessarabia
+ are supposed to confirm other indications that Russia is meditating
+ a revenge for the check she has sustained with regard to Bulgaria.
+ This, it is supposed, must bring Austria into the field. Moreover,
+ Bismarck does not seem to be in an amiable mood towards France;
+ and with or without instigation from him, Germans talk as if war
+ was inevitable.
+
+ Then the Republic here has lasted sixteen years, and that is
+ about the time which it takes to make the French tired of a form of
+ Government. The Republic has not been successful financially, and
+ trade and agriculture are not prosperous, nor is the reputation of
+ the Republican administration high for purity or efficiency.
+
+ So there is plenty to croak about for those who are inclined
+ to croak.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, July 13, 1886.
+
+ The regular session of the French Chambers is to be closed the
+ day after to-morrow, and the Chambers are to spend to-morrow at
+ the Review at Longchamps, and I suppose to take part in the other
+ nuisances which makes Paris insupportable on a National Fête day.
+ I conclude the Chambers will come back in October for an extra
+ session as usual. In fact, they have not yet voted the Budget; or,
+ I had almost said, any useful measure. In Commercial matters and
+ indeed in everything relating to intercourse with other countries,
+ they have shown the narrowest and most exclusive spirit. Their
+ great feat has been the law for the persecution of the Princes,
+ which seems to be carried out as harshly as possible. I should
+ not have said that the literal wording of the law necessitated
+ or even justified the dismissal from the army of Princes who
+ already belonged to it, but I suppose that was the intention of
+ the legislators. The Duc d'Aumale's letter to the President is a
+ powerful document, but was sure to lead to his expulsion, and was
+ perhaps intended to have that effect.
+
+ Among people who ought to have good information from abroad,
+ the alarm as to a war this autumn seems stronger than among
+ the French politicians who confine themselves more closely to
+ considering French feeling at home. Certainly it comes round to
+ one in various ways from Germany that war is very generally
+ expected, or at all events talked of there. The accounts current
+ in Germany of supposed French provocations look as if there was
+ a party there trying to work up hostile feeling against France.
+ An alliance between France and Russia seems to be the bugbear. I
+ don't see symptoms at present of any war spirit in this country;
+ but of course a quarrel between Russia and Germany would be a great
+ temptation to French Chauvinism.
+
+The abhorred annual fête of July 14, 1886, possessed an interest which
+had been wanting previously, and has never since been renewed. This
+was due to the presence of a number of troops at the Longchamps Review
+who had just returned from Tonquin, and to the excitement caused by
+the first appearance of Boulanger at a big military display in Paris.
+Notwithstanding the inflated rubbish which was published the next day in
+the French press, there could not be the least doubt that the Tonquin
+troops were received without the slightest enthusiasm. In Paris the
+very word 'Tonquin' was hated; the country was associated with loss of
+life, and with heavy taxation, and nothing could have expressed more
+eloquently the disenchantment produced by a Spirited Colonial Policy,
+than the chilling reception accorded to these returned soldiers. The
+enthusiasm which should have been bestowed upon these humble instruments
+was lavished upon the charlatan who at that moment was the most
+prominent and popular figure in the eye of the French public.
+
+The military mountebank (aptly christened by Jules Ferry, 'a music
+hall St. Arnaud') had, with some foresight, provided himself with a
+high-actioned black circus horse, and those who were present on the
+occasion will never forget the moment when he advanced to salute the
+President, and other notabilities established in the official Tribune.
+Only a few days before, it was currently believed, he had terrified his
+ministerial colleagues by appearing at a Cabinet Council in uniform,
+and now as he pranced backwards or forwards on the circus horse and the
+public yelled their acclamations, President Grévy and the uninteresting
+crowd of bourgeois ministers and deputies who surrounded him, seemed
+visibly to quiver and flinch as shuddering memories of December 2 and
+other _coups d'état_ obtruded themselves upon their recollections.
+
+From that day Boulanger became a dangerous man; the circus horse
+had done the trick; the general embodied in the public fancy the
+_clinquant_, for which the French had so long been sighing in secret;
+_l'homme qui monte à cheval_ in place of _l'homme qui monte à la
+tribune_, and for a long time he survived even that ridicule which in
+France is supposed to kill more effectively than elsewhere. Even when
+he engaged in a duel with an elderly and short-sighted civilian, M.
+Floquet, and was decisively worsted, he continued to remain a popular
+hero.
+
+Lord Rosebery, upon whom the unreasonable ill-feeling then constantly
+shown by the French towards England had made a painful impression,
+had realized in May that the Gladstone Government was doomed, and
+had wisely decided in consequence that a process of marking time
+was preferable to embarking upon anything in the nature of a heroic
+policy. Upon his retirement and the formation of a new administration,
+Lord Lyons experienced what was probably the greatest surprise of his
+life in the shape of the following letter from Lord Salisbury. In
+order to reinforce its arguments the late Lord Currie, then Permanent
+Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign Office, was sent over with it to
+Paris.
+
+[Illustration: _General Boulanger._
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Confidential. July 26, 1886.
+
+ I accepted yesterday the Queen's commission to form a
+ Government. It is a task full of difficulties; and I would have
+ gladly seen Lord Hartington undertake it. This, however, he could
+ not be induced to do; and the duty falls upon me. One of my first
+ thoughts is to provide a Foreign Secretary for the new Government:
+ for I could not, with any hope of carrying it through successfully,
+ repeat the experiment of last summer by uniting the Foreign
+ Secretaryship with the Premiership.
+
+ There is no one possessing the experience and knowledge of
+ Foreign Affairs which you have, and no one whose appointment would
+ exercise so great a moral authority in Europe. And we certainly
+ have not in our political ranks any one who could claim a tithe of
+ the fitness for the office which every one would acknowledge in
+ your case. I earnestly hope the proposal may be not unacceptable to
+ you. If that should happily be the case, a great difficulty in our
+ way will have been most successfully removed.
+
+ As there is much to be said on the matter which it would be
+ too long to write, Currie has very kindly undertaken to take this
+ letter over and discuss the matter with you. We have talked it over
+ very fully.
+
+ If you should be in need of any interval of repose, I could
+ easily take the seals for a few weeks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris. July 27, 1886.
+
+ Currie brought me your letter early this morning. In answer to
+ it I sent you at 11.30 a.m. the following telegram:--
+
+ 'I am very much gratified, and I am very grateful for the kind
+ consideration with which your proposal is accompanied, but my
+ age and the state of my health make it quite impossible for me to
+ undertake the office.'
+
+ I hope I need not assure you that I am fully sensible of the
+ kindness of your letter, and that if I cannot feel that I merit all
+ you say of me, I am at least grateful for your good opinion.
+
+ The truth is, that I could not now undertake new and laborious
+ duties with any confidence that I could discharge them efficiently.
+ I feel the need of rest, and I am not equal to beginning a new
+ life of hard work. I could not conscientiously assume the great
+ responsibility which would be thrown upon me.
+
+If the post of Foreign Secretary has ever been offered during the
+last hundred years to any other person outside the ranks of orthodox
+party politicians the secret has been well kept, and it might perhaps
+be suggested that few people would be found with sufficient strength
+of mind to decline so glittering a prize. Lord Lyons, however, as is
+sufficiently evident, found no difficulty in at once deciding upon the
+refusal of an offer which the ordinary mediocrity would have accepted
+with avidity. In the above letter he founded his refusal upon grounds
+of age and ill-health, and in private he used to express the opinion
+that after the age of forty a man's faculties began and continued to
+deteriorate. But it is not in the least likely that he would have
+accepted the honour which it was proposed to bestow upon him, at any
+period of his life. His extreme modesty and diffidence have already
+been dwelt upon, but a more valuable quality than these is a man's
+realization of his own limitations, and it is probable that Lord Lyons,
+by the exercise of his exceptionally impartial judgment, was able to
+form a more correct opinion as to his own potentialities than Lord
+Salisbury. A thorough and profound knowledge of foreign politics is
+not the sole necessary qualification of an English Foreign Secretary;
+had such been the case, Lord Lyons would have been an ideal occupant
+of the post; but in England, where the value of Ministers is gauged
+chiefly by the fallacious test of oratorical capacity, the Foreign
+Secretary is constantly obliged to make speeches in defence of or in
+explanation of his policy, and although the House of Lords is the
+most long-suffering and good-natured assembly in the world, it would
+have been no easy task for a man of sixty-nine, who had never put two
+sentences together in public, to suddenly appear in Parliament as the
+representative of one of the most important departments, to say nothing
+of public meetings, deputations, banquets, etc. It may also be doubted
+whether, in spite of his many admirable qualities, he was really adapted
+for the post. All his life, he had been merely an instrument--a highly
+efficient instrument--of the existing Government, and had received
+instructions, which had invariably been carried out with singular skill
+and intelligence. But the responsibility had not been his, and as
+Foreign Secretary the initiative as well as the responsibility which
+would have rested upon him might have imposed too formidable a strain
+upon one of so cautious a temperament. Taking into consideration these
+doubts, his advanced age, failing health, and the effect of depression
+caused by the recent death of his much loved sister, the Dowager Duchess
+of Norfolk, the refusal of the Foreign Office by Lord Lyons was only an
+additional instance of that robust common sense which was one of his
+most pronounced characteristics. Lord Rosebery, at all events, thought
+that he had decided wisely.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Rosebery to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Dalmeny, Aug. 10, 1886.
+
+ As my Foreign Office episode is at an end, I write a line of
+ good-bye, not as a Minister, but on the footing of what I hope I
+ may call friendship.
+
+ My six months' experience has led me to the conviction that
+ our relations with France are really more troublesome than with
+ any other Power. She is always wanting something of us which it is
+ impossible to give her, and she then says plaintively, 'You never
+ do anything for me.' She is quite oblivious of the fact that she
+ never loses the opportunity of playing us a trick. Witness the
+ secret expedition to the New Hebrides. Nothing would have induced
+ me to go on with any one of the negotiations with Waddington until
+ they had removed their troops from those islands. Whenever he asked
+ for an answer about anything, I always turned the conversation
+ round to that interesting spot.
+
+ With this conviction, therefore, it has been a great comfort
+ to feel that you were at Paris.
+
+ I am not surprised that you did not care about my succession!
+ It is a weary post.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Heron's Ghyll, Uckfield, Aug. 17, 1886.
+
+ Your friendly letter has followed me here and has much
+ gratified me.
+
+ I think you must look back with great satisfaction to your
+ time at the Foreign Office. You have certainly won golden opinions
+ from your subordinates and from the world at large, which is
+ perhaps a less competent judge. My own official intercourse with
+ you was certainly both very pleasant to me and very satisfactory.
+
+ I attribute the difficulties with France more to the
+ inevitable consequences of our coming into contact with the French
+ in all parts of the world, than to any ill-will on either side,
+ although I do not pretend to say that the state of feeling is what
+ I could wish it to be.
+
+ Independently of any other considerations, I felt altogether
+ too old to undertake the Foreign Office. I was so convinced of
+ this, that I regarded it as what the French call an objection
+ _préjudicielle_ to entertaining the question at all.
+
+The post which Lord Lyons had declined was accepted by Lord Iddesleigh,
+who had just been removed from the House of Commons, and, as was only
+natural, it is evident that he was in the habit of consulting Lord
+Salisbury before taking any step of importance. In October, 1886, with
+the concurrence of Lord Salisbury, Lord Lyons was instructed to approach
+the French Government on the question of Egypt, and to explain the
+conditions under which it would be possible to terminate the British
+military occupation. There seems to be absolutely no doubt that Her
+Majesty's Government were perfectly sincere and honestly desirous of
+carrying out the promises that had been made at various times, and as
+subsequent history showed, it was the misguided opposition of France and
+Russia which was as much responsible as anything else for the permanent
+British occupation of Egypt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 22, 1886.
+
+ In my previous letter of to-day I have told you what M. de
+ Freycinet said to me about the Suez Canal Convention. I had a long
+ interview with him, but though I gave him plenty of opportunities,
+ he did not say one other word about Egypt. This being the case,
+ I thought it prudent to abstain, at all events at this first
+ interview, from saying anything on my side. So far then I have not
+ made known to him any part of the contents of your letter to Lord
+ Salisbury of the 18th or of his telegraphic answer.
+
+ The fact is, that from what I have made out since I came back
+ here, I am led to think that the French Government have now good
+ reason to doubt whether they would get Bismarck's support if they
+ raised the Egyptian question with a view to embarrass us. This
+ being the case, they are very much hesitating to do so, and are
+ on the look-out for signs of our impressions on the subject, and
+ would interpret any appearance of unusual anxiety on our part, or
+ any fresh offers of concessions from us, simply as indications
+ that we still thought Germany might join against us. If the French
+ Government are not pretty sure of help and sympathy from abroad,
+ they will probably not stir in the matter.
+
+ In the meantime, however, the press has been strongly excited,
+ probably by d'Aunay and Charmes. There is a very nasty article,
+ principally about the financial part of the Egyptian question, in
+ the _Débuts_ this morning.
+
+ I shall perhaps be able to see my way more clearly in a day or
+ two. In the meantime I am disposed to think the most prudent plan
+ will be to be reserved and firm about Egypt, but not to display
+ anxiety on the subject.
+
+The idea of Lord Salisbury, speaking generally, was that a somewhat
+distant date of evacuation should be foreshadowed; that if evacuation,
+as was fully intended, should be carried out, some return should be
+expected for the expenditure of British blood and treasure, and that
+the Suez Canal difficulty should be settled without further delay. He
+considered that the negotiations should be carried on with the Porte
+(Sir Henry Drummond Wolff had already been despatched on this mission),
+and that confidential communications should be made to France and
+Germany.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 26, 1886.
+
+ I shall be very anxious to know what line Waddington took on
+ his return to his post, and particularly what, if anything, he said
+ about Egypt.
+
+ Freycinet is the man chiefly responsible for the refusal of
+ France to join in our expedition to Egypt, and this no doubt makes
+ him very anxious to gain for himself the credit of some striking
+ success in getting England out of that country. So far as I can
+ make out here, the attempts that have been made to get the Powers
+ to unite in calling for a general Conference upon Egyptian affairs
+ have not met with much success. If Bismarck decidedly opposes
+ attempts of this kind, they will no doubt be abandoned. The Press
+ continue to urge strong measures against our continuing in Egypt,
+ and is not measured in its language.
+
+ The autumn session is often fatal to French Ministers. I
+ recollect Gambetta's saying to me not long before his own fall:
+ '_En automne les feuilles tombent et les porte-feuilles aussi._'
+
+It is more than likely that the instructions which M. Waddington
+received about this period were of a disagreeable nature. A well-known
+French Ambassador once remarked to me some years later, that the London
+Embassy was no very desirable post from the French diplomatist's point
+of view. 'We are sent there with the mission of getting the English out
+of Egypt, and the thing cannot be done!'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 23, 1886.
+
+ Freycinet's aim seems to be to improve his own position in
+ the Chambers and in the country by obtaining our withdrawal from
+ Egypt, and of course the object cannot be attained unless he can
+ make it appear that the withdrawal is his doing. Hence his strong
+ desire that we should negotiate with him and his dislike to our
+ negotiating with Turkey or any other Power.
+
+ The crushing defeat of the Right in the elections in the
+ Department of the Nord is another proof of their blindness in
+ misusing the chance they had after the general election. They might
+ possibly have led gradually up to a restoration by giving strength
+ to Conservative principles and measures. They could only discredit
+ themselves by joining the extreme Radicals and attempting to
+ produce mischief and confusion.
+
+ The Germans are either very dilatory, or they have some
+ _arrière pensée_ about the Zanzibar affair. Yesterday afternoon
+ Münster was still without any instructions to make the joint
+ invitation to the French.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 3, 1886.
+
+ You will see by my despatch that Freycinet has again attacked
+ me about Egypt. He wants the negotiation to go through him, and
+ if possible to be made with him, independently of the Turks, or
+ at least virtually in conjunction with us. I have not yet seen
+ any symptoms of his being anxious really to help us in Egyptian
+ matters; and I am not generally favourable to carrying on parallel
+ negotiations, or the same negotiation in different places. The
+ danger of informal conversations between Freycinet and me is that,
+ however cautious I may be, he may somehow or other find occasion
+ to quote me, as being more _coulant_ than you. At any rate, if I
+ had to talk to him it would be very necessary for you to tell me
+ very exactly how far I could go: and above all, that I should be
+ guarded from holding any language which might by any possibility be
+ embarrassing to the line circumstances might make it advisable for
+ Her Majesty's Government to take in Parliament afterwards.
+
+ I was long enough at Constantinople to see that no dependence
+ whatever was to be placed upon what the Porte told an Ambassador
+ about his colleagues. Still I cannot say that the Turkish
+ revelation about the communications the Porte affects to receive
+ from the French and Russian Ambassadors about Egypt and about us,
+ are, in the face of them, improbable. At any rate, our views must
+ be much nearer than those we now have to the French ideas, before
+ we shall get any real help from France at the Porte.
+
+ I write, as you know, in ignorance of Wolff's opinion, as he
+ did not stop here on his way home.
+
+ Freycinet's defeat in the Chamber this afternoon is serious
+ because it followed a strong speech from himself against the
+ _Sous-Préfet_ abolition, but he has wonderful skill in patching
+ things up.
+
+Freycinet in December was defeated by one of those combinations of
+Royalist and Radicals which were not uncommon in French politics, and
+although the absurdity of the situation was obvious to every one,
+insisted on placing his resignation and that of the Cabinet in President
+Grévy's hands. A change of Government was so useless that even those
+who had combined to overthrow Freycinet endeavoured to persuade him
+to reconsider his determination. He remained obdurate, however, and
+the President, casting about for a successor, pitched at first upon M.
+Floquet, a strong Radical who was particularly obnoxious to the Russian
+Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 7, 1886.
+
+ The chances seem to be in favour of Floquet being Prime
+ Minister. He is of the section of the Chamber called 'Gauche
+ radical,' that is to say, he falls just short of the most extreme
+ Left. Who would be his Minister for Foreign Affairs and what would
+ be his foreign policy I do not pretend to say. The incident in
+ his life most talked about is his having cried out, '_Vive la
+ Pologne!_' and used some expressions taken as disrespectful to
+ the late Emperor of Russia, when His Majesty was at the Palais de
+ Justice, on his visit to Paris during the Exhibition of 1867. The
+ Russian Ambassadors have, I believe, declined or avoided exchanging
+ courtesies with him when he has since been in situations, such
+ as that of _Préfet de la Seine_, and President of the Chamber of
+ Deputies, which have brought him into communication with the rest
+ of the diplomatic body. Russia at this moment is paying so much
+ court to France that she might perhaps get over this.
+
+ The Left of the Chamber have hitherto been opposed to the
+ Tonquin and Madagascar Expeditions and to an adventurous and
+ Chauvin policy altogether; but if in power they would probably go
+ in for pleasing the Chamber and the bulk of the people out of doors
+ even more unreservedly than Freycinet did.
+
+ I should have regretted Freycinet's fall more, if he had
+ not taken up the Egyptian question in the way he did. Our
+ communications with him on that subject were becoming very
+ uncomfortable. I am not very sanguine, however, about their being
+ more satisfactory with his successor.
+
+The notion, however, of having M. Floquet as Prime Minister frightened
+every one except the extreme Radicals so much that that gentleman was
+unable to form an administration, and the choice of the President
+ultimately fell upon a M. Goblet, who was Radical enough for most people
+and not much hampered by pledges and declarations. The office of Foreign
+Minister remained vacant, but, much to the relief of Lord Lyons, it was
+definitely refused by M. Duclerc. Lord Lyons had, by this time, had no
+less than twenty-one different French Foreign Ministers to deal with,
+and of these Duclerc was the one he liked least. No suitable person
+seemed to be available, and it was in vain that, one after the other
+French diplomatists were solicited to accept the office. At length a
+Foreign Minister was found in M. Flourens, a brother of the well-known
+Communist who was killed in 1871. M. Flourens was completely ignorant of
+everything concerning foreign affairs, and his appointment was perhaps
+an unconscious tribute to the English practice of putting civilians at
+the head of our naval and military administrations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 21, 1886.
+
+ I have not yet had the means of improving my acquaintance
+ with Flourens, but I expect to have some conversation with him
+ to-morrow. He had not a word to say about Bulgaria when I saw him
+ on Friday. He did not seem to have known anything about foreign
+ affairs before he took office, nor to expect to stay long enough in
+ office to become acquainted with them. Some people suppose that he
+ is to make way for the return of Freycinet as soon as the Budget is
+ passed. Anyway, the Goblet Ministry is only the Freycinet Ministry
+ over again without the strongest man, who was undoubtedly Freycinet
+ himself. When Parliament meets, things will be just as they were.
+ There will still be in the Chamber 180 Deputies on the Right,
+ ready to vote any way in order to make mischief and discredit the
+ Republic; about 100 Deputies on the extreme Left, intimidating the
+ Government and forcing it into extreme Radical measures, they being
+ able to count in all emergencies upon getting the vote of the Right
+ to turn out a Ministry; and lastly there will be 300 remaining
+ deputies, who cannot agree enough amongst themselves to form a
+ majority that can be relied upon, who do not at all like violent
+ radical measures, but who are too nervously afraid of unpopularity
+ to show resolution in opposing the extreme Left.
+
+ So far the Comte de Paris's declaration seems simply to have
+ made the ultra-Monarchists furiously angry, and not to have induced
+ any great part of the Right to think of taking the wise course it
+ recommends.
+
+ I do not see any outward signs here of the strained relations
+ between France and Germany and the imminent war between the two
+ countries which the _Standard_ announces. But it is true that among
+ the French themselves some suspicion and distrust of Boulanger's
+ aims are becoming more apparent.
+
+The hackneyed saying: _Plus cela change, plus c'est la même chose_, was
+never more appropriate than in the case of the change from a Freycinet
+to a Goblet Government; one section of uninspiring ministers had merely
+given place to another, and no one in France seemed in any way the
+better for it.
+
+On New Year's Dav, 1887, President Grévy broke out into Latin in
+congratulating the Diplomatic Corps on the already long continuance
+of peace, but a more accurate view of the situation was expressed by
+a French newspaper in the sentence: 'Jamais année nouvelle ne s'est
+ouverte au milieu d'autant de promesses de paix et de préparatifs de
+guerre que l'année 1887.' 'I do not know,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'which is
+the nation which wishes for war. France certainly does not, she is, on
+the contrary, very much afraid of it. But one would feel more confidence
+in peace if there appeared less necessity in all countries to be
+perpetually giving pacific assurances. There are rumours of a defensive
+alliance between Russia and France. The bond of union between the two
+countries, if it exists, must be simply a common hatred of Germany.'
+
+At the beginning of the year 1887, the Germans professed to be in
+dread of an attack from France, while the French complained that they
+were threatened by Germany. In France it was believed that in August,
+1886, preparations had been actually made to mobilize the German army,
+and the language held by Boulanger was to the effect that the military
+power of France would be found to be very different to what it was in
+1870. Meanwhile an unsuccessful attempt had been made by those two old
+Parliamentary hands, Freycinet and Ferry, to get rid of Boulanger, who
+was now becoming to be considered as equally dangerous both in France
+and Germany.
+
+It was probably the apprehension caused by the presence of this
+adventurer, whose incapacity was as yet imperfectly realized, that was
+responsible for the state of tension and alarm which prevailed in France
+during January and February, 1887.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._[44]
+
+ Paris, Jan. 18, 1887.
+
+ I saw M. Grévy this morning, and found him, as it seemed to
+ me, really alarmed at the possibility of France being attacked
+ by Germany. The only overt act he spoke of, on the part of
+ Germany, was the increase of the strength of the German garrisons
+ in the neighbourhood of the French frontier. Grévy himself is
+ most peaceful, and quite sincerely so. His natural character and
+ temperament, and his interest too, tend that way. He would hardly
+ be able to hold his own as President in case of war, and there is
+ very little chance of France going to war as long as he is the head
+ of the State. Flourens also spoke to me of danger to France and
+ Germany when I saw him this afternoon.
+
+ I think the alarm of Grévy and Flourens was sincere, though I
+ do not share it myself at this moment.
+
+ In France there is no desire to go to war, and I doubt whether
+ she is able, or at all events fancies herself able, to cope with
+ Germany.
+
+ It is perhaps more difficult to keep her on good terms
+ with us. Egypt is a sore which will not heal. There was a nasty
+ discussion about Newfoundland Fisheries in the Senate yesterday. I
+ send you a full report officially. Happily, so far, it has not had
+ much echo in the public.
+
+Alarm with respect to Germany continued to grow, and was fed by private
+communications from Bismarck, who sent by unofficial agents messages
+to the effect that 'he was all for peace, but that it was impossible
+for him to stand the way that France was going on.' These messages came
+through Bleichröder and members of the _haute finance_ in Paris, who
+expressed the opinion that if Boulanger remained in office, war with
+Germany was certain. The _haute finance_ is by no means invariably
+correct in its political judgment, but it seems highly probable that the
+war scares prevalent in 1887 were promulgated with the object of getting
+rid of the troublesome firebrand upon whom so much public attention was
+concentrated. The position of Boulanger, however, was a strong one, and
+to dislodge him was a work of no slight difficulty. Ever since the day
+when he had been taken into Freycinet's Cabinet he had contrived by
+adroit advertising to keep himself before the public, and to distinguish
+himself from his colleagues as exercising a separate and commanding
+influence in the Chambers and with the public. In the army he had
+managed to make himself feared by the higher officers and assiduously
+courted popularity with the rank and file. In the political world he
+had at first been regarded as being ultra democratic, but now excited
+suspicion by paying court to the Conservatives, and by endeavouring, not
+entirely without success, to obtain their good will.
+
+On the whole, there was a very general impression that he was ambitious,
+self-seeking, and thoroughly unscrupulous; but there were few means of
+forming an opinion as to what his special plans really were, if indeed
+he had formed any. Still he successfully flattered the belief of the
+French that they were fast emerging from the eclipse in which their
+military power and reputation were involved in 1870, and there were
+not wanting those who asserted that he was inclined to seek a war, in
+the hope of conducting it with success, and so establishing himself as
+a military dictator. Others, influenced by their wishes, indulged in
+the hope that he might be meditating a Monarchist restoration under an
+Orleanist or Bonapartist Dynasty. Unsubstantial and improbable as these
+suppositions may have been, it was plain that in the army and among the
+public at large there prevailed a vague notion that he might be the man
+of the future, a notion fostered by the absence of any one recognized in
+France as possessing conspicuous and commanding abilities, and by the
+craving for a real personality after a long succession of second-class
+politicians.
+
+The embarrassment with regard to Germany created by the presence of
+so disturbing an element in the Government as Boulanger did not,
+contrary to what might have been expected, tend to improve Anglo-French
+relations, and a letter from Lord Salisbury expresses in forcible
+terms his dissatisfaction at difficulties which seemed to have been
+gratuitously created.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Feb. 5, 1887.
+
+ The French are inexplicable. One would have thought that under
+ existing circumstances it was not necessary to _make_ enemies--that
+ there were enough provided for France by nature just now. But
+ she seems bent upon aggravating the patient beast of burden that
+ lives here by every insult and worry her ingenuity can devise. In
+ Newfoundland she has issued orders which, if faithfully executed,
+ must bring the French and English fleets into collision. At the
+ New Hebrides, in spite of repeated promises, she will not stir. In
+ Egypt she baulks a philanthropic change out of pure 'cussedness.'
+ In Morocco she is engaged in appropriating the territory by
+ instalments, threatening to reach Tangier at no distant date. And
+ now, just as we are entering on pacific negotiations, the French
+ Government sent orders to do precisely that which, a month ago,
+ Waddington promised they should not do, namely run up the French
+ flag at Dongorita.[45] It is very difficult to prevent oneself
+ from wishing for another Franco-German war to put a stop to this
+ incessant vexation.
+
+ We have protested earnestly about Dongorita, which has more
+ the air of a studied insult than any of the others. As to the
+ Newfoundland Fisheries, if they execute their threats, they render
+ the passage of a Bait Bill next year a matter of certainty. We
+ have strained the good will of the colonists very far in refusing
+ to allow it this year. The other matters will, I suppose, be the
+ subject of slow negotiations.
+
+ D'Herbette has made at Berlin more practical suggestions as to
+ naming a date for the annexation of Egypt than we have yet had from
+ the French Government. I hope the large majorities will persuade
+ the French that the national feeling is in this instance not in
+ favour of scuttle.
+
+All that Lord Lyons, who was always most anxious to make the best case
+he could for the French, was able to say in their defence, was that he
+hoped that it was an exceptionally dark moment, and that there must be a
+change shortly for the better.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 18, 1887.
+
+ The French seem to be more confident of peace and altogether
+ in better spirits than they were a few days ago, but I do not know
+ that they have any positive facts or distinct information to go
+ upon. The hopes of a certain number of them rest upon the belief
+ that the Goblet Ministry is likely to be upset as soon as the
+ Budget is finally disposed of, and that thus Boulanger will be got
+ rid of.
+
+ The newspaper accounts of Wolff's mission to Constantinople
+ have brought Egypt on the tapis again, and as anxiety about
+ Germany falls into the background, irritation against England
+ comes prominently forward. There are, however, some symptoms of
+ a return among wiser men to more prudent and reasonable views
+ respecting the relations of France towards England. These men are
+ alarmed especially respecting the hostility towards France which is
+ apparent in Italy, and they see the folly of making enemies on all
+ sides. If there should be a new Ministry it might possibly pursue
+ a policy more friendly towards England with regard to Egypt and
+ other matters. The Egyptian question would no doubt become less
+ difficult if a change should remove M. Charmes from the Foreign
+ Office and put into his place, as Political Director there, a man
+ less prejudiced about Egypt.
+
+ In the meantime much amusement has been caused by an escapade
+ of Madame Flourens. On Saturday last she called upon Countess Marie
+ Münster, and found with her Count Hoyos, the Austrian Ambassador.
+ Madame Flourens announced loudly that her husband had resigned
+ the Foreign Office, because Boulanger had attempted, without his
+ knowledge, to send a letter direct to the Emperor of Russia by the
+ French Military Attaché, who was to start for St. Petersburg.
+ Hoyos fetched Münster himself out of an adjoining room, to hear the
+ story. Madame Flourens, it appeared, supposed that Flourens was on
+ the point of announcing his resignation to the Chamber of Deputies.
+ It turned out, however, that Flourens had made a scene with
+ Boulanger at the Council of Ministers, had gone away in a huff,
+ but had been subsequently calmed by M. Grévy and M. Goblet; no
+ letter to the Emperor had been sent, and the resignation had been
+ withdrawn. The story had of course spread all over the town. In
+ defiance of truth, a _communiqué_ contradicting it was inserted in
+ the _Agence Havas_, with no other effect than that of discrediting
+ the _communiqués_ which the Government is apt to put into the Havas.
+
+There is so little mention of women in Lord Lyons's correspondence that
+Madame Flourens's indiscretion comes as a welcome relief, although in
+all probability it got the unfortunate Count Münster into trouble with
+Bismarck, and afforded an excuse for fresh bullying. Count Münster,
+who had been for many years Ambassador in London, where he had been
+extremely popular, found the transfer to Paris singularly unpleasant,
+more especially as in order to make things thoroughly uncomfortable for
+him, Bismarck had provided an entirely new Embassy Staff.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Feb. 19, 1887.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ We are thinking of renewing our negotiations with respect to
+ the Suez Canal in a serious spirit. But before we sign anything we
+ shall want some satisfaction about Dongorita and the New Hebrides,
+ and possibly about the Corvée.
+
+ I think it was very shabby of the French to open the Dongorita
+ affair upon us, just after we had made so material a concession
+ upon the subject of the bait in Newfoundland.
+
+ Waddington is gloomy and rather ill-tempered--either from the
+ fogs or the crisis. I have not had any further talk with him about
+ Egypt lately. I think he avoids the subject. Wolff tells me that
+ the French Chargé d'Affaires at Constantinople is a mere creature
+ of Nelidoff's. Our negotiations are dragging on with little
+ prospect of success. We are willing to fix a distant date for our
+ leaving, if we receive a treaty power to go back whenever internal
+ or external security are threatened. The tone in which both France
+ and Turkey have received this proposal may be best expressed by the
+ colloquial phrase 'Damn their impudence!' I do not expect to carry
+ what I want at present, but before modifying these terms, I should
+ like to know what is going to happen in Europe.
+
+Sir Henry Drummond Wolff was at this time at Constantinople endeavouring
+to negotiate the Convention with regard to the evacuation of Egypt,
+and the French and Russian Embassies were actively engaged in the
+senseless opposition which eventually prevented the ratification of the
+Convention. The above letter from Lord Salisbury is an additional proof
+of the honest desire of the British Government to carry out the rash
+undertakings which had been given in the past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 25, 1887.
+
+ The general feeling here seems to be that war has been
+ escaped, but still there is a good deal of discontent against the
+ foreign policy of the Goblet Cabinet. It seems to be considered
+ that the understanding between Italy, Austria, and Germany is as
+ good as made, and that the result of it will be to put an end to
+ any fear of war between Russia and Austria. On the other hand, it
+ is thought that Russia will feel it too necessary to watch Germany
+ for it to be prudent of her to make an alliance with France, while
+ without the alliance of Russia, France of course cannot face
+ Germany, particularly as she has almost hostility to expect from
+ Italy and no great sympathy to look for from England. The policy
+ which has thus isolated France from the other Powers is seen to
+ have been a mistake, and there seems to be a disposition to throw
+ the blame on the Goblet Ministry. If the Goblet Ministry should
+ fall, it is not improbable that the new Government might take
+ the line of being conciliatory to the neighbouring countries and
+ to Italy and England in particular. I am not very sanguine about
+ this, but if in the meantime no irritating questions come to excite
+ public opinion against us, there may possibly be a chance that
+ a change of Ministry here would make our relations with France
+ smoother.
+
+ My hopes that a change towards England may be in contemplation
+ have perhaps been strengthened by a visit which I have just had
+ from a person wholly unconnected with the French Ministry who
+ evidently came to ascertain what were the particular points with
+ regard to which the relations between France and England might be
+ improved. I said that instead of thwarting us in our endeavours
+ to improve the condition of Egypt and put it in a state to stand
+ alone, the French might help us; and they could not expect
+ comfortable relations with us if they endeavoured to stir up other
+ Powers to make difficulties with us about Egypt. I mentioned also
+ the New Hebrides question, which most certainly ought and might
+ be settled at once. I alluded also to those various matters all
+ over the world which might be treated in a cordial and not in an
+ antagonistic spirit.
+
+ P.S.--I have strong reasons for thinking it very important
+ that Waddington should not have the least inkling of my having had
+ the above interview, or any communication of the kind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Feb. 26, 1887.
+
+ I will not mention to Waddington the interview which you have
+ had as to English grounds of complaint. I have not seen him for ten
+ days: he must have taken huff at something.
+
+ I think, as the French are coming to their senses, it might be
+ well to mention unofficially to Flourens that I am quite ready to
+ resume the negotiations about the Suez Canal; and that I have good
+ hope of bringing it to a successful issue, but that I am hindered
+ by the flag that is floating at Dongorita, and by the delay of the
+ French in performing their promises as regards the New Hebrides. We
+ are being a good deal reproached here, on account of our apparent
+ submission to this breach of faith. If these two matters are
+ corrected, I shall find it possible, and shall be very glad to
+ renew the Suez Canal discussion either at Paris or here.
+
+ I have seen Karolyi to-day--an unusual occurrence--and for the
+ first time have had the admission from him that a war with Russia
+ was not an impossible contingency.
+
+ The Russians are very quiet; and the negotiations about
+ Bulgaria do not really advance a bit.
+
+M. Flourens, in spite of his complete inexperience, seems to have
+realized the simple fact that it was not advisable to quarrel with
+England just at the moment when relations with Germany were in a
+critical condition; but unhappily the public did not appear to be in
+an accommodating mood. The statements published in the English press
+respecting the Drummond Wolff mission had caused great irritation,
+and what was perhaps more serious, had alarmed the French again
+about the security of the coupons. As long as they felt sure that
+the coupons would be paid regularly, and that there was no fear of
+future reduction, they were reasonably patient, unless some specially
+severe blow, such as a reduction of the numbers and salaries of French
+officials, as compared with English, was struck at their _amour propre_.
+Now, however, they were beset with the fear that, under what they
+considered to be English mismanagement, they were about to lose their
+money as well as their influence.
+
+In March the Goblet Ministry was already in difficulties, and it was
+believed that Freycinet was likely to return to power, although what the
+precise advantages were of these continual changes, no one was capable
+of explaining.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ March 8, 1887.
+
+ By taking credit to himself at the expense of his
+ predecessors, in the interpellation yesterday, Goblet has stirred
+ up the bile of a large party in the Chamber, and the determination
+ to turn his Cabinet out, if possible, has revived with fresh
+ vigour. It is supposed that the attempts will be made as soon as
+ the Corn Duties Bill is disposed of. It seems to be thought that,
+ if it succeeds, Freycinet must be Prime Minister; but there appears
+ to be a strong feeling against his having the Foreign Office again.
+ He is thought to have got France into uncomfortable relations with
+ many of his neighbours. In the treatment of the Egyptian question
+ he is believed to have sacrificed cordiality with England to a
+ desire to regain the popularity he had lost by the policy which
+ led to England's occupying her present position in Egypt; while
+ his attempt to get up an opposition to England on the part of the
+ European Powers and his worrying way of dealing himself with the
+ British Government about Egypt, are thought simply to have excited
+ public opinion on both sides of the Channel and to have provoked
+ ill will, without in the least improving the position of France.
+ There can be no doubt that Freycinet looked upon a success with
+ regard to Egypt as a personal necessity for himself, and was much
+ influenced in his policy towards England by this feeling.
+
+ It is apprehended that unless the _prestige_ of Boulanger is
+ put on high again by strong language from Germany, there will be no
+ difficulty in obtaining, as a matter of course, his fall, with the
+ rest of the Cabinet of which he is a part. M. Grévy is believed to
+ be very anxious to be rid of him.
+
+ I hear on good authority that the Russians have been trying
+ again, though without success, to come to a special understanding
+ with the French Government.
+
+To say that M. Grévy was very anxious to be rid of Boulanger was
+probably an understatement, for he could not conceivably have desired
+anything so ardently. But the 'Music Hall St. Arnaud' was by no means
+at the end of his tether, and had contrived to advertise himself by
+egregious conduct with regard to the Army Committee of the Chamber
+of Deputies. That Committee had drawn up a military Bill, based upon
+three years' service, and Boulanger, on the pretext that it was 'not
+sufficiently faithful to democratic principles,' had, without consulting
+any of his colleagues, written a letter condemning the provisions of
+the bill and proposing something quite different. This letter was
+thoughtfully communicated to the press before it reached the Committee,
+and the outraged members of the Committee as well as his colleagues
+were at last goaded into resistance. The Chamber condemned the attitude
+of the General towards the sacrosanct representatives of the nation;
+the General himself beat a hasty and prudent retreat under cover of an
+apology; the Moderate Republicans denounced him as a would-be dictator,
+and the Ultra-Radicals accused him of cowardice in consequence of his
+apology. Most men under the circumstances would have felt disposed to
+resign office, but in the case of Boulanger it was probably immaterial
+to him whether he was blamed or praised, so long as he could keep his
+name before the public.
+
+It was, and probably is still, a regulation in the British Diplomatic
+Service, that its members should retire at the age of seventy, and, as
+a rule, an Ambassador who had attained that age, usually considered
+himself fit to discharge his duties for a further period. Lord Lyons,
+however, was an exception. His seventieth birthday fell due in April,
+and a month beforehand he wrote to announce that he wished to resign.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, March 22, 1887.
+
+ Towards the end of the next month, the time will come when
+ I shall be superannuated, and I feel very strongly that it will
+ not come too soon. It will not be without a pang that I shall
+ find myself no longer a diplomatic servant of the Queen, who has
+ ever received my endeavours to obtain her approval with the most
+ generous indulgence. But the labour and responsibility of this post
+ are becoming too much for me, and I shall be anxious to be relieved
+ from them when the time fixed by the regulations arrives.
+
+ I need not assure you that I shall much regret the termination
+ of the official connexion with you from which I have derived so
+ much satisfaction.
+
+It may not unfairly be presumed that resignations of important official
+posts are habitually welcomed by Governments, as they not only remedy
+stagnation in the public service, but frequently provide opportunities
+for political patronage. It is plain, however, that the prospect of
+losing Lord Lyons was looked upon by Lord Salisbury as a genuine
+misfortune, and he did his best to induce him to reconsider his decision.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 26, 1887.
+
+ I have considered your letter of the 22nd, stating that you
+ felt very strongly that the time of your superannuation would not
+ come too soon; and though it was a matter of very deep regret to me
+ to receive such an announcement from you, it was not altogether a
+ matter of surprise; for I remembered the language you had used to
+ me when I tried to induce you to join us as Foreign Secretary last
+ July.
+
+ The loss which the Diplomatic Service will suffer by your
+ retirement will be profound, and, for the time, hardly possible to
+ repair. Your presence at Paris gave to the public mind a sense of
+ security which was the result of a long experience of your powers,
+ and which no one else is in a position to inspire.
+
+ In face of the expressions in your letter I feel as if I were
+ almost presuming in suggesting any alternative course of action.
+ But it struck me that possibly you might be willing to make your
+ official career terminate with the end of your current appointment,
+ rather than with the precise date of superannuation. The effect of
+ this would be to prolong your stay at Paris till next December.
+
+ My reasons from a public point of view will, I hope, strike
+ you at once. We are passing through a very anxious European crisis.
+ If any fateful decisions are taken this year, it will be within the
+ next three or four months. It will add very much to our anxiety to
+ know that the reins at Paris are in new hands, which have never
+ held them before. This mere fact may even be an element of danger.
+ The avalanche hangs so loosely, that any additional sensation or
+ uneasiness may displace it. If we could avoid a change till the
+ winter it would be a great public advantage, even if the change
+ should be inevitable.
+
+ I hope you will forgive me for having pressed this on you in
+ the interests of the public service. Whatever your decision may be,
+ I give you the warmest thanks for the kind and loyal support which
+ you have always given to the policy which it has been my duty to
+ carry out.
+
+An appeal of this kind from an official chief could not well be
+disregarded, setting aside the fact that but few officials can have
+experienced the compliment of being assured that their continued service
+was essential to the peace of Europe. With well justified misgivings,
+Lord Lyons therefore consented to remain on until the end of the year,
+knowing perfectly well that his physical energies were on the point of
+exhaustion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, March 29, 1887.
+
+ I am deeply touched by your letter of the 26th, and I feel
+ that, after what you say in it, I should be extremely ungrateful if
+ I were not ready to sacrifice a great deal to meet your views.
+
+ For my own part I feel that the work and responsibility here
+ are an increasing strain both upon my mind and upon my bodily
+ health, and I am beset with misgivings lest, even in ordinary
+ times, I may be unable to discharge my duties with energy and
+ efficiency, and lest, in an emergency calling for much labour,
+ I may break down altogether. This being the case, it would
+ undoubtedly be a great relief and comfort to me to retire on
+ becoming superannuated towards the end of next month.
+
+ Begging you to take the misgivings into full consideration,
+ and to be sure that they have not been conceived without good
+ reason, and that they are strongly and very seriously felt by
+ me, I place myself in your hands. If after giving full weight to
+ them, you still think that it would be a satisfaction to you that
+ I should continue to hold this post till the winter, and that it
+ would be a great public advantage to avoid a change till that time,
+ I am ready to stay on, and trusting to your indulgence to do my
+ best.
+
+ I should, of course, look upon it as quite settled that in any
+ case I should retire at latest when my current appointment comes to
+ an end at the close of the present year.
+
+ If you wish me to hold on, I must ask you what, if any,
+ announcement respecting my retirement should be made. Up to this
+ time I have simply stated to people who have questioned me,
+ that nothing was definitely settled. I did not mention to any
+ one my intention to write my letter of the 22nd expressing to
+ you my wish to retire, nor have I made any one acquainted with
+ my having written it, except of course Sheffield, who, as my
+ private secretary, made a copy of it for me to keep. The question,
+ therefore, as to announcing my retirement remains intact.
+
+ I cannot conclude without once more saying how much I am
+ gratified by the appreciation of my services expressed in your
+ letter, and how truly I feel the kindness shown by it.
+
+The offer was accepted by Lord Salisbury in singularly flattering terms,
+Queen Victoria also expressing much satisfaction at the consent of the
+Ambassador to remain at his post. From Lord Salisbury's language, it
+might be inferred that he was in some doubt as to whether his own tenure
+of office was likely to be prolonged.
+
+ I have had no hesitation in availing myself of your kind
+ consent--though you seemed to doubt whether on reflection I should
+ do so. Of course I fully understand that you do not feel equal to
+ the amount of exertion which you would take in a more favourable
+ condition of health. But this circumstance will not detract
+ from the great value of your counsel and judgment, nor from the
+ authority which by so many years of experience you have acquired.
+
+ I quite understand that towards the close of the session of
+ Parliament you will require the holiday you have been accustomed
+ to take in recent years. I hope also to get to a bath at that
+ time--whether I am in office or not.
+
+Why Lord Salisbury should have spoken so doubtfully is not clear, unless
+instinct warned him of Miss Cass, who was the first to strike a blow
+at the Unionist administration. At the end of March there reappeared
+the mysterious emissary who has been already mentioned. There are no
+means of actually establishing his identity, but there can be little
+doubt that it was M. de Chaudordy, who represented the French Foreign
+Office at Tours and Bordeaux during the war. M. de Chaudordy had made
+friends with Lord Salisbury at the time of the Constantinople Conference
+in 1876, and he was, therefore, a suitable person to utilize for the
+purpose of making advances towards a better understanding between the
+two Governments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, March 29, 1887.
+
+ In a private letter which I wrote to you on the 25th of last
+ month, I mentioned that I had received a visit from a person wholly
+ unconnected officially with the French Government, who appeared to
+ have come to ascertain what were the particular points with regard
+ to which the relations between the English and French Governments
+ might be improved. The same person has been to me again to-day,
+ and has only just left me. This time he did not conceal that it
+ was after being in communication with Flourens that he came. He
+ enlarged on the embarrassing and indeed dangerous position in which
+ France was placed by the adherence of Italy to the Austro-German
+ Alliance, and said that M. Flourens was ready to make almost any
+ sacrifice to secure the good will of England. I said that there
+ could be no great difficulty in this, if only France would abstain
+ from irritating opposition to us, and would settle promptly and
+ satisfactorily outstanding questions. My visitor answered that
+ Flourens conceived that he had sent conciliatory instructions
+ to Waddington which would settle these questions, and that both
+ Waddington and Florian[46] (who had come on leave) reported that
+ there was decidedly a _détente_ in the strain which had existed in
+ the Anglo-French relations. I said that I was delighted to hear it,
+ and that it showed how ready you were to welcome all conciliatory
+ overtures. My friend seemed on this occasion, as on the last, to
+ wish me to tell him some special thing which Flourens might do
+ to please you. I said that I should at any rate mention a thing
+ which he might do to avoid displeasing you. He might prevent the
+ French setting up an opposition to financial proposals in Egypt in
+ cases in which all the other Powers were ready to agree. My friend
+ spoke of Flourens's readiness to give to Russia on the Bulgarian
+ question advice which you might suggest, and he mentioned various
+ things which he thought M. Flourens might be ready to do to please
+ England. These things appeared to me to be rather too grand and
+ too vague in character to be very practical. I said, however, that
+ I would always bear in mind what he had told me of M. Flourens's
+ good dispositions, and would speak frankly and unreservedly to the
+ Minister whenever I could make a suggestion as to the means of
+ acting upon those dispositions in a manner to be satisfactory to
+ England.
+
+ The conclusions I drew from the conversation of Flourens's
+ friend were that the French are horribly afraid of our being led
+ to join the Italo-Austro-German Alliance, and that they have been
+ urged by Russia to exert themselves to prevent this. I do not
+ conceive that the French expect to induce us to join them against
+ the Germans and the German Alliance. What they want is to feel sure
+ that we shall not join the others against France and Russia.
+
+It is somewhat curious that M. Flourens, who was evidently desirous
+of establishing better relations with England, should have selected
+an unofficial person for communication, rather than approach the
+Ambassador himself; but perhaps, being quite ignorant of diplomatic
+usage, he considered it necessary to shroud his action in mystery.
+The Triple Alliance dated in reality from 1882, Italy having joined
+the Austro-German Alliance in that year; but a new Treaty had been
+signed in the month of February, 1887, and caused the French to feel a
+well-justified alarm. In fact, their position was anything but a happy
+one, for it was generally believed that the Emperor Alexander III. had
+resolved, since the abortive attempt on his life, that he would never
+ally himself with Revolutionists, and that he considered the French to
+be arch-Revolutionists. Perhaps this belief may have accounted in some
+measure for Flourens's amiable professions towards England.
+
+In the month of April there occurred one of those incidents which
+are the despair of peaceably minded politicians and the delight of
+sensational journalism and of adventurers of the Boulanger type. A
+certain M. Schnaebelé, a French Commissaire de Police, was induced to
+cross the German frontier, and thereupon was arrested and imprisoned.
+The act had the appearance of provocation and naturally caused a
+prodigious uproar in France; Flourens endeavouring to settle the
+matter diplomatically and Boulanger seizing the opportunity to display
+patriotic truculence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, April 26, 1887.
+
+ So far as one can judge at present the French are irritated
+ beyond measure by the arrest at Pagny, but generally they still
+ shrink from war. It will not, I conceive, be difficult for
+ Bismarck to keep at peace with them, if he really wishes to do so.
+ The danger is that they are persuaded that he is only looking out
+ for a pretext, and that however much they may now give way, he will
+ be bent upon humiliating them till they _must_ resent and resist.
+ I don't see that so far the German Government have treated the
+ Pagny affair as if they wished to make a quarrel of it. The German
+ _Chargé d'Affaires_ has taken many messages from Berlin to Flourens
+ in the sense that if Schnaebelé shall prove to have been arrested
+ on German soil, all satisfaction shall be given. But, then, in the
+ Press of the two countries a controversy is raging as to which side
+ of the frontier he was arrested on, and as to whether or no he was
+ inveigled over the frontier.
+
+ The French undoubtedly shrink from war, but they do not
+ shrink from it as much as they did ten years ago; and if the press
+ should get up a loud popular cry, there is no Government strength
+ to resist it. I conceive that at this moment the Government is
+ pacific, and that it does not believe the army to be yet ready.
+ But if, as is no doubt the case, the Germans also believe that the
+ French army is not as ready now as it will be two or three years
+ hence, they may be impatient to begin. In the mean time, so far
+ as I can make out, the Pagny affair is being treated by the two
+ Governments with each other, in correct form diplomatically, and
+ without any apparent willingness to embitter matters. I cannot say
+ as much for the press on either side, though there are symptoms of
+ prudence and caution in the moderate French papers.
+
+The Schnaebelé incident was disposed of by his release from prison and
+transfer to another post at Lyons; but the agitation did not subside
+readily, and a bill brought in by Boulanger to mobilize an army corps
+caused much disquietude at the German Embassy. It was now generally
+known that Bismarck considered Boulanger a danger and desired his
+removal from the War Office; but the very knowledge of this feeling and
+the support accorded to him by the League of Patriots and other noisy
+organizations rendered this step all the more difficult.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 13, 1887.
+
+ I have not heard of any new incident between France and
+ Germany, but the suspicion and susceptibility with which the two
+ nations, and indeed the two Governments, regard each other, are
+ certainly not diminishing.
+
+ In France home politics are in so peculiar a state as to be
+ positively disquieting. The Budget Committee and the Ministry have
+ come to an open breach, and the Committee intend to propose to
+ the Chamber a resolution which apparently must, if carried, turn
+ out the Goblet Cabinet. This the Chamber would be willing enough
+ to do, if it could see its way to forming another Government. The
+ plan would be to form a Ministry with Freycinet as Prime Minister,
+ but not as Minister for Foreign Affairs, and without Boulanger.
+ But then they are afraid to try and upset Boulanger, while they
+ feel that to form a new Government and put Boulanger in it would
+ be, or might be, taken in Germany as a plain indication that they
+ are warlike at heart. It is an emergency in which the Chief of
+ the State should exert himself; but Grévy's caution has become
+ something very like lethargy. In the mean time they are letting
+ Boulanger grow up into a personage whose position may be a danger
+ to the Republic at home, even if it does not embroil the country
+ in a foreign war. The redeeming point in all this is that the
+ Government does seem to feel that it would not do to be upon bad
+ terms with England, and that it would be wise to be conciliatory
+ toward us.
+
+The Goblet Ministry soon found itself in hopeless difficulty over
+the Budget, and it was plain that another aimless change of men was
+inevitable. Goblet's Government had lasted for five months (inclusive
+of a prolonged recess), and the real question of interest was whether
+Boulanger was to be a member of the new Government or not. If he was
+included in it, it was apprehended that the suspicions of Germany would
+be aggravated; and on the other hand, it was doubtful whether any
+Government could be formed without him. An ultra-patriotic demonstration
+in Paris against German music, in the shape of Wagner's operas, was
+eloquent of the state of feeling between the two nations at the time,
+and the Government found that the only course open to them was to close
+the theatre where the obnoxious productions were to have appeared.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 20, 1887.
+
+ Freycinet appears to have agreed with Grévy to try and form a
+ Cabinet and to be hard at work at the task. Of course the question
+ is whether Boulanger is or is not to be in the new Cabinet? It was
+ believed this morning that Grévy and Freycinet had decided upon
+ offering to keep him as Minister of War. As the day has gone on,
+ however, the belief has gained ground that Freycinet has not found
+ colleagues willing to run the risk of war which the maintenance
+ of Boulanger would produce, and that he is to propose to Grévy a
+ Cabinet from which Boulanger is to be excluded. He is, however,
+ to make it an essential condition with Grévy that he is to have
+ the power to dissolve the Chamber of Deputies in his hands, as
+ without this power he does not feel able to form a Cabinet without
+ Boulanger, or indeed any Cabinet at all. In the mean time the
+ Reds are getting up in all directions addresses and petitions in
+ favour of Boulanger, with a view to forcing Grévy's and Freycinet's
+ hands and working on their fears. If Boulanger is got rid of, the
+ immediate danger of war will probably be escaped for the moment.
+ Boulanger's own character, and the position in which he has placed
+ himself, make him threatening to peace; and the opinion held of him
+ in Germany and the irritation felt against him there make him still
+ more dangerous.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 24, 1887.
+
+ The last news is supposed to be that Floquet, the President
+ of the Chamber, has undertaken the task of forming a Ministry,
+ and that he will keep many of the outgoing Ministers, Boulanger
+ included. The goings and comings at the Elysée; the singular
+ selections of men to be Prime Ministers, or quasi Prime Ministers,
+ and the apparent want of firmness and inability to exercise any
+ influence on the part of the President of the Republic, have
+ certainly not increased the reputation of M. Grévy. Floquet will,
+ I suppose, be unacceptable to Russia, for the Russians have always
+ ostentatiously kept up the show of resentment against him for the
+ cry, offensive to the Emperor Alexander II., which he raised when
+ that monarch visited the Palais de Justice during the Exhibition
+ of 1867. Boulanger has lately declared that he does not want to
+ continue to be Minister, but that if he is Minister, he will,
+ whatever Germany may say, continue his mobilization scheme, and not
+ relax in his preparations to resist an attack from Germany, and to
+ avert the necessity of submitting to humiliation.
+
+ I think, in fact, that things look very bad for France both
+ at home and abroad. I can only hope that as the phases of the
+ Ministerial crisis change from hour to hour, you may receive by
+ telegraph some more satisfactory news before you get this letter.
+
+In course of time a new Ministry was formed under M. Rouvier, and the
+important fact attaching to it was that Boulanger had been got rid of.
+Otherwise there was nothing much to distinguish the new Ministers from
+the old, and they seemed disposed to angle for popularity in the country
+much in the same way as Freycinet and Goblet.
+
+The object of removing Boulanger had been to reassure and placate
+Germany, but no sooner had this been done, than the Government appeared
+to feel alarmed at the danger of incurring unpopularity in the country,
+and hastily announced that the new Minister of War would continue to
+follow in the footsteps of his predecessor.
+
+Again, it had been understood that one of the objects of the new
+Government would be to put an end to the isolation of France by
+placing itself on more cordial terms with the neighbouring nations
+and especially with England; but what it appeared anxious to profess,
+was the intention of stoutly refusing to accept or even acquiesce
+in the Anglo-Turkish Convention respecting Egypt. All this, as Lord
+Lyons observed, might proceed in great measure from ignorance and
+inexperience, and might be mitigated by the knowledge of affairs and
+sense of responsibility which accompany office, but still it was
+disquieting: all the more disquieting, because the French Foreign
+Minister never failed to intimate that France would never be a party to
+an arrangement which would confer upon England an international right
+to re-occupy Egypt under certain circumstances after evacuation, whilst
+France was to be formally excluded from enjoying an equal right.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 12, 1887.
+
+ Baron Alphonse de Rothschild came to see me this afternoon,
+ and told me that the last accounts he had received from Berlin
+ caused him to feel more than usual alarm as to the feelings of
+ Prince Bismarck and of the Germans in general towards France. They
+ did not indeed imply that Germany was actually contemplating any
+ immediate declaration of war, but they did show that in Germany
+ war with France was regarded as a contingency that could not be
+ long postponed, and of which the postponement was not desirable
+ for German interests. The Germans did not seem to be prepared to
+ incur the opprobrium of Europe by attacking France without having
+ the appearance of a good reason for doing so, but they did seem to
+ be looking out impatiently for a plausible pretext for a rupture;
+ far from being sorry, they would be very glad if France would
+ furnish them with such a pretext. Prince Bismarck was evidently
+ not disposed to facilitate the task of M. Rouvier's Government,
+ notwithstanding the pledges it had given of its desire for peace
+ abroad, and the efforts it was making to promote moderation at home.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild had, he told me, seen M. Rouvier to-day
+ and made all this known to him. He had pointed out to him the
+ danger which arose from the sort of coalition against France of
+ the Powers of Europe, had dwelt on the importance of making almost
+ any sacrifice to break up this coalition, and had especially urged
+ the imprudence of allowing coldness, if not ill-will, to subsist
+ between France and England.
+
+ M. Rouvier had expressed an anxious desire to establish
+ cordial relations with England.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild had answered that the time had come
+ to show this by acts, and had strongly pressed M. Rouvier to
+ settle without any delay the outstanding questions which produced
+ irritation between the two countries. M. Rouvier had expressed his
+ intention to do so, and Baron de Rothschild had reason to believe
+ that this was also the desire and intention of M. Flourens.
+
+ I said that I heard this with great pleasure, and that
+ I had received with much satisfaction assurances to the same
+ effect respecting M. Flourens's sentiments, which had come to me
+ indirectly through various channels. I must, however, confess that
+ I had not found in M. Flourens himself any disposition to push
+ assurance to this effect beyond generalities. I had not seen any
+ strong practical instances of a desire on his part to give a speedy
+ and satisfactory solution to outstanding questions.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild observed that what he had said on this
+ point to M. Rouvier had appeared to make a considerable impression
+ on him.
+
+ I said that it so happened that I should in all probability
+ have the means of testing this almost immediately. I had in fact
+ only yesterday strongly urged M. Flourens to close a question, that
+ of the New Hebrides, which was creating suspicion and annoyance to
+ England and causing great inconvenience in consequence of the very
+ strong feeling about it which prevailed in the colonies. The two
+ Governments were entirely in accord in principle upon it, and in
+ fact it was only kept open by the pertinacity with which the French
+ Government delayed to take the formal step necessary for closing it.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild went on to tell me that in speaking of
+ the relations with England, M. Rouvier alluded to the convention
+ negotiated by Sir Drummond Wolff at Constantinople, and said that
+ he did not see why it should produce any lasting disagreement
+ between France and England. Whether it was ratified or not, France
+ might be as conciliatory as possible towards England in dealing
+ with the matter in future. In answer I suppose to a remark from
+ Baron de Rothschild, M. Rouvier would seem to have said that the
+ Comte de Montebello[47] appeared to have gone far beyond his
+ instructions in the language he had used to the Porte.
+
+ I asked Baron de Rothschild whether M. Rouvier had also
+ said that the Comte de Montebello had received any check or
+ discouragement from the Government at Paris.
+
+ Passing on from this, Baron de Rothschild told me that before
+ concluding the conversation, he had pointed out to M. Rouvier that
+ the great addition of strength which the Ministry had received
+ from the vote of the Chamber yesterday, would enable them to act
+ with more independence and vigour, and that they might now settle
+ questions with England, and establish good relations with her
+ without being under the constant fear of a check in the Chamber of
+ Deputies.
+
+ There can be no doubt that, in fact, the position of the
+ Rouvier Ministry has been immensely strengthened by the large vote
+ they obtained yesterday on the interpellation put forward against
+ them on the subject of Monarchical and Clerical intrigues. It is
+ earnestly to be hoped, for their own sakes, and for the sake of
+ France, that they will turn it to account in order to pursue a more
+ reasonable and conciliatory policy towards England, and to take
+ stronger and more effectual means of preserving order in Paris. The
+ riot at the Lyons railway station seems to have done Boulangism
+ harm even among the ultra-Radicals, and to have been the main cause
+ of Boulanger's having been thrown over by Radical speakers in the
+ Chamber yesterday. But it is a very dangerous thing to give the
+ Paris mob its head.
+
+M. Rouvier's friendly assurances with regard to England had, of course,
+been imparted to the Baron in order that they might be communicated
+to the British Embassy, but the action of the French Government
+appeared to have very little in common with them; nor was there any
+reason to assume that Montebello was exceeding his instructions in
+opposing at Constantinople the ratification of the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention with regard to Egypt. The egregious action which forced
+the Sultan to withhold his consent to the Convention, and thereby
+perpetuated the British occupation of Egypt, was not the result of the
+unauthorized proceedings of the French Ambassador, but the consequence
+of the deliberately considered joint policy of the French and Russian
+Governments. Incidentally, it may be pointed out that the fruitless
+attempt to negotiate the Convention was yet another convincing proof
+of the absolute honesty of British policy with regard to Egypt, and
+the following letter from Lord Salisbury shows no satisfaction at the
+frustration of Sir H. Drummond Wolff's mission.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 20, 1887.
+
+ I am afraid the temper of the French will not make the
+ settlement of the Egyptian question more easy. I do not now see how
+ we are to devise any middle terms that will satisfy them. We cannot
+ leave the Khedive to take his chance of foreign attack, or native
+ riot. The French refuse to let us exercise the necessary powers
+ of defence unless we do it by continuing our military occupation.
+ I see nothing for it but to sit still and drift awhile: a little
+ further on in the history of Europe the conditions may be changed,
+ and we may be able to get some agreement arrived at which will
+ justify evacuation. Till then we must simply refuse to evacuate.
+ Our relations with France are not pleasant at present. There are
+ five or six different places where we are at odds:--
+
+ 1. She has destroyed the Convention at Constantinople.
+
+ 2. She will allow no Press Law to pass.
+
+ 3. She is trying to back out of the arrangement on the Somali
+ coast.
+
+ 4. She still occupies the New Hebrides.
+
+ 5. She destroys our fishing tackle, etc.
+
+ 6. She is trying to elbow us out of at least two
+ unpronounceable places on the West Coast of Africa.
+
+ Can you wonder that there is, to my eyes, a silver lining even
+ to the great black cloud of a Franco-German War?
+
+On account of the tension existing between France and Germany, and
+of the agitation produced by the transfer of Boulanger to a command
+at Clermont-Ferrand, it was feared that the National Fête of July 14
+would be marked by serious disturbances; these fears were happily not
+realized, although Boulanger's departure from Paris a few days earlier
+had formed the pretext for a display of embarrassing Jingoism. The
+French Government were so apprehensive of an anti-German demonstration,
+that, although Count Münster received the usual invitation to attend
+the Longchamps Review, M. Flourens privately begged him to absent
+himself, and the two German military attachés, instead of joining the
+War Minister's Staff in uniform, went to the Diplomatic Tribune in plain
+clothes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 15, 1887.
+
+ The National Fête of yesterday passed off quietly enough.
+ There are said to have been cries in various places of 'Vive
+ Boulanger,' and 'À bas Grévy,' but nowhere was there anything which
+ assumed anything like the proportions of a demonstration. There do
+ not appear to have been any cries at all in the army.
+
+ The low French papers keep up a constant fire of scurrilous
+ language against the Germans and even against the Germany Embassy.
+ This sort of thing seems to be taken more seriously and to cause
+ more irritation in Germany than it would in most countries. Count
+ Münster naturally enough did not come to the President's stand, to
+ which he and the other Ambassadors were as usual invited to see
+ the Review. The German military attachés did not go in uniform
+ with the staff of the Minister of War, but saw the Review from the
+ Diplomatic Tribune in plain clothes. In fact, ill will between
+ France and Germany seems to be on the increase. It looks as if the
+ Germans would really be glad to find a fair pretext for going to
+ war with France. On the other hand, Boulangism, which is now the
+ French term for Jingoism, spreads, especially amongst the reckless
+ Radicals and enemies of the present Ministry. And even among the
+ better classes, warlike language and, to some degree, a warlike
+ spirit grows up with a new generation, which has had no practical
+ acquaintance with war. Abject fear of the German armies is being
+ succeeded by overweening confidence in themselves.
+
+ The present Ministry seem to have been afraid of unpopularity
+ if they abandoned altogether Boulanger's absurd mobilization
+ scheme. The Germans seem to be taking this quietly. Perhaps they
+ look on with satisfaction at the French incurring an immense
+ expenditure for an experiment apparently without any practical use
+ from a military point of view. Perhaps they believe, as many people
+ do here, that the Chambers will never really vote the money.
+
+ It is supposed that the session will be over next week, and I
+ trust that then you will be disposed to receive an application from
+ me for leave. I am getting quite knocked up by the Paris summer,
+ and am in urgent need of rest and country air.
+
+The foregoing letter was one of the last communications received from
+Lord Lyons at Paris, and his official career practically terminated a
+few days later, when he left on leave, destined never to return to the
+post which he had so long occupied, for the unfavourable view which
+he held with regard to his physical condition was only too completely
+justified.
+
+He appears to have passed the months of August and September quietly
+with his near relatives in Sussex. Towards the end of October he
+must have learnt with some surprise that, whereas in March he had
+been most urgently begged by Lord Salisbury to remain at his post
+until the end of the year, a successor to him, in the person of Lord
+Lytton, had been appointed, and that there was no necessity for him to
+return to Paris. If he, as would have been the case with most people,
+really felt aggrieved at this change of circumstances, there is no
+trace of resentment shown in his correspondence. On the contrary, he
+warmly welcomed the new appointment, and at once set about making
+arrangements for his successor's convenience. On November 1, he made
+a formal application to be permitted to resign his appointment, was
+created an Earl, and the few remaining letters (the latest bearing the
+date of November 20) deal with business details, and unostentatious
+acts of kindness to various persons who had been in his service or
+otherwise connected with him. The very last of all was a characteristic
+communication to Sir Edwin Egerton, the Chargé d'Affaires at Paris,
+respecting the payment of the fire insurance premium on the Embassy.
+
+The close of his life was destined to coincide dramatically with the
+close of his official career. Intellectually there were no signs of
+decay; but physically he was even more worn out than he realized
+himself. On November 28, whilst staying at Norfolk House, he was
+stricken with paralysis, and a week later he was dead, without having
+in the meanwhile recovered consciousness. Thus the end came at a moment
+singularly appropriate to his well ordered existence, and to no one
+could the time-honoured Latin epitaph have been applied with greater
+accuracy.
+
+In an earlier portion of this work some attempt has been made to
+portray Lord Lyons's personality and to explain the causes of his
+success as a diplomatist, but the best criterion of the man is to be
+found in his letters, which have been reproduced verbatim, and may be
+said to constitute a condensed record of the most interesting episodes
+in English diplomatic history during a space of nearly thirty years.
+Throughout this long series there is hardly to be found an unnecessary
+sentence or even a redundant epithet; there is a total absence of any
+straining after effect, of exaggeration, of personal animosity or
+predilection, or of any desire to gain his ends by intrigue or trickery.
+On the other hand, they are marked by profound mastery of detail, sound
+judgment, inexhaustible patience, an almost inhuman impartiality, and
+an obviously single-minded desire to do his best for his country as one
+of its most responsible representatives. Such, then, was the character
+of the man, and the general public is probably quite unconscious of the
+inestimable value to the country of officials of this particular type.
+
+It was Lord Lyons's fate twice to represent this country at most
+critical periods during wars, in the course of which, England, while
+desiring to observe the strictest neutrality, aroused the bitterest
+hostility on the part of the belligerents. In spite of untiring efforts
+he had the mortification of seeing the relations of England, first with
+the United States and then with France, gradually deteriorate, and never
+experienced the satisfaction, which no one would have appreciated more
+highly than himself, of seeing those unfriendly relations converted into
+the condition which now happily prevails; but it may be fairly said
+of him that no one ever laboured more assiduously and efficiently to
+promote peace and good will between England and her neighbours; that he
+never made either an enemy or apparently a mistake, and that no other
+diplomatist of his day enjoyed to an equal degree the confidence of
+his chiefs, and the regard of his subordinates. Overshadowed by more
+brilliant and interesting personalities, the unobtrusive services of
+Lord Lyons are unknown to the rising generation, and probably forgotten
+by many of those who have reached middle age; but in the opinion of
+the statesman who amongst living Englishmen is the most competent to
+judge, he was the greatest Ambassador who has represented this country
+in modern times, and by those whose privilege it was to serve under him,
+his memory will ever be held in affectionate remembrance.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 44: Lord Salisbury had taken over the Foreign Office upon the
+death of Lord Iddesleigh on January 12, 1887.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Dongorita. A town on the Somali coast.]
+
+[Footnote 46: Secretary of French Embassy at London.]
+
+[Footnote 47: French Ambassador at Constantinople.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+LORD LYONS IN PRIVATE LIFE.
+
+BY MRS. WILFRID WARD.
+
+
+It is not uncommon to find a seeming contradiction between the official
+and the private characters of the same individual. Extreme reserve, for
+instance, even an astonishing power of silence in conducting official
+work, may not indicate the same power of silence in private life, or the
+same reserve in the life of the affections. In Lord Lyons there was no
+such contrast, and no attempt to depict him could pretend to penetrate
+his extreme reserve as to his deeper feelings. This reticence on his
+part must severely limit any account of his _vie intime_. Moreover,
+curiously enough there is another difficulty in describing him which
+lies in quite an opposite direction. Lord Lyons had a keen sense of
+the ridiculous, and he loved the absolute relaxation of talking pure
+nonsense which, however amusing at the moment, would hardly bear the
+strain of repetition. Indeed, very little can be added to the history
+of the public life of a man so absolutely reticent as to his feelings,
+his thoughts, and his opinions, which he further concealed rather than
+revealed by an almost burlesque habit of talking nonsense among his
+intimates.
+
+It would be easy to give many instances of his gift for silence when he
+did not wish to be 'drawn' by his interlocutor. A little story told to
+me by the late Sir Edward Blount is a case in point.
+
+Sir Edward, waiting to see Lord Lyons at the Embassy, heard talking in
+the next room which lasted some time, and soon distinguished the voice
+of M. Blowitz. As soon as he was alone with Lord Lyons he said that he
+felt obliged to warn him that, if he had liked, he could have overheard
+his conversation with the journalist.
+
+'You might,' was the answer, 'have overheard what was said by M.
+Blowitz, but you could not have heard anything said by me for the good
+reason that I said nothing at all!'
+
+It was never known to anybody, as far as it is possible to ascertain,
+whether Lord Lyons had ever even contemplated marriage, though he
+certainly did not recommend celibacy. 'Matrimony,' he constantly used to
+repeat--slightly varying the phrase in his favourite _Rasselas_--'may
+have thorns, but celibacy has no roses.'
+
+There was at one moment, while he was attached to the Embassy at Rome,
+a rumour that he was engaged to be married. Hearing something of it he
+inquired of a lady friend whether she could tell him to whom he was
+supposed to be attached, and later on he discovered that she was herself
+the person in question!
+
+His nature was certainly lonely, and I believe from quite early in life
+he was conscious of suffering from loneliness. I have been told of a
+letter of his written from school in which this was quite clearly set
+forth. In later life he would never have expressed so much. What he felt
+and thought on any intimate question can, I think, only be inferred by
+his comments on life in general, or on the sorrows and joys of others.
+Once only I believe did he take any part in directly influencing the
+lives of young people in the critical question of marriage. The daughter
+of an old friend, with a courage in her confidence which seems to me
+almost phenomenal, told him the story of a mutual affection existing
+between her and a young man who did not seem to her parents to be a
+sufficiently good match. Lord Lyons listened with the utmost attention,
+and eventually interceded with his old friend, speaking of the terrible
+danger of causing irremediable pain to two young hearts, and was the
+means of making these young people happy. Was there, perhaps, in this
+action some reminiscence of a possible past happiness lost by himself?
+No one can even make the faintest surmise as to whether this was the
+case. He made no allusion to his own past when telling the story.
+
+Of his childhood I know little, but there is a toy preserved in the
+family that gives a curious and characteristic foretaste of what he
+was to become. It is a miniature escritoire fitted with pen and paper
+and seals, and also soap and towels, etc. All this was supposed to
+belong to the children's dog, who was promoted in their games to the
+position of an Ambassador, and described as 'His Excellency.' There are
+still existing despatches written to and by 'His Excellency' in the
+handwriting of the four children.
+
+I think he must have been too old to have joined in his sister Minna's
+bit of naughtiness when at Malta she put snuff in the guitar of a young
+exquisite who had provoked their mirth, and whose name was Benjamin
+Disraeli.
+
+He used to say that among his most vivid recollections of his boyhood
+while at Malta, was the unexpected return of his father and the fleet.
+The children had been deeply engaged in preparing theatricals which were
+postponed on account of their father's arrival. He remembered his guilty
+feeling that he ought to be glad, and that he was not glad at all!
+
+It was not at first intended that Bickerton Lyons should enter the
+diplomatic service; he began life in the navy. But Bickerton, unlike
+his brother Edmund, had no vocation for the sea. The sorrow of Edmund's
+loss, who died at Therapia, from a wound received when commanding his
+ship in the Sea of Azoph during the Crimean war, was a shadow that never
+passed from the lives of the other three. Bickerton was deeply attached
+to both his sisters and their families. Annie married Baron Wurtzburg,
+and Minna married Lord Fitzalan, afterwards Duke of Norfolk. Other
+relations with whom he was in close intimacy all his life were his aunt,
+Mrs. Pearson and her children, especially her daughters, Mrs. Lister
+Venables and Mrs. Little, who both survived him.
+
+All his life Lord Lyons was devoted to children, and especially so to
+the large family of the Duchess of Norfolk, with whom he was able to
+indulge his domestic tastes and his love of fun. He spent with them the
+greater part of every holiday, and in the last twenty-five years of his
+life they were frequently with him in Paris. My mother, Lady Victoria,
+the eldest of the family, married very young, and my aunt Minna, the
+second daughter, became a Carmelite nun. Mary, the eldest of the sisters
+who remained at home, was Lord Lyons's constant companion and secretary.
+I think she was the only person who did not experience the strong sense
+of his reserve which so impressed those who had to do with him even in
+everyday intercourse. In a very serious state of health which followed
+his work at Washington he depended greatly on the companionship of his
+nieces. I have been told that for months he could not raise his head,
+and the only thing he could do by himself was to play with glass balls
+on a solitaire board. During this interval in his career, before he
+accepted the Embassy at Constantinople, he had more leisure than usual
+for the society of his sister's family, but he had always been devoted
+to them when they were quite little children, and was once described as
+'an excellent nursery governess.' He said to his sister: 'I could never
+have married; it would not have been right, as I could never have loved
+my own children as much as I love yours.'
+
+Into this near association with him my sisters and I were more
+closely drawn after the death of our parents. We had lost our mother
+in the winter of 1870, and my father, James Hope-Scott, died in the
+spring of 1873. It was then that my grandmother took us to live with
+her at Arundel, and we were added to the large family party who had
+often stayed with him in Paris. My own earliest recollections of my
+great-uncle are tinged with an awe which no amount of time spent with
+him ever quite overcame; but it did not prevent great enjoyment of all
+the fun we had with him. He was certainly very indulgent to the younger
+members of the family circle, particularly my brother, who was some
+years younger than the rest of us, and this was especially the case when
+we were his guests.
+
+I think that what inspired awe was the immense strength of character,
+the reserved force, the severely controlled natural irritability. He
+had, too, a humorous vehemence of expression which seemed at times to be
+a safety valve to the forces he had under control, and was a reminder of
+their existence.
+
+I suppose that nothing could be imagined more stately and more regular
+than life at the Embassy in those days. The Ambassador himself lived
+in a routine of absolute regularity and extremely hard work. He got up
+at seven, had breakfast at eight, and was, I think, at work by nine
+o'clock. His very small leisure, when he was alone, was mostly spent
+in reading. And this was carefully classified in three divisions. In
+the morning he read history or science, in the evening, between tea and
+dinner, biography; while, for an hour before he went to bed he read
+novels. While in France he never left the Embassy. Once a year he did
+leave it for his annual holiday--generally spent in England. He used to
+boast how many nights in succession--I think in one year it amounted
+to over 300--he had slept in the same bed. Every afternoon when we
+were with him, he drove with my grandmother, generally in the Bois de
+Boulogne, and in the warm weather we always stopped at some _café_ for
+us children to have ices. He also took us to the circus once during each
+visit until, in later life, he became afraid of catching cold. He still
+occasionally went to the theatre, to which he had been much devoted as
+a younger man. We all dined downstairs, and he used to like my youngest
+sister and my brother to sit at a little table near the big one and have
+dessert. He insisted on this, and was rather pleased than otherwise at
+the scolding he received from an English friend for keeping them up
+so late. In later life he used to speak of the pretty picture the two
+children had made.
+
+I recollect the extraordinary general sense of importance as to
+his movements in those days, partly on account of their phenomenal
+regularity. I could not imagine him ever acting on impulse, even in the
+matter of going up or downstairs. I cannot picture him strolling into
+his own garden except at the fixed hour. This without intention added to
+the dignity of his life which seemed to move like a rather dreary state
+procession.
+
+I wonder if the servants who never saw him break through his routine,
+or lose one jot of his dignity, ever guessed at how shy he was of them,
+or suspected the rather wistful curiosity he felt about their lives.
+I think it was Pierre, the butler, who lived with his family in the
+_entresol_ between the two floors of reception rooms in the Embassy.
+Lord Lyons was much interested in their family life, and liked to
+speculate as to what went on there. One inconvenient result of his
+extreme shyness was that when he really wished to alter any detail as
+to the daily routine, he could not bring himself to impart his wishes
+to any of the servants. I have often heard him say how tired he was of
+the same breakfast which never varied in the least, and he would add
+that his Italian valet Giuseppe was so convinced that it was the only
+breakfast he liked that when he travelled, the man took incredible
+pains that the coffee, the eggs, the rolls, the marmalade, the two
+tangerine oranges in winter and the tiny basket of strawberries in
+summer, should not differ an iota from those served up every morning
+at the Embassy. But Lord Lyons could never summon up courage to speak
+to him on the subject. On certain days Pierre undertook Giuseppe's
+duties, and for many years Lord Lyons wished that Pierre would arrange
+his things as they were arranged by Giuseppe, but he never told him
+so. While he grumbled, he was amused at the situation and at himself.
+Indeed, his keen sense of the ridiculous and his endless enjoyment of
+nonsense explain a good deal of his life. He used to say that as he was
+too shy to look at the servants' faces, he had learnt to know them by
+their silk stockinged calves. When he dined alone he made an amusement
+of identifying the six or seven pairs of calves, and was proud of his
+success in this odd game of skill.
+
+I recall one ludicrous instance of his shyness with servants. It was
+his custom annually when he came to stay with us to shake hands with
+the old family nurse, and on one occasion, meeting her on the stairs,
+he leant across the banisters to perform the ceremony with such
+_empressement_ and effort that he broke one of the supports. He always
+afterwards alluded to the extraordinary emotion he had shown in this
+greeting. Nothing is so unaccountable as shyness, but it was curious
+that a man who had seen so much of public life and of society should
+have so much of it as he had. I remember once helping him to escape
+with, for him, astonishing speed across the garden of a country house,
+when a very agreeable woman, whom I believe he really liked, had come
+to call; he was as full of glee as if he were a boy running away from a
+school-master.
+
+[Illustration: THE BRITISH EMBASSY, PARIS.
+
+_F. Contet, Paris. Phot._]
+
+I don't think that in Paris he ever gave way to such impulses; they were
+the relaxation of a shy nature in the holidays.
+
+To return for one moment to Paris. He occasionally gave a big official
+dinner which I don't think he at all enjoyed, and of which we knew
+nothing. But he certainly enjoyed small gatherings, especially if they
+included old friends who were passing through Paris, although not one
+word of ordinary sentiment would probably pass his lips, nor would one
+of the day's arrangements be changed. He certainly enjoyed the society
+of his women friends, and I liked to watch him talking to Mrs. Augustus
+Craven, the author of the _Récit d'une Soeur_. Two characteristic
+sayings of his about the Cravens I remember. He was always pleased at
+showing his knowledge of the most orthodox and strict views of Roman
+affairs. He used to say that Mrs. Craven could never make amends for
+her conduct at the time of the Vatican Council--when her _salon_ was a
+centre for 'inopportunist' Bishops--unless she went back to Rome and
+gave 'Infallibilist tea-parties.'
+
+Mr. Augustus Craven, her husband, was intensely mysterious in manner,
+and Lord Lyons used to call him 'the General of the Jesuits.' Once, on
+meeting him in London, he asked him if his wife were with him. Mrs.
+Craven was staying with Lady Cowper, and Mr. Craven answered with
+solemn, slow and mysterious tones: 'She is at Wrest,' and my uncle said
+'Requiescat in Pace,' with equal solemnity.
+
+I think that with all his natural British prejudices he liked French
+people and their ways. He used to maintain that Frenchwomen were more
+domestic and kept earlier hours than Englishwomen. He certainly liked
+French cooking. He spoke once in tones of horror of an Englishman who
+had committed the monstrosity of putting pepper on young green peas--a
+crime of which a Frenchman was incapable.
+
+Many of his opinions, however, like Dr. Johnson's, were evoked by the
+spirit of contradiction, and it was chiefly with English people that I
+heard him talk about the French.
+
+In the holidays in England reading aloud was one of his chief pleasures.
+He read much poetry to us at one time, but later I think he had to
+give this up as it tired him. At Arundel he wrote his letters in the
+dressing-room opening out of his bedroom. We used to sit there waiting
+for him before the appointed time, making drawings in red ink, of which
+there was always a large supply, when he would make a mock solemn
+entrance, as of a stiff professor. We were allowed to scribble during
+the reading, but, woe betide us! if we showed any inattention. He read
+'Marmion,' Southey's 'Thalaba,' and, I think, 'The Curse of Kehama,'
+also much of Byron, the 'Siege of Corinth,' with especial enjoyment. He
+knew many pages of Byron by heart, and we used to get him to repeat any
+amount while out walking. 'Rejected Addresses,' 'Bombastes Furioso,'
+'The Rape of the Lock' were also among the many things he liked to
+recite. I wish I could remember half the things he read or repeated
+to us. I am sure there was no Tennyson, and certainly no Browning. He
+used to jeer at the obscurity of both the Brownings, and to mutter such
+phrases as the 'thundering white silence' of Mrs. Browning with intense
+scorn. I think he may have met the Brownings when he was in Rome. He saw
+a good deal of Fanny and Adelaide Kemble at that time. He liked Adelaide
+much the best of the two, and used to quote with delight a saying of
+hers as to the Brownings. When she was told of the birth of their son
+she exclaimed: 'There are now then not one incomprehensible, or two
+incomprehensibles, but three incomprehensibles!'
+
+He was always amused at the Kemble grand manner. He used to imitate the
+dramatic utterance with which Fanny Kemble frightened a young waiter
+who had brought her some beer. 'I asked for _water_, boy; you bring me
+_beer_!'
+
+At that same time he knew Sir Frederick Leighton, and they once had a
+pillow fight! Who could imagine that pillow fight who only knew him as
+Ambassador in Paris? He always spoke as if he had enjoyed life in Rome;
+he was devoted to the theatre, and he had much congenial society. He
+used to say, too, that Pius IX. was the most agreeable sovereign with
+whom he ever had diplomatic relations.
+
+Lord Lyons's literary tastes were not those of the present generation.
+He declared that he only liked verse that rhymed and music with a tune.
+He loved the sonorous sound of Byron as he loved the solemn cadence of
+Latin verse. All the time the love of absurdity was never far off. He
+would suddenly imitate the action of a schoolboy repeating Latin verse,
+first with his arms and then with his feet! A stout, very dignified
+elderly man, in some path in the garden, punctuating the verse with the
+action of his feet, is sufficiently surprising. Occasionally he would
+have the oddest freaks of this kind, and I remember an afternoon when he
+took a whim of pretending to be imbecile; he made the most extraordinary
+faces, and not a word of sense could be got from him.
+
+Once in a steamer on the lake of Lucerne he insisted on his nieces
+joining him in impersonating a typical family of English tourists
+out for their holiday. He was the _paterfamilias_, one niece was his
+wife, another the German governess, a third his child. In the middle
+of the performance he found that he was being regarded with surprise
+and curiosity by some English society friends whose acquaintance with
+him had hitherto been exclusively in the character of a very dignified
+ambassador.
+
+My aunt, Mary Howard, used to read aloud to him by the hour, and we all
+enjoyed these times immensely. It would be difficult to say how often we
+had 'Pickwick,' 'Cranford,' 'Rasselas,' 'The Rose and the Ring,' and
+'Mrs. Boss's Niece.' I have never met anybody outside that circle who
+ever even heard of 'Mrs. Boss's Niece;' it is a serious loss. To quote
+at all appropriately from any of his favourites was to be exceedingly
+in his good books for the rest of the day. Like the late Lord Salisbury
+he delighted in Miss Yonge; he could not have too many pairs of twins,
+or too large a family circle to read about. He loved the analysis of
+domestic life, and would have been ready to canonise any really and
+genuinely unselfish character. Detective stories were a great joy. 'The
+House on the Marsh,' and 'Called Back,' were among the most successful.
+He used to prolong discussion as to the solution of the mystery, and
+would even knock at our doors very late at night if he thought he had
+identified the murderer, and mutter in dramatic undertones, 'So-an-so
+was the man who did it.' But the detective story was never read before
+dinner, and to look into the book meanwhile was a crime. Anybody who
+peeped to see the end of a novel 'deserved to be dragged to death by
+wild horses.' And there must be no skipping. Only descriptions of
+scenery--to which he had the strongest objection--might be left out.
+
+The annual holiday was, for the most part, spent with the Duchess of
+Norfolk at Arundel, and later at Heron's Ghyll. Sometimes he went to
+Germany to take the waters, in company with his eldest sister, Baroness
+Wurtzburg. When in England he always paid a certain number of country
+house visits. These generally included Knowsley and Woburn. The visits
+that were paid every year, I think without exception, were those to
+Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, and to an old schoolfellow--Major Trower,
+who had been with him at Winchester. Major Trower was one of four old
+Wykehamists who remained close friends. The other two had died some time
+before. I think the visit to Raby was annual. He specially enjoyed the
+society of the Duchess of Cleveland and of Lady Mary Hope. He was at
+Raby in the September before he died, and I believe that was the last
+visit he ever paid. The famous visitors' book there always amused him,
+and he was fond of quoting from it. One of his own contributions I
+remember was written with mock modesty. He took from Lockhart's Spanish
+ballads the lines:--
+
+ ''Twere better to be silent before such a crowd of folk,
+ Than utter words as meaningless as he did when he spoke.'
+
+His recollections of the society of his youth in these houses had some
+amusing details. I think it was at the Duchess of Bedford's that there
+was a Christmas tree, off which each young man visitor was given a piece
+of flowered silk for a waistcoat. Early next morning, at Mr. Lyons's
+suggestion, one of the young men, provided with a list of the names and
+addresses of the tailors employed by the others, went up to London and
+brought back all the waistcoats made up in time to be worn at dinner
+that evening. He used to speak with some amusement of the ungraciousness
+of Rogers, the poet, whom he met at the Derbys'. On one occasion Rogers
+had lost his spectacles, and Mr. Lyons went a long way in the big house
+to find them. Rogers who was drinking tea took the spectacles, but did
+not thank him, and, a moment later, when he heard Mr. Lyons refusing
+sugar, he observed to the company: 'That young man, having nothing else
+to be proud of, is proud of not having sugar with his tea!'
+
+I don't suppose that he talked much as a young man, and probably he
+followed the rule he always preached, that young men should speak
+'little but often.'
+
+Among the few serious sayings to be quoted from him was that the great
+axiom in diplomacy was 'Never do anything to-day that can be put off
+till to-morrow.'
+
+In speaking of Leo XIII. and his successful policy with Bismarck, he
+said: 'Those very clever men succeed by doing what no one expects. My
+success has been made by always doing what was expected of me. I always
+did the safe thing.'
+
+In conversation he enjoyed a Johnsonian style of repartee. One retort of
+his had an excellent practical result. He acted as a special constable
+in London during the Chartist Riots. Hearing a woman in the dense crowd
+cry out, 'Let me faint, let me faint,' he turned to her at once, and
+said: 'Pray do, madam,' whereupon she recovered immediately.
+
+Soon after the Berlin Conference when the Disraeli party were making the
+most of the accession of Crete, a visitor at the Embassy, gushing over
+its charms concluded with the assertion that Crete was the loveliest
+island in the world. Whereupon Mr. William Barrington (now Sir William
+Barrington) said drily: 'Have you seen all the others?' This amused
+Lord Lyons immensely, and some years afterwards when a young lady who
+was and is still famous for her powers of conversation had talked at
+him for some time, he adopted the same method. After a good many other
+sweeping assertions she said of some work that had just come out: 'It is
+the best written book that has appeared this century.' 'Ah,' he said,
+'have you read all the others?' Being alone with her soon afterwards I
+was not surprised at her inquiring of me dubiously whether I liked my
+great-uncle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It need hardly be said that, in the matter of his personal religion,
+Lord Lyons was very reticent. He was absolutely regular in his
+attendance at the Sunday service in Paris and in England. He was very
+fond of the singing of English hymns.
+
+He never had any sympathy with the ritualist party in the Church of
+England, and was inclined to be sarcastic as to those whom he designated
+'Puseyites,' as was then the custom.
+
+One who knew him very well told me that for a time he was somewhat
+unsettled in the matter of definite religious belief. There is also
+evidence that in middle life the idea of joining the Catholic Church
+had been present to him as a possibility. As far as can be known it
+was during the last summer of his life that he began to consider the
+question practically. It is not surprising that Lord Lyons, when he
+took the matter up, showed the same characteristics in its regard that
+he had shown in any serious question throughout his life, namely, the
+greatest thoroughness and care in studying the Catholic religion and
+in carrying out its practical side, reserve as to deep sentiment, not
+without humorous touches which were intensely characteristic. Newman's
+works formed the chief part of his study during those summer months.
+A letter written in that August says of him, 'He is always reading
+Newman.' It was not until shortly before his death that he spoke on the
+matter to any of the family. A note in the writing of his secretary and
+intimate friend--Mr. George Sheffield--says that he spoke of it six
+weeks before his death. Lord Lyons had known Bishop Butt for many years
+when he was parish priest at Arundel, and it was to him that he applied
+for advice. He studied the Penny Catechism most carefully, learning the
+answers by heart, like a child. He began to fulfil the practices of a
+Catholic with great regularity. He went to Mass daily at ten o'clock,
+and adopted little habits of self-denial and showed greater liberality
+in almsgiving. The last honour he ever received was the offer of an
+earldom on his retiring from the Paris Embassy. He suggested to Dr. Butt
+that it would be a good act of mortification to refuse this honour, but
+the Bishop would not advise him to do so. He began, against his usual
+custom, to give money to crossing-sweepers or beggars in the streets,
+and I am told by my aunt, Lady Phillippa Stewart, that, after returning
+from my wedding, he said to her: 'Is it not customary after an event
+of this kind to give money in alms?' He then suggested that he should
+make some offering to the hospitals and asked her to write out the
+names of those she thought would be the most suitable. It was about
+ten days before my marriage in November, 1887, that I first heard of
+his intentions. I learnt it in a fashion very characteristic of him. I
+was not staying in the house, but I had been dining with him when he
+remarked casually: 'Really, my austerities are becoming alarming. I have
+given up soup for dinner and jam for breakfast.' This struck me as a
+novel proceeding, as I knew his fondness for jam and that the ordinary
+routine of dinner beginning with a clear soup was a fixed ceremonial
+with him. That night I questioned my aunt, who told me that he had been
+for some weeks preparing to join the Church. It was at this time that
+he said to one of the family: 'I am now ready to be received as soon
+as the Bishop likes.' He also characteristically consulted his nephew,
+the Duke of Norfolk, as to whether he ought to inform Lord Salisbury of
+his intention of becoming a Catholic. He did not, during these weeks,
+know that he was in any danger. The last time I saw my great uncle was
+at my wedding. He had a stroke about ten days afterwards, and to all
+appearance became unconscious. Dr. Butt, knowing what his intentions had
+been, had no hesitation in giving him conditional Baptism and Extreme
+Unction. I was at the funeral at Arundel, and saw the coffin lowered
+into the vault in the Fitzalan Chapel, where his sister Minna had been
+placed two and a half years earlier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I feel most strongly as I conclude these very imperfect notes, how
+entirely Lord Lyons belonged to a generation of Englishmen now long
+passed away. The force of will, the power of self-devotion, the dignity,
+the reticence, the minute regularity, the sense of order, the degree
+of submission to authority and the undoubting assertion of his own
+authority towards others--all were elements in a strong personality.
+There are, no doubt, strong men now, but their strength is of a
+different kind. Englishmen to-day are obliged to be more expansive
+and unreserved. No fixed routine can be followed now as then; no man
+can so guard his own life and his own personality from the public
+eye. Lord Lyons was not of the type that makes the successful servant
+of the democracy. Fidelity, reticence, self-effacement, are not the
+characteristics that are prominent in the popular idea of the strong man
+to-day. But no one who knew Lord Lyons can doubt that those qualities
+were in him a great part of his strength. He was and must always be to
+those who knew him very much of an enigma, and it certainly would not
+have been his own wish that any great effort should be made to interpret
+his inner life to the world at large.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Aali Pasha, i. 146, 150, 151, 155, 161, 166, 167, 172;
+ and the Paris Conference, i. 153.
+
+ Abdul Aziz, Sultan of Turkey, i. 151, ii. 175;
+ effort for Navy, i. 152;
+ dismisses Fuad Pasha, i. 155;
+ unpopularity of, i. 161, 163;
+ visit to France, i. 169, 170;
+ to England, i. 171, 173.
+
+ Abdul Hamid, ii. 108, 208;
+ policy of, ii. 137;
+ reported conspiracy against, ii. 167;
+ suzerainty in Tunis, ii. 246;
+ overthrow of, i. 168.
+
+ Aberdeen, Lord, ii. 11.
+
+ Abolition proclamation, i. 93.
+
+ Abou Klea, battle of, ii. 343.
+
+ Adams, Mr., U.S. Minister in London, i. 38, 43, 59, 63, 71, 72, 98, 99.
+
+ Adams, Sir Francis, chargé d'affaires at Paris, ii. 72;
+ telegram on Anglo-French sympathies, ii. 136;
+ Minister at Berne, ii. 220.
+
+ Adrianople, railway to Constantinople, i. 176.
+
+ Aehrenthal, Count, i. 342.
+
+ Afghanistan, Lytton's policy in, ii. 209;
+ attacked by Russia, ii. 348, 352.
+
+ Africa, west coast, ii. 409.
+
+ _Alabama_ incident, i. 97, 98, 99, 105, 300;
+ question revived, i. 162, 189.
+
+ Alaska, bought by America, i. 168.
+
+ Albanian league, ii. 228.
+
+ Alderson, Capt., sent to report on army of the Potomac, i. 128, 129.
+
+ Alexander, Emperor of Russia, i. 187, 255, 273, 333, 354, ii. 52,
+ 54, 404;
+ visit to Berlin, ii. 76;
+ friendliness to England, ii. 80;
+ attempt on life of, ii. 207.
+
+ Alexandretta, ii. 150, 151.
+
+ Alexandria, ii. 172, 188, 273;
+ Anglo-French Naval Demonstration at, ii. 283;
+ massacre at, ii. 285;
+ bombardment of, ii. 288.
+
+ Algeria, position of French in, i. 199, 268, 271, 382, ii. 159, 249.
+
+ Alsace and Lorraine, question of cession, i. 321, 332, 334, 358,
+ 361, 369;
+ French hopes of recovery of, ii. 103, 135, 195, 197, 247, 346;
+ trade of, ii. 14.
+
+ America, army, i. 45, 47, 48, 79, 109;
+ methods of recruiting, i. 110, 116;
+ finance, i. 57;
+ slave trade, i. 20;
+ affairs in central, i. 13;
+ relations between North and South, i. 20, 29, 31;
+ relations with England, i. 12, 15, 16, 45, 46, 79, 129, 189.
+
+ American Civil War, i. 34, 343;
+ Blockade question, i. 33, 36, 37;
+ privateering, i. 42;
+ Confederate Government, i. 53;
+ Southern Confederacy, i. 31, 33, 34, 36;
+ position of Consuls, i. 83, 121;
+ Southern activity, i. 82, 83;
+ Revolutionary Party, i. 80;
+ proposed foreign intervention, i. 90, 91, 92, 96;
+ rising prices, i. 94;
+ vessel building in England, i. 101, 102;
+ position of foreigners during, i. 106-109;
+ seizure of British vessels, i. 100, 104, 105;
+ Irish in, i. 109, 114, 115;
+ Germans in, i. 115;
+ British officers sent to follow operations, i. 128;
+ M. Mercier on, i. 85.
+
+ Anarchical plots, i. 187.
+
+ Ancona district, Austrian troops in, i. 3.
+
+ Anderson, at Fort Sumter, i. 35.
+
+ Anderson, Mr., attaché at Washington, i. 87.
+
+ Andrassy, Count, ii. 85;
+ and the Eastern Question, ii. 127, 134, 138;
+ and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194.
+
+ Andrassy Note, ii. 95.
+
+ Anglo-Russian Agreement, ii. 143, 160.
+
+ Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. 140-142;
+ disclosed to Waddington, ii. 148;
+ made public, ii. 151;
+ irritation in France, ii. 152, 159, 163.
+
+ Annam, French in, ii. 103, 307, 327.
+
+ Anti-Slavery party in England, i. 118.
+
+ Antonelli, Cardinal, i. 3, 4, 184.
+
+ Anzin, ii. 323.
+
+ Arabi Bey, rebellion of, ii. 258, 273, 278;
+ Minister of War, ii. 279, 283;
+ campaign against, ii. 295, 296.
+
+ Arago, Emmanuel, succeeds Gambetta as Minister of War, i. 361.
+
+ Archibald, Consul, on the kidnapping of recruits, i. 112.
+
+ Arcolay pamphlet, i. 220.
+
+ Argyll, Duke and Duchess of, i. 41.
+
+ Armenia, ii. 131, 137;
+ patriarch question, ii. 55.
+
+ Army Purchase Bill, ii. 9, 12.
+
+ Arnim, Count, Minister at Rome, i. 347;
+ Ambassador at Paris, ii. 14, 16, 27, 30, 60, 68, 140;
+ and Thiers, ii. 31;
+ on French policy, ii. 45;
+ Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 46.
+
+ Arundel, Lyons at, i. 139, ii. 222, 418, 422, 428.
+
+ Ashman, Mr., i. 50.
+
+ Asia Minor, Russian policy in, i. 268, ii. 133, 137.
+
+ Athens, i. 149; Lyons attaché at, i. 1.
+
+ Atlantic, coast defence, i. 40.
+
+ Augusta, Empress, Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 80, 354.
+
+ Aumale Duc d', ii. 2, 7, 16, 44, 48, 51, 56, 64, 311, 368.
+
+ d'Aunay, M., ii. 300, 376.
+
+ Austria, relations with Prussia, i. 186, 193, 202;
+ relations with France, ii. 35;
+ military power of, i. 268;
+ and the Eastern Question, ii. 85, 127;
+ in the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. 153;
+ in the Ancona district, i. 3.
+
+ Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194, 199, 205, 398.
+
+ Austro-Prussian War, failure of French policy in, i. 177.
+
+ Azoph, Sea of, ii. 417.
+
+
+ Bac-ninh, ii. 324.
+
+ Baden, Grand Duchy of, and Confederation, i. 208, 266, 276, 285, 293;
+ French policy in, i. 190, ii. 36;
+ proposed neutrality, i. 302.
+
+ Bagdad railway, ii. 151.
+
+ Bahamas, the, i. 130.
+
+ Baker Pasha, defeat of, ii. 323.
+
+ Balkan Peninsula, ii. 223.
+
+ Bapaume, i. 355.
+
+ Bardo, Treaty of the, ii. 243.
+
+ Baring, Major (Earl of Cromer) in Egypt, ii. 189, 322, 352;
+ letter to Lyons, ii. 203;
+ and "Modern Egypt," ii. 295.
+
+ _Barracouta_, H.M.S., i. 100.
+
+ Barrère, M., ii. 322.
+
+ Barrington, Mr. (Sir William), ii. 128, 426.
+
+ Bateman, Sir Alfred, ii. 253.
+
+ Batoum, ii. 137, 138, 143.
+
+ Baucel, M., i. 228.
+
+ Bavaria, i. 193;
+ and Confederation, i. 266;
+ proposed neutrality, i. 302.
+
+ Bayazid, ii. 142.
+
+ Baynes, Admiral, i. 23.
+
+ Bazaine, General, i. 317, 320;
+ capitulation, i. 329.
+
+ Beaconsfield, Lord, ii. 144.
+
+ Beatrice, Princess, ii. 162.
+
+ Beauregard, General, i. 35.
+
+ Beaury, plot against Napoleon III., i. 285.
+
+ Bedford, Duchess of, ii. 425.
+
+ Belfort, i. 370, 374.
+
+ Belgium, Prince Napoleon on, i. 193;
+ French in, i. 211;
+ trade relations with France, ii. 25;
+ neutrality of, i. 298, 302;
+ foreign policy towards, i. 303, 355, ii. 113, 124, 206;
+ secret Treaty, i. 320, 340;
+ in Constantinople Conference, ii. 109;
+ Bismarck's policy in, i. 254, ii. 74, 83, 345.
+
+ Belgium, King of, i. 212, 216.
+
+ Belgrade, Fortress of, i. 161;
+ evacuated by the Turks, i. 163.
+
+ Belligerent Rights, Exposition of French Jurists on, i. 44, 46, 50.
+
+ Benedetti, French Ambassador at Berlin, i. 293;
+ on Franco-Prussian situation, i. 299;
+ affront to, i. 300, ii. 206;
+ despatch from, i. 304;
+ meeting with King of Prussia at Ems, i. 305.
+
+ Benjamin, Mr., i. 122.
+
+ Berlin, Congress at, ii. 147.
+
+ _Berlin Post_, "Is War in Sight" article, ii. 72.
+
+ Berlin, Treaty of, i. 342, ii. 227;
+ Layard on, ii. 160.
+
+ Bermuda, i. 130.
+
+ Berne, ii. 256.
+
+ Bernstorff, Count, Prussian Ambassador in London, i. 196, 256, 259,
+ 260, 268, 293, 304, 309, 317, 323, 337;
+ on Belgian affairs, i. 218;
+ letter from Bismarck, i. 261.
+
+ Bert, M. Paul, ii. 323.
+
+ Berthaut, General, Minister of War, ii. 115.
+
+ Bessarabia, ii. 142, 367.
+
+ Bessborough, Lord, ii. 11.
+
+ Beust, Count, Austrian Minister, i. 162, 272, 314, 320; ii. 202, 231;
+ and the Belgian question, i. 229;
+ letter to Metternich, ii. 35.
+
+ Beyens, Baron, Belgian Minister, i. 213.
+
+ Biarritz, i. 197.
+
+ Biggar, Mr., ii. 234.
+
+ Billing, Baron de, plan to relieve Gordon, ii. 326.
+
+ Billot, General, ii. 311.
+
+ Bisaccia, Duc de, French Ambassador in London, ii. 57.
+
+ Bismarck, Prince, i. 162, 192, 387;
+ and Luxemburg railway affair, i. 168, 213;
+ and German Confederation, i. 247, 251, 276;
+ at Ems, i. 293;
+ and the Vatican, ii. 30, 68;
+ relations with Emperor, ii. 62, 120;
+ and disarmament negotiations, i. 254, 260-5, 270-3, 275, 278, 301;
+ foreign policy of, i. 179, 211, 214, 218, 314, 355, ii. 14, 29, 49,
+ 54, 70, 72, 74, 77, 82, 124, 205, 345, 358;
+ with regard to Austria, ii. 42;
+ and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194;
+ and Belgium, i. 303;
+ and the Eastern Question, ii. 90, 97, 231;
+ and Egypt, ii. 150, 297, 325, 338, 339, 352;
+ and France, ii. 16, 60, 136, 283, 286, 384;
+ during war, i. 314;
+ peace negotiations, i. 345, 348, 357, 361, 365, 370, 374, 380,
+ ii. 20, 30, 82;
+ and payment of indemnity, ii. 3;
+ colonial policy, ii. 60;
+ and French colonial schemes, ii. 244-5, 251, 259, 264, 268, 342;
+ and Russia, i. 338;
+ and Russo-Turkish War, ii. 109;
+ Suez Canal transaction, ii. 94;
+ and claims of Prussia in Tunis, i. 200;
+ and Favre, i. 316, 318, 321, 323, 324, 352;
+ interviews with Malet, i. 319;
+ with Thiers, i. 329, 331, 342, 353, 358;
+ French views of policy, ii. 107;
+ and Arnim, ii. 46;
+ and Boulanger, ii. 401;
+ and Clarendon, i. 250, 279;
+ and Gramont, i. 307;
+ and Count Münster, ii. 388;
+ and Napoleon III., i. 221, 254, 333;
+ and Odo Russell, i. 338;
+ and Waddington, ii. 168;
+ on himself, ii. 61;
+ on French Press, i. 271-2;
+ and the German Press, i. 305;
+ power of, ii. 53, 73;
+ illness of, ii. 290.
+
+ "Bismarck, his Reflections and Reminiscences," quoted, i. 338.
+
+ Bizerta, ii. 243.
+
+ Black Sea Conference, i. 341, 350, 366;
+ clauses in Treaty of Paris, concerning, i. 337;
+ French policy in, i. 337, 339;
+ Russia policy in, ii. 127.
+
+ Blairgowrie, Lord Russell at, i. 119.
+
+ Blanqui, revolutionary leader, i. 385.
+
+ Bleichröder, ii. 384.
+
+ Blignières, M. de, ii. 171, 204;
+ in Egypt, ii. 189, 238, 261, 278;
+ resignation of, ii. 279;
+ on Egyptian finances, ii. 330.
+
+ Blockade, international law concerning, i. 97.
+
+ Blount, Sir Edward, ii. 415.
+
+ Blowitz, M., _Times_ correspondent, ii. 70, 241, 308, 416.
+
+ Blue Books, publication of, i. 101, 102, 300.
+
+ Boer War, i. 49;
+ pay of men in, i. 110.
+
+ Bonaparte, Prince Pierre, i. 244.
+
+ Bonapartist Party, policy of, i. 349, 356, 364, ii. 15, 17, 66, 106,
+ 191.
+
+ Bordeaux, i. 345, 349.
+
+ Bosnia, ii. 127, 134, 141, 143;
+ annexation of, i. 342;
+ insurrection in, ii. 84.
+
+ _Bosphore Egyptien_, suspended, ii. 352.
+
+ Boston, i. 73, 75;
+ harbour, i. 64.
+
+ Boulanger, General, ii. 121;
+ policy, ii. 367, 384, 385, 393, 403;
+ and the army, ii. 365, 383;
+ popularity of, ii. 366;
+ at Longchamps, ii. 369;
+ mobilization scheme, ii. 401, 411;
+ transferred to Clermont-Ferrand, ii. 409.
+
+ Bourbaki, General, i. 327, 354;
+ on the military situation, i. 327;
+ at Bourges, i. 348;
+ defeated, i. 359;
+ army not included in armistice, i. 360.
+
+ Bourges, Bourbaki at, i. 348.
+
+ Brassey, Mr., application for railway concession, i. 176.
+
+ Bray, Bavarian Minister, i. 302.
+
+ Brodie, attaché at Washington, i. 87.
+
+ Broglie, Duc de, at Black Sea Conference, i. 341;
+ French Ambassador in London, ii. 22, 23, 24;
+ in French politics, ii. 64, 67, 100;
+ becomes Prime Minister, ii. 111;
+ unpopularity of, ii. 113.
+
+ Browning, Mr. and Mrs., ii. 422.
+
+ Bruce, Sir Frederick, i. 140, 141.
+
+ Brünnow, Baron, i. 186, ii. 38.
+
+ Buchanan, President (U.S.A.), i. 12, 19, 23, 29;
+ invitation to Prince of Wales, i. 25;
+ letter from Queen Victoria, i. 26.
+
+ Bucharest, i. 149.
+
+ Buffet, M., i. 282.
+
+ Bulgaria, i. 166-8, ii. 142, 143;
+ proposed limits of, ii. 130;
+ Union with Eastern Roumelia, ii. 360;
+ Russia in, ii. 367, 391, 399.
+
+ Bull's Run, Fight of, i. 47-50, 110.
+
+ Bülow, Count von, ii. 53, 74, 87.
+
+ Bulwer, Sir Henry, at the Constantinople Embassy, i. 145, 146;
+ opinion on a Turkish Navy, i. 152.
+
+ Bulwer, Lady, i. 146.
+
+ Bunch, Mr., British Consul at Charleston, i. 42, 51-53, 72, 94.
+
+ Burmah, ii. 358;
+ English in, ii. 360;
+ annexation of, ii. 361.
+
+ Burnley, Mr., Chargé d'Affaires in Washington, i. 134, 136.
+
+ Burns, Mr., ii. 343.
+
+ Busch, M., ii. 130;
+ quoted, ii. 82, 344, 352.
+
+ Butt, Bishop, ii. 427.
+
+ Buyak Dere, ii. 138.
+
+
+ _Cagliari_ case, i. 8-11.
+
+ Cairo, intrigues at, ii. 87, 258;
+ British troops enter, ii. 285;
+ Northbrook mission to, ii. 332.
+
+ Calais, ii. 22.
+
+ Calcutta, i. 223.
+
+ Calice, Baron, ii. 130.
+
+ Cambridge, Duke of, i. 379.
+
+ Canada, i. 15, 119;
+ defences of, i. 40, 43, 49, 60, 72, 74, 80, 132, 134, 291;
+ despatch of troops to, i. 54;
+ Reciprocity Treaties, i. 17, 123.
+
+ _Caradoc_, the, i. 146.
+
+ Carafa, Signor, Neapolitan Foreign Minister, i. 9, 11.
+
+ Carey, Capt., ii. 194.
+
+ Carnarvon, Lord, resigns office, ii. 123.
+
+ Cass, Miss, ii. 398.
+
+ Cass, General, i. 12.
+
+ Cayenne, i. 243.
+
+ Ceylon, i. 223.
+
+ Chalons, i. 204;
+ French army at i. 307.
+
+ Chambord, Comte de, i. 364; ii. 2, 9, 18, 21, 25, 56, 57, 64, 66;
+ proclamation of, ii. 7;
+ White Flag manifesto, ii. 47.
+
+ Chanzy, General, at Le Mans, i. 348, 354, 359;
+ suggested President, ii. 118, 197;
+ death of, ii. 305.
+
+ Charles X. of France, i. 254.
+
+ Charleston, fighting at, i. 34, 51;
+ prices in, during war, i. 94.
+
+ Charmes, M., ii. 376, 387.
+
+ Chartres, Duc de, ii. 3, 365.
+
+ Chase, Mr., Secretary of Treasury, U.S., i. 43, 119.
+
+ Chasseurs d'Afrique, ii. 118.
+
+ Chatsworth, Lyons at, ii. 222.
+
+ Chattanooga, i. 120.
+
+ Chaudordy, Comte de, i. 325;
+ and the elections, i. 338;
+ policy at Tours, i. 339;
+ on the recognition of the Government, i. 357, 362;
+ on cession of territory, i. 329;
+ and Black Sea Conference, i. 366, 371;
+ at Constantinople Conference, ii. 109, 398.
+
+ Cherbourg, i. 303.
+
+ Cherif Pasha, ii. 174, 204.
+
+ Childers, Mr., ii. 330.
+
+ China, French Treaty with, ii. 327;
+ French war with, ii. 337.
+
+ Chios, ii. 159.
+
+ Chislehurst, Empress Eugénie at, i. 327;
+ reported review by Napoleon at, ii. 21;
+ death of Napoleon at, ii. 36.
+
+ Choiseul, ii. 231.
+
+ Christ Church, Oxford, Lord Lyons at, i. 1.
+
+ Christiania, i. 345.
+
+ Christians in Turkey, i. 160, 165, 167.
+
+ Civita Vecchia, i. 8, 180, ii. 55.
+
+ Claremont, Colonel, British military attaché in Paris, i. 194, 196,
+ 245, 351, 377;
+ on French army, i. 281.
+
+ Clarendon, Lord, interest in Lyons, i. 6, 8, 174;
+ and the _Cagliari_ case, i. 9;
+ succeeds Lord Russell as Foreign Secretary, i. 149;
+ on Roumanian affairs, i. 156;
+ on Franco-Prussian relations, i. 201;
+ and Napoleon III., i. 203;
+ return to office, i. 205;
+ and proposed Turco-Greek Conference, i. 210;
+ on foreign affairs, i. 214, 216;
+ on French politics, i. 231, 237, 241;
+ on disarmament, i. 247, 251, 256, 301;
+ views on the plébiscite, i. 287;
+ on North American colonies, i. 292;
+ and party voting, ii. 11;
+ Bismarck's tribute to, i. 279;
+ death of, i. 294;
+ his private correspondence, i. 221;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 207, 215, 217, 225, 234, 236, 247, 259, 260,
+ 266, 276, 282, 287, 293;
+ letters to Loftus, i. 267, 251.
+
+ Clémenceau, M., ii. 201, 350;
+ open letter from de Blignières to, ii. 279.
+
+ Clermont-Ferrand, ii. 409.
+
+ Cleveland, Duchess of, ii. 424.
+
+ Coasting trade with U.S.A., i. 17.
+
+ Cobden, on intervention in American Civil War, i. 92.
+
+ Cochin China, ii. 103.
+
+ Cologne, i. 193.
+
+ Commercial Treaties, Anglo-French negotiations, i. 239, 241, 243,
+ 245, 284, 368, 372; ii. 3, 7, 8, 14, 33, 43, 163, 165, 206, 252,
+ 261, 265, 269, 315.
+
+ Commune, termination of, i. 388.
+
+ Compiègne, i. 206.
+
+ Congo Conference, ii. 334.
+
+ Connecticut, i. 113.
+
+ Conolly, General, ii. 102.
+
+ Conscription Act, in U.S., i. 115.
+
+ Constantinople i. 5;
+ Embassy at, offered to Lyons, i. 144;
+ position of British ambassador at, i. 147;
+ intrigues, i. 149, 151;
+ discontent among Mussulmans, i. 167;
+ railway scheme, i. 176;
+ Russian policy in, ii. 52, 124;
+ Moustier's policy in, i. 206;
+ Conference at, ii. 106, 107, 108, 109, 398.
+
+ Corfu, ii. 224.
+
+ Cotton trade with America, i. 31, 88, 89;
+ during the war, i. 115, 118, 122.
+
+ Courbet, Admiral, ii. 322;
+ in Chinese war, ii. 337.
+
+ Courbevoie, i. 381.
+
+ Courcel, overtures from Bismarck, ii. 353.
+
+ Coutouly, M., ii. 182.
+
+ Couza, Prince, i. 149, 150, 157;
+ deposed, i. 153.
+
+ Cowley, Lord, i. 70, 225;
+ on Eastern question, i. 170;
+ on Ambassadors' votes, ii. 9;
+ visit to Napoleon, i. 197;
+ letter to Lord Lyons, i. 165.
+
+ Cowper, Lady, ii. 421.
+
+ Crampton, Sir John, i. 41, 42.
+
+ Craven, Mr. and Mrs. Augustus, ii. 421.
+
+ Cremer, Mr., ii. 342.
+
+ Crete, i. 148, 180, 300, ii. 159, 426;
+ insurrection in, i. 160, 163, 208;
+ proposed cession to Greece, i. 163, 206;
+ Omar Pasha sent to, i. 166;
+ settlement in Turco-Greek Conference, i. 210.
+
+ Cridland, Mr., i. 122.
+
+ Crimean war, allusions to, i. 4, 49, 129, 170, ii. 229, 417.
+
+ Cromer, Earl of. _See_ Baring.
+
+ Crowe, Sir Joseph, ii. 196, 253, 323.
+
+ Cuba, United States and, i. 13, 15.
+
+ _Curaçoa_, H.M.S., i. 12.
+
+ Currie, Lord, ii. 371.
+
+ _Cuvier_, the, French gunboat, ii. 22.
+
+ _Cygnet_, H.M.S., i. 100.
+
+ Cyprus, ii. 143, 150, 151.
+
+ Czacki, Mgr., ii. 233.
+
+ Czarewitch, ill-will to Prussia, i. 255, 260.
+
+
+ _Daily Telegraph_, letter on Lyons' opinions, ii. 129.
+
+ Daira Land, administration of the, ii. 340.
+
+ Dallas, Mr., U.S. Minister in London, i. 18, 38.
+
+ Damietta, ii. 188.
+
+ Danube, Russian policy, ii. 145.
+
+ Dardanelles, the, i. 350, ii. 123, 224.
+
+ Daru, Count, i. 243, 247, 251, 256, 261, 282;
+ on disarmament, i. 258, 265, 274, 301;
+ on political situation in France, i. 244;
+ on Bismarck's policy, i. 257;
+ and the plébiscite, i. 289.
+
+ Davies, Jefferson, i. 89, 121, 123.
+
+ Dayton, Mr., i. 46.
+
+ _Débuts,_ anti-English articles in, ii. 180, 376.
+
+ Décazes, Duc, ii. 50;
+ French Foreign Minister, ii. 56;
+ and the suzerainty of Tunis, ii. 60;
+ and ministerial crisis, ii. 67;
+ on foreign affairs, ii. 68;
+ and the war scare, ii. 71, 83;
+ policy in Russo-Turkish war, ii. 109;
+ internal policy, ii. 90, 100, 112;
+ suggests secret treaty to England, ii. 113.
+
+ Declaration of Paris, allusions to, i. 38, 42.
+
+ Denmark, Bismarck and, i. 272, 278;
+ Danish War, i. 177;
+ position before Franco-Prussian War, i. 302;
+ and Russia, i. 355.
+
+ Derby, Earl of. _See_ Stanley.
+
+ Dervish Pasha, ii. 284.
+
+ Des Michels, M., ii. 231.
+
+ Dilke, Sir Charles, ii. 197;
+ and Anglo-French commercial negotiations, ii. 253, 263, 269;
+ his Cherbourg speech, ii. 244.
+
+ Disarmament negotiations, i. 246 _et seq._
+
+ Disraeli, Benjamin (Lord Beaconsfield), ii. 61;
+ quoted, ii. 138, 417;
+ on Franco-Prussian relations, i. 208;
+ on Anglo-French relations, ii. 73.
+
+ Dix, Maj.-General John A., Report to, on recruiting system, i. 112-3,
+ 131;
+ and raid of St. Albans, i. 135.
+
+ Döllinger movement, ii. 31.
+
+ Domain Land, administration in, ii. 340.
+
+ Dongorita, ii. 386, 388.
+
+ Douglas, Governor, i. 19, 43.
+
+ Dragoman system, Lyons dislike of, i. 146, 150, 175.
+
+ Dresden, Lyons attaché at, i. 2.
+
+ Duclerc, M., ii. 154;
+ forms a Ministry, ii. 293;
+ refuses office of Foreign Minister, ii. 380.
+
+ Ducrot, General, ii. 111, 115.
+
+ Dufaure, M., in the National Assembly, i. 365;
+ President of the Council, ii. 119;
+ resigns office, ii. 167.
+
+ Dufferin, Lord, ii. 284, 287;
+ in Egypt, ii. 297, 299, 317.
+
+ Dulcigno, ii. 274;
+ demonstration at, ii. 228;
+ surrender of, ii. 232.
+
+ Dundas, Admiral, i. 5.
+
+ Dunkirk, ii. 22.
+
+ Dupanloup, Mgr., Bishop of Orleans, ii. 114.
+
+
+ Eastern Question, i. 221 _et seq._;
+ reopened, ii. 84, 89, 95;
+ Salisbury's circular on, ii. 132.
+
+ Edinburgh, Duke of, offer of throne of Spain to, i. 200.
+
+ Egerton, Sir Edwin, ii. 412.
+
+ Egypt, affairs of, ii. 128, 154, 163, 203;
+ crisis in, ii. 171;
+ controllers appointed, ii. 189;
+ question of independence, i. 240;
+ Dual Note presented, ii. 270;
+ proposed Foreign Commission, ii. 273;
+ Turkish Commission in, ii. 284;
+ Conference on situation, ii. 285, 333;
+ Italy refuses to join England in, ii. 293;
+ Loan Decree, ii. 357;
+ question of evacuation, ii. 389;
+ Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. 405, 409;
+ financial affairs, ii. 330;
+ proposed Conference on, ii. 325;
+ French counter-proposals, ii. 341;
+ settlement of, ii. 347;
+ English policy in, ii. 89, 109, 123, 133, 139, 153, 187-9;
+ Anglo-French action in, ii. 182;
+ Anglo-French relations in, ii. 246, 258, 296, 302, 304, 375;
+ French policy in, ii. 103, 386;
+ fears of English annexation, ii. 135;
+ French retirement from, ii. 291, 293;
+ National Party in, ii. 273;
+ foreign interests in, ii. 104;
+ Derby's policy in, ii. 122.
+
+ Elliot, Sir Henry, ii. 216.
+
+ Elysée, the, New Year's reception at, ii. 305.
+
+ Emancipation of Slaves, i. 95.
+
+ Emly, Lord, letter to Czacki, ii. 234.
+
+ Ems, interviews at, i. 305;
+ visit of Emperor of Russia, i. 293.
+
+ Enfida estate dispute, ii. 238.
+
+ England, relations with the Papal Government, i. 4;
+ and the Neapolitan Government, i. 9;
+ and with U.S.A., i. 12;
+ and Belgian independence, i. 212;
+ commercial relations with France, i. 239, ii. 25.
+ (_See_ Commercial Treaties);
+ expenditure on armament, i. 278;
+ position in Franco-Prussian question, i. 203, 205, 314, 317;
+ and peace negotiations, i. 334;
+ military forces of, ii. 288;
+ military preparations in Central Asia, ii. 346;
+ press in, ii. 335.
+
+ Erlanger, Baron Emile d', ii. 93.
+
+ Errington, M.P., Mr. G., ii. 236;
+ secret mission to the Vatican, ii. 339.
+
+ Erskine, Mr., British Minister at Athens, i. 149.
+
+ Eugénie, Empress, on foreign affairs, i. 179, 180, 191;
+ visit to the East, i. 236, 239;
+ proposed visit to India, i. 222;
+ on Queen Victoria's postponed visit, i. 197;
+ on Spanish affairs, i. 205, 207;
+ and the war, i. 308, 309, 316;
+ on home affairs, i. 235, 245;
+ withdrawal from politics, i. 241;
+ press attacks on, i. 244;
+ a fugitive, i. 310;
+ at Chislehurst, i. 327, ii. 22;
+ Bismarck on, i. 271.
+
+ European Conference at Constantinople, ii. 85, 106;
+ at Berlin, ii. 125, 126, 147.
+
+ Exclusion Bill, ii. 309, 311.
+
+ Expulsion Bill, ii. 365, 366.
+
+
+ Fabrice, General von, i. 387, ii. 3.
+
+ Faidherbe, General, defeat at St. Quentin, i. 359.
+
+ Fair Trade League, ii. 255.
+
+ Fallières, M., ii. 309, 312.
+
+ _Faon_, the, French gunboat, ii. 22.
+
+ Fashoda, i. 71.
+
+ Favre, Jules, Minister for Foreign Affairs, i. 313, 315, 332, 341,
+ 349, 356, 358, 361, 377, 381, 386, ii. 3, 16;
+ war policy, i. 310;
+ meeting with Bismarck, i. 316-324;
+ advises diplomatists to leave Paris, i. 322;
+ at Black Sea Conference, i. 350;
+ Bismarck refuses safe conduct to London, i. 353;
+ and peace negotiations, i. 360;
+ policy attacked, i. 362;
+ in the National Assembly, i. 368;
+ Lyons appreciation of, i. 359, 368.
+
+ Fazyl Pasha, and the Young Turk Party, i. 167.
+
+ Ferrières, i. 321.
+
+ Ferry, M. Jules, i. 361;
+ Prime Minister, ii. 230;
+ policy in Tunis, ii. 240;
+ and Gambetta, ii. 249;
+ forms a Ministry, ii. 312;
+ at Foreign Office, ii. 320;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 330, 338;
+ policy in China, ii. 339;
+ resignation of, ii. 349;
+ on Soudan affairs, ii. 344.
+
+ Fielding, Hon. Percy, i. 348.
+
+ Fire Island, kidnapped recruits at, i. 112.
+
+ Fitzmaurice, Lord, i. 316;
+ "Life of Granville," quoted, i. 342.
+
+ Flahault, M. de, i. 92.
+
+ Fleury, General, i. 217;
+ proposed Minister at Florence, i. 230;
+ and Russo-French Alliance, i. 273;
+ Lord Clarendon on, i. 231.
+
+ Floquet, M., ii. 404;
+ duel with Boulanger, ii. 370;
+ fails to form an administration, ii. 380.
+
+ Florence, i. 2;
+ Lyons appointed secretary of legation at, i. 6;
+ Lyons appointed Minister at, i. 11;
+ Fleury's mission to, i. 230.
+
+ Florian, Count, ii. 399.
+
+ Flourens, M. Gustave, organizes riot in Paris, i. 330.
+
+ Flourens, M., appointed Foreign Minister, ii. 381;
+ policy, ii. 398, 406.
+
+ Flourens, Mme., ii. 387.
+
+ Fontainebleau, i. 197, 375.
+
+ Foochow, Chinese fleet destroyed at, ii. 337.
+
+ Formosa, blockade of, ii. 337, 344.
+
+ Forsyth, Mr., i. 14.
+
+ Fort Issy, i. 382.
+
+ Fort Lafayette, i. 131.
+
+ Fort Sumter, i. 34, 50.
+
+ Fort Warren, i. 71, 74, 75.
+
+ Fournier, M., French Ambassador at Constantinople, ii. 169, 182, 205;
+ withdrawn from Constantinople, ii. 210.
+
+ Fourtou, M., ii. 114.
+
+ France, internal affairs, i. 190, 238, 280, ii. 105, 147, 164, 306,
+ 402;
+ republic declared, i. 237, 310;
+ Constitutional Government in, i. 283, 290;
+ Bismarck on, i. 271;
+ government of National Defence, i. 311, 336 _et seq._;
+ National Assembly, i. 363;
+ public v. monarchy in, i. 364;
+ elections in, i. 227, 360, ii. 97, 114, 116, 237, 363;
+ unrest among peasantry, ii. 297;
+ finances, i. 236, 358;
+ Protection v. Free Trade, ii. 321, 328, 335.
+ (_See_ Commercial Treaties);
+ press campaigns against England, ii. 178, 307, 310, 328, 333, 376;
+ anti-German attacks, ii. 411;
+ military power of, i. 257, 268, 369, ii. 59, 102, 356;
+ Lord Stanley on, i. 162;
+ Villiers' report, ii. 310;
+ and disarmament, i. 246, 258, 277;
+ navy of, ii. 59;
+ policy in U.S.A., i. 13, 42, 44, 46, 54, 67, 70, 77, 81;
+ in the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. 153;
+ in Belgium, i. 211, 303;
+ in North Africa, i. 199;
+ in Eastern Question, ii. 134;
+ occupation of Rome, i. 3, 183-187;
+ proposes cession of Crete to Greece, i. 163.
+
+ Franco-Prussian War, apprehensions of, i. 185, 195;
+ war declared, i. 301;
+ causes of, i. 305;
+ panic in Paris, i. 306;
+ suggestion for armistice, i. 312, 314, 347;
+ Bourbaki on the military situation, i. 327;
+ peace party, i. 328;
+ suggestion for European Congress, i. 367;
+ suggested terms of Peace, i. 348;
+ armistice agreed on, i. 360;
+ preliminaries of Peace signed, i. 369;
+ harshness of conditions, i. 373;
+ Neutral Powers and, i. 371;
+ the war indemnity, i. 369, ii. 3, 29, 41, 45;
+ effects on the Embassy, i. 347.
+
+ Frankfort, i. 140, 236, 370.
+
+ Frederick William IV., King of Prussia, ii. 41, 62;
+ in the San Juan dispute, i. 19;
+ on German unity, i. 208, 247, 266;
+ and army, i. 207, 247-9, 252, 254-6, 348;
+ on disarmament, i. 266, 275, 277;
+ at Ems, i. 293, 305;
+ and Clarendon, i. 201, 204;
+ friendship for Arnim, ii. 46;
+ relations with Bismarck, ii. 54, 57, 62, 73, 120;
+ attempt to assassinate, ii. 146;
+ ill-health, ii. 80, 354.
+
+ Frederick William, Crown Prince of Prussia, on Franco-Prussian
+ relations, i. 207;
+ in the Franco-Prussian War, i. 309;
+ peaceful policy, i. 247;
+ English sympathies, i. 342, 343;
+ conversation with Odo Russell, ii. 80;
+ relations with Bismarck, ii. 57, 63, 74.
+
+ Free Trade, decline in France, i. 241, 245, 290, 372, ii. 3, 27, 163.
+ (_See_ Commercial Treaties and Protection);
+ Lyons on, i. 284, ii. 27.
+
+ Frère-Orban, M., visit to Paris, i. 219.
+
+ Freycinet, M. de, ii. 119, 154, 200, 350;
+ succeeds Waddington at Foreign Office, ii. 204;
+ his ideal ambassador, ii. 211;
+ refuses office in Gambetta Ministry, ii. 262;
+ forms Ministry, ii. 277;
+ retires from office, ii. 291, 378;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 281-91, 356, 377, 392;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 223.
+
+ _Friedland_, the, sent to Tunis, ii. 238.
+
+ Fuad Pasha, Grand Vizier, on Turkish finance, i. 146;
+ and the Paris Conference, i. 153;
+ dismissal of, i. 155;
+ alluded to, i. 151, 155, 166, 167, 171.
+
+
+ Galliera, Duchess of, ii. 43.
+
+ Gallipoli, ii. 127.
+
+ Gallway, Colonel, sent to report on army of the Potomac, i. 128, 129.
+
+ Galt, Mr., Canadian Finance Minister, i. 60.
+
+ Gambetta, minister of war, i. 325-329, 336, 338, 345, 349, 351, 355,
+ 356, 358, 360;
+ resigns office, i. 361;
+ recovery of influence, ii. 98;
+ dispute with Grévy, ii. 118;
+ interview with Prince of Wales, ii. 156;
+ growth of power, ii. 168;
+ on foreign policy of France, ii. 205;
+ resignation of, ii. 277;
+ and Ferry, ii. 249;
+ administrative qualities, ii. 262;
+ fall from office, ii. 296;
+ shot, ii. 301;
+ death, ii. 305;
+ policy and views of, i. 362, 363, 365, 370, ii. 8, 64, 67, 99, 106,
+ 119, 133, 147, 166, 197, 198, 226, 237, 266;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 177, 181, 261, 290;
+ St. Hilaire on, ii. 229.
+
+ Gambia, the, ii. 198.
+
+ Garibaldi, invades Papal States, i. 178;
+ embarrassing foreign policy, i. 177;
+ in Franco-Prussian war, i. 324.
+
+ _Gaulois_, on Sir J. Drummond Hay, ii. 329.
+
+ Genoa, i. 8.
+
+ Germany. _See also_ Prussia and Franco-German War;
+ Confederation question, i. 190, 192, 201, 204, 205, 207, 251, 266,
+ 276, 277, 343;
+ and need of seaboard, ii. 60;
+ relations with Russia, ii. 42, 324;
+ military power, i. 275, ii. 80, 356.
+
+ Gibraltar, i. 200, ii. 288.
+
+ Gladstone, on American struggle, i. 89;
+ on Belgian independence, i. 212, 214, 218;
+ on a peer's vote, i. 225, ii. 336;
+ and disarmament, i. 250, 259;
+ on the plébiscite, i. 283, 289, 290;
+ and the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 298;
+ on peace negotiations, i. 334;
+ Russian sympathies, ii. 109;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 228, 231;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 274, 329;
+ visit to Paris, ii. 313;
+ Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 353, 354;
+ resigns office, ii. 356;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 334, ii. 347.
+
+ _Globe_, and the Anglo-Russian Agreement, ii. 143.
+
+ Goblet, M., Prime Minister of France, ii. 380;
+ foreign policy, ii. 389;
+ difficulties of, ii. 392.
+
+ Godeaux, M., ii. 172.
+
+ Gontaut, M. de, ii. 29.
+
+ Goodenough, Captain, i. 128.
+
+ Gordon, General, sent to Soudan, ii. 321, 343;
+ in Khartoum, ii. 326;
+ death of, ii. 343.
+
+ Gortschakoff, Prince, i. 181, 209, 248, 273, ii. 42, 77, 80, 85, 88,
+ 90;
+ Bismarck's abuse of, ii. 168.
+
+ Goschen, Mr. (afterward Viscount), at Constantinople, ii. 210, 223.
+
+ Gozze, Count, i. 6.
+
+ Gramont, Duc de, i. 289, 299, 302, 303, 340;
+ on the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 294;
+ and war, i. 307;
+ letter from Napoleon, i. 304;
+ Bismarck on, i. 320;
+ publishes letter of Beust, ii. 35, 36.
+
+ Grant, General, i. 133, 372.
+
+ Granville, Lord, at the Foreign Office, i. 294, 301, 343, 383;
+ policy in Franco-Prussian War, i. 313;
+ interview with Thiers, i. 316;
+ on revolution in Paris, i. 379;
+ Free Trade policy, ii. 27, 257;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 274, 277;
+ succeeded by Lord Derby, ii. 54;
+ on the Eastern Question, ii. 231;
+ and Franco in Tunis, ii. 250;
+ on peers' voting, ii. 12;
+ on Waddington, ii. 314;
+ succeeded by Salisbury, ii. 356;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 294, 297, 317, 337, 340, 373, ii. 9, 23, 241,
+ 242, 270, 289, 323, 324, 329, 332, 346, 348, 353;
+ letter to Gladstone, ii. 274.
+
+ Great Lakes, fortification of, i. 60.
+
+ Greece, ii. 183;
+ financial immorality, i. 163;
+ increase of power, i. 164;
+ and Turkey, i. 166, 209, ii. 89;
+ and the Eastern question, i. 160, ii. 131, 223;
+ frontier question, i. 206, ii. 207, 227, 229.
+
+ Greece, King of, ii. 225.
+
+ Greeley, Mr. Horace, i. 96.
+
+ Green, Mr., at Bucharest, i. 149, 153, 158.
+
+ Grévy, M., i. 328;
+ in the National Assembly, i. 365, 368, ii. 16;
+ dispute with Gambetta, ii. 118;
+ becomes President, ii. 167;
+ loss of prestige, ii. 202;
+ and Boulanger, ii. 367, 393;
+ New Year's reception, ii. 305;
+ and peace policy, ii. 382, 383.
+
+ Grey, General, letter to Clarendon, i. 211.
+
+ Griffith, Mr., i. 28.
+
+ Grousset, Paschal, i. 383.
+
+
+ Halifax, i. 73, 74.
+
+ Halim, ii. 261;
+ proposed to make Khedive, ii. 280.
+
+ Hammond, Mr., Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs, views and opinions
+ of, i. 63, 64, 77, 86, 294, 299;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 172.
+
+ Hauseman, ii. 46.
+
+ d'Harcourt, Emmanuel, ii. 91, 100, 144.
+
+ Harney, General. i. 19, 23.
+
+ Harper's Ferry, i. 20.
+
+ Hartington, Lord, ii. 330, 332, 371.
+
+ Hartmann, nihilist, ii. 207.
+
+ Hatfield, Lyons at, ii. 222.
+
+ Havannah, i. 54.
+
+ Hay, Sir J. Drummond, ii. 329.
+
+ Haymerle and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194.
+
+ Head, Sir Edmund, Governor-General of Canada, i. 39, 50.
+
+ Heneage, Mr., i. 132.
+
+ Herat, ii. 352.
+
+ Herbert, Sir Michael, i. 90.
+
+ Herbette, M. d', ii. 386.
+
+ Heron's Ghyll, Lyons at, ii. 424.
+
+ Herzegovina, ii. 141;
+ annexation of, i. 342;
+ insurrection in, ii. 84;
+ and the Andrassy Note, ii. 96, 127.
+
+ Hesse, i. 285.
+
+ Hicks Pasha, disaster in Soudan, ii. 320, 325.
+
+ Hobart Pasha, ii. 136.
+
+ Hohenlohe, Prince, ii. 31, 69, 292.
+
+ Hohenzollern, candidature for Spain, i. 294, 296, 305.
+
+ Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Prince Charles of, chosen Hereditary Prince
+ of Roumania, i. 155-157;
+ invested at Constantinople, i. 158.
+
+ Holland, i. 217;
+ and Luxembourg, i. 165, 168;
+ foreign designs on, i. 304, 355, ii. 83;
+ suggestions for protection of, ii. 113;
+ foreign relations, ii. 124;
+ in Constantinople Conference, ii. 109;
+ Bismarck's policy, ii. 345.
+
+ Hope, Sir James, i. 133.
+
+ Hope, Lady Mary, ii. 424.
+
+ Hope-Scott, James, ii. 418.
+
+ Hotham, Captain, ii. 22.
+
+ Hovas, Queen of the, ii. 301.
+
+ Howard, Lady Mary, ii. 418, 423.
+
+ Hoyos, Count, ii. 387.
+
+ Hudson, Sir James, note to the Sardinian Government, i. 10.
+
+ Hugo, Victor, i. 224, 363, 370, 371;
+ death and funeral, ii. 354.
+
+ Hungary, policy of Russia concerning, ii. 134.
+
+ Hussein Khan, ii. 216.
+
+
+ Iddesleigh, Lord, Foreign Secretary, ii. 375;
+ death of, ii. 383.
+
+ Ignatieff, General, Russian Minister at Constantinople, i. 148, 158;
+ mission to London, ii. 109;
+ foreign policy, ii. 128, 130.
+
+ Imperialists, policy of, ii. 56.
+
+ India, ii. 137, 205.
+
+ International Law on blockade, i. 97.
+
+ Irish emigrants in U.S.A., i. 15, 16, 25, 69;
+ liability to service, i. 109, 114, 115;
+ secret societies, i. 40.
+
+ Irish Church Bill, i. 224, ii. 10, 11.
+
+ Irish Nationalists, ii. 232.
+
+ Isabella, Queen, in France, ii. 22.
+
+ Ismail, Khedive, i. 221, 222, 239;
+ and Suez Canal Shares, ii. 85;
+ and Russo-Turkish War, ii. 110, 155, 171;
+ warning to, ii. 177;
+ deposed, ii. 185;
+ proposal to restore, ii. 344.
+
+ Italy, ii. 55;
+ neutral policy, i. 298, 302;
+ Bismarck on, i. 321;
+ Eastern policy, i. 164;
+ and Prussia, i. 178, 193;
+ and Savoy, i. 382;
+ policy in Tunis, ii. 240, 248.
+
+
+ Jahde, i. 228.
+
+ James river, America, i. 83.
+
+ Janina, ii. 183.
+
+ Jecker bonds, i. 218.
+
+ Jenner, Mr., i. 87.
+
+ Johnstone, Mr. Horace, i. 127.
+
+ Joinville, Prince de, ii. 3, 7, 34.
+
+ _Journal officiel_, i. 315, ii. 320.
+
+ Juarez, i. 13.
+
+
+ Karolyi, ii. 391.
+
+ Kars, ii. 143.
+
+ Kemble, Adelaide, ii. 422.
+
+ Kemble, Fanny, ii. 422.
+
+ Kennedy, i. 140.
+
+ Kentucky, i. 60.
+
+ Kern, M., Swiss Minister at Paris, ii. 255.
+
+ Khaireddin Pasha, ii. 167, 196.
+
+ Khartoum, ii. 322; Gordon in, ii. 326;
+ expedition to, ii. 341;
+ fall of, ii. 343.
+
+ Khedive. _See_ Ismail.
+
+ Kiel, i. 204.
+
+ Kitchener, Major (Lord), Rochefort's abuse of, ii. 358.
+
+ Klazko, Mgr., i. 272, 278, 294.
+
+ Knollys, Viscount, ii. 152.
+
+ Knowsley, Lyons at, ii. 222, 424.
+
+ Kroumirs, the, ii. 240, 301.
+
+
+ Lacour, M. Challemel, ii. 211, 257, 310;
+ becomes Foreign Minister, ii. 312;
+ on Egyptian question, ii. 316;
+ resignation of, ii. 320.
+
+ Lagarde, the Abbé, i. 385.
+
+ Land Bill (English), i. 294.
+
+ Landsturm Bill, ii. 62.
+
+ Lang-Son, French defeat at, ii. 349.
+
+ Lascelles, Sir Frank, i. 377.
+
+ La Tour d'Auvergne, La Prince de, i. 208, 233, 234, 240, 241, 308, 310.
+
+ La Valette, M. de, i. 206, 218, 223, 234, 242, 256, 261, 287, 298,
+ 300-303;
+ on home policy, i. 229;
+ and disarmament, i. 247;
+ on the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 295;
+ on political situation, i. 285.
+
+ Layard, Mr. (Sir Henry), i. 295, 347;
+ reports from Constantinople, ii. 123, 127;
+ the Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. 140, 142, 143;
+ on Treaty of Berlin, ii. 160;
+ withdrawn from Constantinople, ii. 209;
+ letter to Lyons, ii. 137, 138.
+
+ League of Patriots, ii. 402.
+
+ Leboeuf, on France's readiness for war, i. 307.
+
+ Le Flô, General, ii. 29;
+ conversation with Alexander of Russia, ii. 52, 54.
+
+ Legh, Mr. (Lord Newton), ii. 220.
+
+ Legitimists, policy of, i. 228, 364, 368, ii. 15, 18, 25, 56;
+ and Comte de Chambord, ii. 7;
+ proposed fusion with Orleanists, ii. 21;
+ White Flag Manifesto, ii. 47.
+
+ Leighton, Sir Frederick, ii. 423.
+
+ Le Mans, Chanzy at, i. 348, 359.
+
+ Leo XIII., ii. 425.
+
+ Lesseps, M. de, ii. 86;
+ and Suez Canal Shares, ii. 90, 93, 321;
+ on Soudan expedition, ii. 343.
+
+ Levy, Mr., and the Enfida estate, ii. 238.
+
+ Lhuys, Drouyn de, i. 241.
+
+ _Liberté_, publishes secret negotiations, i. 301.
+
+ Lincoln, President Abraham, i. 29, 34, 47, 60, 65, 69, 81, 88, 93,
+ 98, 100, 115, 140;
+ issues proclamations of Emancipation, i. 95;
+ and the U.S. Army, i. 110.
+
+ Lindau, employed as secret agent by Bismarck, ii. 46.
+
+ Lindsay, Major-General, i. 129.
+
+ Lisbon, i. 144.
+
+ Little, Mrs., ii. 417.
+
+ Lobanoff, Prince, ii. 130.
+
+ Loftus, Lord Augustus, British Ambassador at Berlin, i. 250, 295;
+ despatches from, i. 218, 273, 276, 285, 293;
+ interview with Bismarck, i. 254, 261, 270, 275;
+ letters to Clarendon, i. 254, 270.
+
+ Longchamps, Reviews at, ii. 368, 369, 410.
+
+ Longworth, Mr., i. 161.
+
+ Lord Mayor, in Paris, ii. 64.
+
+ Lords, House of, Lyons vote in, i. 226, ii. 9, 336.
+
+ Lorraine. _See_ Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+ Louis XVI., i. 254.
+
+ Louis Philippe, i. 254.
+
+ Louis, Prince Imperial, ii. 102;
+ death of, ii. 190-193.
+
+ Lumley, British Minister at Brussels, ii. 75.
+
+ Luxembourg, report of cession to France, i. 165;
+ Prussia refuses consent to sell, i. 168;
+ conference in London, i. 169;
+ railway affair, i. 211, 257;
+ Commission in London, i. 219.
+
+ Lynch Law, i. 21.
+
+ Lyons, strength of garrisons at, i. 268, 349.
+
+ Lyons, Richard Bickerton Pemell, Lord, early life, i. 1;
+ succeeds to the peerage, i. 11;
+ Mission to Naples respecting _Cagliari_ case, i. 8-11;
+ appointed Minister at Florence, i. 11;
+ offer of the Washington Legation, i. 11;
+ with Prince of Wales in Canada, i. 25; a G.C.B., i. 76;
+ visits to Canada, i. 119, 134;
+ returns to London on account of ill-health, i. 89, 136;
+ resigns U.S. Legation, i. 139;
+ receives the degree of D.C.L., i. 144;
+ appointed to the Embassy at Constantinople, i. 144;
+ to Paris Embassy, i. 177;
+ removes with Embassy to Tours, i. 322;
+ to Bordeaux, i. 345;
+ returns to Paris, i. 375;
+ invited to represent England at Berlin Congress, ii. 125;
+ proffered resignation, ii. 394;
+ offer of Foreign Secretaryship, ii. 371;
+ termination of office, ii. 411;
+ created an earl, ii. 412;
+ death, ii. 412;
+ his personal characteristics, ii. 213-222, 412;
+ in private life, ii. 415.
+
+ Letters from Lyons--
+ to Lord Clarendon, i. 149, 152, 153, 206, 213, 219, 224, 227, 228,
+ 230, 233, 235, 239, 241, 244, 248, 256, 273, 280, 283, 285, 288,
+ 290.
+ to Earl Cowley, i. 154, 158, 174.
+ to Lord Derby, i. 156, ii. 54, 66, 95, 102, 107, 111, 112, 117,
+ 119, 127.
+ to Sir C. Dilke, ii. 254, 255.
+ to Lord Granville, i. 296, 299, 301, 303, 305, 308, 312, 315, 322,
+ 325, 329, 338, 350, 355, 356, 361, 365, 367, 371, 374, 376, 380,
+ 382, 385, 386, ii. 2, 7, 13, 15, 21, 24, 26, 34, 36, 37, 39, 47,
+ 48, 50, 223, 225, 226, 229, 230, 233, 235, 239, 243, 247, 248,
+ 249, 258, 261, 262, 263, 265, 271, 275, 278, 280, 281, 283, 286,
+ 292, 296, 298, 300, 302, 303, 308, 309, 312, 313, 314, 315, 317,
+ 319, 320, 321, 323, 326, 328, 330, 334, 338, 339, 341, 342, 345,
+ 350, 351, 352.
+ to Mr. Green, i. 158.
+ to Mr. Griffith, i. 28.
+ to Mr. Hammond, i. 127, 132, 309, 346.
+ to Sir Edmund Head, i. 39, 50.
+ to Lord Iddesleigh, ii. 375, 377, 378, 379, 381.
+ to Mr. Layard (Sir H.), i. 347, ii. 207.
+ to Captain Lyons, i. 5.
+ to Lady Lytton, ii. 209.
+ to Lord Malmesbury, i. 13, 14.
+ to Admiral Sir A. Milne, i. 104.
+ to Viscount Monck, i. 123.
+ to Duke of Newcastle, i. 28, 29.
+ to Lord Rosebery, ii. 363, 365, 366, 367, 368, 374.
+ to Lord John Russell, i. 17, 20, 21, 26, 30, 31, 36, 41, 42, 47, 55,
+ 57, 59, 65, 67, 71, 74, 82, 85, 88, 101, 102, 115, 120, 122, 128,
+ 136, 143, 145.
+ to Lord Odo Russell, ii. 30, 42, 51, 129.
+ to Lord Salisbury, ii. 134, 139, 145, 151, 152, 156, 165, 169, 171,
+ 180, 191, 192, 195, 196, 198, 202, 204, 357, 371, 383, 387, 388,
+ 389, 392, 394, 396, 398, 400, 402, 403, 404, 405, 410.
+ to Mr. Seward, i. 131, 140.
+ to Mr. Stuart, i. 139, 156.
+ to Lord Stanley (Earl Derby), i. 156, 159, 166, 179, 182, 186, 187,
+ 190, 197, 201, 203.
+ to Prince of Wales, ii. 98.
+
+ Lyons, Admiral Sir Edmund, first baron, i. 1.
+
+ Lyons, Captain Edmund, i. 5, ii. 417.
+
+ Lytton, Lord, ii. 52, 209;
+ succeeds Lyons at Paris Embassy, ii. 411;
+ letter to Lyons, ii. 60.
+
+
+ McClellan, General, i. 56, 57, 65, 89.
+
+ McHugh, Mr. James, i. 131.
+
+ McLane, Mr., i. 13, 14.
+
+ MacMahon, Marshal, i. 306, ii. 38;
+ succeeds Thiers as President, ii. 43;
+ and war scare, ii. 83;
+ policy of, ii. 56, 67, 97, 105, 111;
+ character, ii. 100;
+ Gambetta on, ii. 100;
+ election defeat, ii. 116;
+ resigns office, ii. 167.
+
+ MacMahon, Madame la Maréchale, ii. 47, 114.
+
+ Madagascar, ii. 300, 301, 307, 318, 360, 380.
+
+ Magee, Mr., Consul at Mobile, i. 97, 121.
+
+ _Magicienne_, the, i. 100, 103.
+
+ Magne, M., finance minister, ii. 59.
+
+ Malet, Sir Edward, accompanies Lyons to the Washington Legation, i. 90;
+ on Lyons' work at, i. 137;
+ transferred to Lisbon, i. 140;
+ accompanies Lyons to Constantinople, i. 144;
+ to Paris, i. 177;
+ emissary to Bismarck, i. 318;
+ alluded to, i. 347, 377, 383, 387, ii. 128;
+ in Egypt, ii. 238, 271, 276;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 319.
+
+ Malmesbury, Lord, foreign secretary, i. 2, 8, ii. 11;
+ in the _Cagliari_ case, i. 10-14;
+ succeeded by Lord John Russell, i. 17.
+
+ Malta, i. 5, 146, ii. 139, 243, 288;
+ troops in, ii. 290;
+ Lyons' boyhood at, ii. 417.
+
+ Marne river, i. 345.
+
+ Marseilles, i. 349; riots at, ii. 248.
+
+ Martel, M., ii. 114.
+
+ Martin, Sir Theodore, i. 61.
+
+ Martino, ii. 177.
+
+ Marvin, Mr., ii. 143.
+
+ Mary, Grand Duchess, of Russia, i. 235.
+
+ Maryland, i. 60.
+
+ Mason, Mr., Confederate delegate to England, seized on board the
+ _Trent_, i. 54;
+ alluded to, i. 59, 60, 63, 74, 81;
+ failure of mission to Europe, i. 121.
+
+ Matamoros, i. 100, 104.
+
+ Mathilde, Princess, i. 223.
+
+ Mayence, i. 265.
+
+ Mazzinians, revolt of the, i. 9.
+
+ Mazzini, plot against Napoleon, i. 188.
+
+ Mediterranean, English power in, ii. 109, 113, 140, 200;
+ fleet ordered to Constantinople, ii. 123;
+ Indian troops in, ii. 132.
+
+ Mehmet Ali, ii. 276.
+
+ Menabrea, General, ii. 294;
+ on Sir J. Drummond Hay, ii. 329;
+ Ministry, i. 186.
+
+ Mentana, i. 178.
+
+ Mercantile Marine Law in France, ii. 24.
+
+ Mercier, M., French Minister in U.S.A., i. 32-34, 46, 66, 115, 156;
+ friendly relations with Lyons, i. 44, 54;
+ on _Trent_ case, i. 68, 70;
+ visits Confederate headquarters, i. 82;
+ on American Civil War, i. 82;
+ proposal of foreign intervention, i. 90, 96.
+
+ Merv, ii. 325.
+
+ Mesopotamia, Russian policy in, ii. 137.
+
+ Metternich, Prince, Austrian Ambassador in Paris, i. 287, 318, 338;
+ letter from Beust, ii. 35.
+
+ Metz, i. 304, 358;
+ French army at, i. 307, 321, 327;
+ capitulation of, i. 329, 351.
+
+ Mexico, United States policy in, i. 13, 15, 21;
+ expedition against, i. 70;
+ French in, i. 177, 218;
+ Emperor of, i. 133.
+
+ Michel, Louise, ii. 316.
+
+ Midhat Pasha, ii. 196.
+
+ Military attachés, i. 120.
+
+ Military efficiency, Lord Palmerston on, i. 48.
+
+ Militia regiments in U.S., i. 47, 50.
+
+ Milne, Admiral Sir A., i. 39, 52, 58, 59, 100, 104, 119.
+
+ Missouri, i. 60.
+
+ Mobile, i. 97, 121.
+
+ Mohrenheim, Baron, ii. 325.
+
+ Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. 148-150.
+
+ Moltke, General von, i. 354, 374, ii. 30;
+ on Germany's position in Europe, i. 196;
+ on Franco-Prussian relations, i. 201;
+ on relations with Russia, i. 202;
+ and Clarendon, i. 203;
+ and the war scare, ii. 74.
+
+ Monck, Lord, Governor-General of Canada, i. 60, 125, 126;
+ and Canadian defence, i. 132, 133.
+
+ _Moniteur_, article in, i. 159.
+
+ Monroe doctrine, i. 23.
+
+ Monson, Mr., attaché at Washington, i. 87.
+
+ Montebello, M. de, ii. 165;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 225, 407.
+
+ Montenegro, ii. 142, 227;
+ surrender of Dulcigno to, ii. 232;
+ Prince of, ii. 226.
+
+ Montpensier, i. 294.
+
+ Moore, Mr., i. 122.
+
+ Morier, Sir Robert, quoted, i. 344, ii. 82.
+
+ Morocco, French policy in, ii. 386.
+
+ Morrill Tariff (U.S.), i. 57.
+
+ Moscow, coronation, ii. 314.
+
+ Mouchy, Duc de, i. 233.
+
+ Moustier, Marquis de, French Ambassador at Constantinople, i. 147,
+ 148, 153;
+ and Roumanian difficulty, i. 156, 158;
+ Eastern policy, i. 165, 186, 192;
+ and Prussia, i. 195;
+ succeeded by de la Valette, i. 206;
+ alluded to, i. 202, 203.
+
+ Münster, Count, German Ambassador in London, ii. 75;
+ on the German army, ii. 80;
+ and French policy in Tunis, ii. 139;
+ at French Embassy, ii. 388, 410.
+
+ Münster, Countess Marie, ii. 387.
+
+ Murat, Prince Joachim, i. 233.
+
+ Muscovite party, and Germany, i. 255.
+
+ Mussulmans, and the Roman Catholic Church, ii. 4;
+ population in Turkey, i. 161;
+ discontent among, i. 167;
+ position in Bulgaria, ii. 227.
+
+ Musurus Pasha, i. 152, 171, ii. 348.
+
+
+ Naples, i. 8, 146.
+
+ Napoleon III., Emperor of France, i. 8;
+ proposal of intervention in American Civil War, i. 92;
+ Pro-Russian sympathies, i. 165. 170;
+ foreign policy, i. 183, 187, 213, 215. 220, 238;
+ on foreign policy of Prussia, i. 192;
+ on Franco-Prussian situation, i. 203;
+ on Spanish affairs, i. 207;
+ love of Conferences, i. 209;
+ ill-health of, i. 236;
+ plot, against, i. 285;
+ position in France, i. 187, 197, 235;
+ home policy, i. 227-9, 232, 234, 237, 240, 250;
+ and Constitutional Government, i. 190, 274;
+ and the plébiscite, i. 280, 291;
+ disposition for peace, i.
+ 191, 296;
+ with the army, i. 307, 355;
+ question of restoration, ii. 17;
+ at Chislehurst, ii. 21;
+ death of, ii. 36;
+ Bismarck on, i. 254, 320, 333;
+ friendship for Clarendon, i. 201;
+ letter to Gramont, i. 304.
+
+ Napoleon, Prince, on the "Roman" question, i. 181;
+ on French foreign policy, i. 185;
+ on war with Germany, i. 191, 194, 203;
+ visit to Germany, i. 191;
+ Proclamation denouncing the Republic, ii. 305, 309;
+ arrest, ii. 308;
+ release, ii. 311;
+ expulsion from France, ii. 366;
+ alluded to, i. 235, ii. 2, 64, 191.
+
+ National Assembly, at Versailles, i. 373.
+
+ National Guards, defection of, i. 376;
+ at Courbevoie, i. 381.
+
+ Neapolitan troops, i. 9.
+
+ Nelidoff, M. de, ii. 389.
+
+ Newcastle, Duke of, Colonial Secretary, i. 24, 28, 29.
+
+ Newfoundland Fisheries, ii. 103, 153, 156, 197, 356, 384, 386.
+
+ Newfoundland, Governor of, on colonial questions, i. 292.
+
+ New Hampshire, i. 113.
+
+ New Hebrides, ii. 314, 374, 386, 388, 390, 407, 409.
+
+ New Orleans, i. 83; captured, i. 93.
+
+ New York, i. 111, 113, 115;
+ visit of Russian squadron to, i. 120.
+
+ Nice, ii. 26.
+
+ Nicholas, Grand Duke, ii. 137.
+
+ Niel, Marshal, orations by, i. 196.
+
+ Nigra, Italian minister in Paris, i. 186.
+
+ Noailles, Marquis de, ii. 197, 287.
+
+ Nobiling, attempt to assassinate German Emperor, ii. 146.
+
+ Noir, Victor, i. 244.
+
+ Norfolk, America, i. 83.
+
+ Norfolk, Duke of, i. 11, ii. 417.
+
+ Norfolk, Duchess of, i. 139, ii. 218, 373, 424.
+
+ Normanby, Lord, Minister at Florence, i. 7, 8, 87;
+ on Parliamentary voting, ii. 9.
+
+ Northbrook, Lord, mission to Cairo, ii. 332;
+ return to England, ii. 337.
+
+ North Carolina, revolt in, i. 35.
+
+ _North German Gazette_, articles in, i. 299, 305.
+
+ North Sea, Prussian fortifications on, i. 265.
+
+ Nothomb, Baron, ii. 74, 76.
+
+ Nubar Pasha, ii. 171, 204;
+ on Egyptian situation, ii. 278.
+
+ Nuncio, the, in Paris, i. 287-8, 387.
+
+
+ Oldenburg, Duke of, i. 266.
+
+ Ollivier, M. Emile, i. 240, ii. 35;
+ ministry of, i. 243;
+ policy of, i. 266;
+ and the plébiscite, i. 283, 284, 286;
+ on disarmament, i. 248, 283, 301;
+ resignation of, i. 307.
+
+ Omar Pasha, sent to Crete, i. 166.
+
+ Ordega, M., French Minister at Tangier, ii. 329.
+
+ _Orénoque_, at Civita Vecchia, ii. 55.
+
+ _Oreto_, the, i. 99.
+
+ Orleans, i. 336, 349.
+
+ Orleanists, i. 228, 349, 368, ii. 2, 15, 18, 21, 25, 56, 66, 106, 116;
+ Expulsion Bill, ii. 365, 366.
+
+ Orloff, Prince, Russian Ambassador at Paris, ii. 33, 34, 231;
+ policy in Central Asia, ii. 38;
+ conversation with Décazes, ii. 69;
+ withdrawn from Paris, ii. 207.
+
+ Osman Pasha, ii. 167.
+
+ Oxford, Lyons at, i. 1.
+
+
+ Pacific coast defence, i. 40.
+
+ Pagny, ii. 400.
+
+ Pain, Olivier, ii. 358.
+
+ Paladines, General d'Aurelle de, i. 336.
+
+ Palermo, i. 146.
+
+ Palikao, Count, i. 307.
+
+ Palmerston, Lord, on fight of Bull's Run, i. 48;
+ on foreign intervention in American Civil War, i. 92;
+ and Lyons, i. 144, ii. 11;
+ death of, i. 149 _n._
+
+ Papal government, i. 3, 4, 8, 184, ii. 31;
+ and Irish affairs, ii. 234-6.
+
+ Paris, Conference at, i. 153, 155;
+ Lyons appointed to the Embassy, i. 173, 177;
+ riots in, i. 286, 376, 386, ii. 316;
+ panic in, i. 306;
+ defences of, i. 317;
+ diplomatists leave, i. 322;
+ siege of, i. 348;
+ bombardment of, i. 356, 383;
+ military power in, i. 356;
+ Embassy returns to, i. 375;
+ Commune proclaimed, i. 379.
+
+ Paris Exhibition, ii. 161.
+
+ Paris, Treaty of, i. 337, 339.
+
+ Paris, Archbishop of, seized by Commune, i. 384;
+ killed, i. 386.
+
+ Paris, Comte de, ii. 8, 21, 25, 48, 56, 365, 366, 382.
+
+ Park, engineer on the _Cagliari_, i. 9.
+
+ Parnell, Mr., ii. 234.
+
+ Pasquier, Duc d'Audiffret, ii. 117.
+
+ Pau, ii. 22.
+
+ Pauncefote and Egyptian Commission, ii. 353.
+
+ Pearson, Mr., ii. 417.
+
+ Peel, Sir Robert, attack on Lyons, i. 324, ii. 129.
+
+ Penjdeh, fight at, ii. 348.
+
+ Persia, Shah of, visit to Berlin, ii. 354.
+
+ Persian Gulf, Russian policy in, ii. 352.
+
+ Peruvian Papers, i. 32.
+
+ _Peterhoff_, the, i. 100, 103.
+
+ Petre, Mr., i. 2.
+
+ Philippines, German interest in, ii. 60.
+
+ Picard, M., i. 358, 387.
+
+ Pines, Isle of, ii. 362, 364.
+
+ Pius IX., ii. 423.
+
+ Playfair, Colonel, i. 382.
+
+ Poland, French policy in, i. 177, ii. 345.
+
+ Polish Party, intrigues of, i. 272.
+
+ Ponza island, i. 9.
+
+ Portland, U.S.A., i. 81.
+
+ Portugal, independence threatened, ii. 39.
+
+ Postage, international, i. 211.
+
+ Pothuau, Admiral, French ambassador, ii. 203, 210.
+
+ Potomac, i. 59; army of the, i. 128.
+
+ Prague, Treaty of, i. 204.
+
+ Prince Consort, advice in _Trent_ case, i. 61, 77.
+
+ Prince Eugène Barracks, i. 286.
+
+ Protection in U.S.A., i. 18.
+
+ Protection, growth of, in France, i. 241, 243, 245, 284, ii. 3, 27,
+ 165, 244, 257.
+ _See also_ COMMERCIAL TREATIES.
+
+ Protestants in Papal dominions, i. 4.
+
+ Provincetown, i. 74.
+
+ Prussia (_see also_ Germany and Franco-German War), proposed
+ intervention in American Civil War, i. 91;
+ irritation against, in Paris, i. 165;
+ alliance with Italy, i. 178;
+ refuses consent to sell Luxembourg, i. 168;
+ relations with Austria, i. 186;
+ armament of, i. 192;
+ desire for peace, i. 201;
+ relations with Russia, i. 202;
+ question of disarmament, i. 246;
+ and Hohenzollern candidature in Spain, i. 294.
+
+
+ Quebec, i. 116, 133.
+
+ Quertier, M. Pouyer, ii. 23, 24.
+
+
+ Raby, ii. 424.
+
+ Radowitz, M., ii. 130, 231.
+
+ Rahming, i. 132.
+
+ Raindre, M. de, ii. 317.
+
+ Rastadt, Prussian troops at, i. 302.
+
+ Reciprocity Treaties, i. 17, 50, 74, 123.
+
+ Recruiting methods in American Civil War, i. 110, 133.
+
+ Redcliffe, Lord Stratford de, ii. 424;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 150.
+
+ Regnier, M., and General Bourbaki, i. 327.
+
+ Rémusat, M. de, ii. 23, 25.
+
+ _République Française_, anti-English articles in, ii. 180, 302.
+
+ Réunion, ii. 198.
+
+ Rhenish Prussia, i. 193.
+
+ Rhodes, ii. 159.
+
+ Riaz Pasha, ii. 203.
+
+ Richmond, U.S.A., Confederate headquarters, i. 82, 93, 133.
+
+ Ring, M. de, ii. 182, 238.
+
+ Rio Grande, i. 100.
+
+ Ripley, General, i. 94.
+
+ Ripon, Lord, mission to Washington, i. 190.
+
+ Rochebouet, General, ii. 120.
+
+ Rochefort, M. de, i. 230, 244, 313, 358, 363.
+
+ Rogers, Mr., ii. 425.
+
+ Rome, i. 2.
+
+ "Roman question," i. 178, 182, 231.
+
+ Rosebery, Lord, visit to Bismarck, ii. 353;
+ at Foreign Office, ii. 361;
+ retires from office, ii. 371;
+ letters to Lyons, ii. 363, 374.
+
+ Rothschild, Baron Alphonse de, ii. 312, 315, 405.
+
+ Rothschild, Sir Nathaniel, ii. 93, 315.
+
+ Rothschild, Messrs., ii. 90, 175.
+
+ Rouher, M., i. 228, 233, 244, 285, ii. 8;
+ foreign policy, i. 178, 183, 184, 254;
+ resignation of, i. 234, 237.
+
+ Roumania, i. 155, 156, ii. 131.
+
+ Roumelia, ii. 145, 227, 360.
+
+ Roustan. M., French Agent at Tunis, ii. 240, 248.
+
+ Rouvier, M., ii. 335;
+ becomes President, ii. 404.
+
+ Russell, Lord John (Earl Russell), at Foreign Office, i. 17;
+ appoints Lyons attaché at Rome, i. 2, ii. 11;
+ policy in U.S.A., i. 37, 38, 61, 76, 90, 101, 127;
+ dislike of Seward, i. 118, 123;
+ his appreciation of Lyons, i. 141;
+ offers Lyons Constantinople Embassy, i. 144, ii. 11;
+ succeeded by Clarendon, i. 149;
+ visit to Paris, i. 283, 284;
+ to Versailles, i. 345;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 19, 37, 52, 62, 64, 92, 98, 99, 118, 132, 141.
+
+ Russell, Odo (Lord Ampthill), on Roman question, i. 187;
+ meets Bismarck at Versailles, i. 339;
+ conversation with Bismarck, ii. 55;
+ on Bismarck's policy, ii. 60, 73, 87;
+ and the Constantinople Congress, ii. 145;
+ alluded to, ii. 71, 236, 345, 354;
+ letters to Derby, ii. 61, 72, 74, 77;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 184, ii. 29, 31, 40, 45, 52, 130;
+ despatch from, ii. 96.
+
+ Russell, W. H., quoted, i. 35.
+
+ Russia, policy in America, i. 91;
+ and the Treaty of Paris, i. 337;
+ foreign policy of, i. 354, ii. 33, 75, 76;
+ relations with Prussia, i. 202, 260, 268, ii. 42, 324;
+ and Denmark, i. 355;
+ policy in Turkey, i. 154, 159, 166, 209, 351;
+ in Eastern question, i. 164, 186, ii. 85;
+ in Asia, ii. 38, 345;
+ reputed ill-will to England, ii. 71;
+ military honour of, ii. 352.
+
+ Russo-Turkish War, ii. 109, 121.
+
+
+ Sackville, Lord, i. 41.
+
+ Sadowa, i. 185, 202, 301, ii. 36.
+
+ St. Albans (Amer.), raid of, i. 135.
+
+ St. Cloud, i. 197, 203, 208, 233.
+
+ St. Denis, i. 382.
+
+ St. Germain, i. 375.
+
+ St. Hilaire, M. Barthélemy, at Foreign Office, ii. 229, 213, 248.
+
+ St. Lawrence, i. 133.
+
+ St. Malo, i. 347, ii. 22.
+
+ St. Paul, M. de, ii. 114.
+
+ St. Petersburg, i. 162, 317.
+
+ St. Quentin, defeat of French at, i. 359.
+
+ St. Thomas, U.S. ships at, i. 104, 105.
+
+ St. Vallier, Comte de, ii. 136.
+
+ _St. Vincent_, deserters from, i. 111.
+
+ Salisbury, Lord, on Derby's foreign policy, ii. 105;
+ at Constantinople Conference, ii. 107, 108;
+ at the Foreign Office, ii. 132, 356;
+ on government of Orientals, ii. 178;
+ and Tunis, ii. 250;
+ and Mgr. Czacki, ii. 233, 234;
+ succeeded by Rosebery, ii. 361;
+ Layard on, ii. 138;
+ letters to Lyons, ii. 133, 140, 142, 144, 158, 172, 173, 175,
+ 176, 178, 180, 185, 187, 188, 190, 193, 242, 371, 386, 391,
+ 395, 409;
+ letter to Waddington, ii. 148.
+
+ Salzburg, ii. 47.
+
+ Sanford, Mr., i. 44.
+
+ _San Jacinto_, American warship, i. 54.
+
+ San Juan, disputed ownership of, i. 18, 23, 29, 30;
+ Company of Marines on, i. 43.
+
+ San Stefano, Treaty of, ii. 124, 131, 136, 137, 144.
+
+ Sapri, i. 9.
+
+ Sardinia, i. 8, 10.
+
+ Saumarez, Lord de, i. 377.
+
+ Saussier, General, ii. 367.
+
+ Savannah, i. 94.
+
+ Savoy, i. 382.
+
+ Saxony, i. 193.
+
+ Saxony, Crown Prince of, i. 387.
+
+ Say, M. Léon, Minister of Finance, ii. 119, 181, 200;
+ elected President of the Senate, ii. 210;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 225;
+ refuses office in Gambetta ministry, ii. 262.
+
+ Schnaebelé, M., ii. 400, 401.
+
+ Schouvaloff, Count, Russian Ambassador in London, ii. 76, 80, 88,
+ 140, 142.
+
+ Schwarzenberg, Prince, i. 272.
+
+ Scotland, Papal Government's plans in, i. 4.
+
+ Scott, General, i. 19, 47, 64, 68.
+
+ Sedan, i. 351, ii. 17.
+
+ Seine, English merchant ships sunk in, i. 344;
+ Prefect of the, ii. 65.
+
+ Semmes, Captain, i. 105.
+
+ Servians and the Fortress of Belgrade, i. 161.
+
+ Seward, Mr., i. 29;
+ appointed Secretary of State, U.S.A., i. 30;
+ policy of, i. 31 _et seq._;
+ advocates annexation of Canada, i. 40;
+ in the _Trent_ case, i. 65 _et seq._;
+ friendly relations with England, i. 80;
+ on the war, i. 92;
+ and Conscription Act, i. 115;
+ proposes state visit to England, i. 117-9;
+ correspondence with, i. 121;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 141.
+
+ Seymour, Mr., i. 140.
+
+ Seymour, Admiral Sir Beauchamp (Lord Alcester), ii. 228.
+
+ Sfax, insurrections at, ii. 249.
+
+ Sheffield, Mr. George, Private Secretary to Lyons, i. 90, 136;
+ sent to Frankfort, i. 140;
+ accompanies Lyons to Constantinople, i. 144;
+ to Paris, i. 177, 347, 377, ii. 98, 128, 204, 397, 427;
+ conversations with Gambetta, ii. 226, 237.
+
+ "Shifting Scenes" quoted, i. 137.
+
+ Shumla, ii. 137, 138.
+
+ Siam, ii. 358.
+
+ Simon, M. Jules, i. 387;
+ Prime Minister, ii. 106;
+ turned out of office, ii. 111.
+
+ Sinkat, ii. 322.
+
+ Slave trade in America, i. 20, 34;
+ proclamations of Emancipation, i. 95.
+
+ Slave Trade Treaty, i. 85.
+
+ Slidell, Mr., Confederate delegate to England seized on board the
+ _Trent_, i. 54, 59, 60, 63, 74, 81;
+ failure of mission to Europe, i. 121;
+ Mr. Benjamin's letter to, i. 122.
+
+ Smyrna, proposed seizure of, ii. 228, 230.
+
+ Socialism in France, i. 280.
+
+ Somaliland coast troubles, ii. 362, 363, 409.
+
+ Soudan, Hicks Pasha's disaster, ii. 320, 321;
+ Baker Pasha's defeat, ii. 323;
+ affairs in, ii. 343.
+
+ Spain, internal affairs of, i. 200, 207, 221, ii. 39-41;
+ the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 294;
+ in Mexico, i. 70;
+ commercial relations with France, ii. 26;
+ in Constantinople Conference, ii. 109;
+ King of, mobbed in Paris, ii. 319.
+
+ Spüller, M., ii. 197, 263.
+
+ Stackelberg, on the Turco-Greek question, i. 206.
+
+ _Standard_, the, on Franco-German relations, ii. 382.
+
+ Stanley, Dean, ii. 193.
+
+ Stanley, Lord (Earl of Derby), becomes Foreign Secretary, i. 156_n._;
+ diplomatic views, i. 161;
+ on the Cretan quarrel, i. 163;
+ on the Luxembourg difficulty, i. 169;
+ offers Paris Embassy to Lyons, i. 173;
+ on the Roman question, i. 178, 181;
+ American policy, i. 188;
+ and Franco-Prussian situation, i. 195, 203;
+ succeeded by Clarendon, i. 206;
+ and Prussian disarmament, i. 246;
+ on Parliamentary vote, ii. 10, 11;
+ at the Foreign Office, ii. 54, 123;
+ resignation of, ii. 132;
+ foreign policy, ii. 105, 107;
+ in Egypt, ii. 104, 122;
+ in Russo-Turkish War, ii. 121;
+ in the Eastern Question, ii. 95, 125;
+ in French politics, ii. 64, 112;
+ and the Suez Canal Shares, ii. 93;
+ Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 353, 354;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 164, 168, 195, ii. 71, 86, 87, 91, 121, 125;
+ letter to Odo Russell, ii. 75.
+
+ Stanton, General, and the Suez Canal Shares, ii. 87, 90.
+
+ Staveley, Mr., letter to Lyons, i. 226.
+
+ Stewart, Lady Phillippa, ii. 427.
+
+ Stoeckl, M. de, Russian Minister in U.S.A., i. 32, 33.
+
+ Stoffel, Colonel, military reports of, ii. 50.
+
+ Strasburg, i. 321, 358.
+
+ Stuart, Lord, ii. 9.
+
+ Stuart, Mr., Chargé d'affaires in Washington, i. 89, 92, 116.
+
+ Suakim, French consul at, ii. 362.
+
+ Suez Canal, i. 156, 221, 222;
+ Anglo-French relations in, ii. 287, 289, 321;
+ Commission, ii. 348, 352, 362, 363, 375, 388-91.
+
+ Suez Canal Shares, Khedive prepares to sell, ii. 85;
+ purchased by England, ii. 90, 96.
+
+ Sumner, Mr., i. 41, 85, 119, 120.
+
+ Sunderland. Rev. Dr., on the _Trent_ case, i. 76.
+
+ Sweden, King and Queen of, visit to Berlin, ii. 81.
+
+ Switzerland, i. 198, 363;
+ proposed Confederation with South German States, i. 204, 205;
+ and Savoy, i. 382;
+ Commercial Treaty, ii. 8;
+ Protectionist policy, ii. 255.
+
+ Syria, Russia in, ii. 137, 141.
+
+
+ Tahiti, ii. 198.
+
+ Tangier, ii. 386.
+
+ Tariff Bill, U.S.A., i. 50.
+
+ Tel-el-Kebir, ii. 285.
+
+ Tennessee, i. 85.
+
+ Tenterden, Lord, letter to Lyons, ii. 90;
+ on Egypt, ii. 271.
+
+ Tewfik, Prince, ii. 174;
+ proclaimed Khedive, ii. 185;
+ plot to dethrone, ii. 261;
+ proposal to depose, ii. 278, 280.
+
+ Texas, i. 31.
+
+ Therapia, ii. 417.
+
+ Thibaudin, General, ii. 312, 319.
+
+ Thiers, M., foreign policy, i. 185, 338, 347, 368, 373, 378,
+ ii. 19, 43;
+ and the political crisis, i. 282, 284;
+ on Napoleon III., i. 221, ii. 36;
+ interview with Lyons, i. 311;
+ mission to the Powers, i. 315, 317, 335;
+ on causes of the war, i. 316;
+ interview with Clarendon, i. 323;
+ interviews with Bismarck, i. 329, 331, 342, 353, 358;
+ peace efforts, i. 345, 347, 349, 369-71, ii. 29;
+ on the situation in Prussia, i. 332;
+ favours a republic, i. 362, 372;
+ in the National Assembly, i. 365, ii. 1;
+ commercial policy, i. 245, ii. 3, 5, 24;
+ made President, ii. 14;
+ tenders resignation, ii. 21;
+ and military re-organization, ii. 27, 29;
+ ill-health, ii. 31;
+ and the Triple Alliance, ii. 42;
+ succeeded by MacMahon, ii. 43;
+ home policy, ii. 34, 64, _et passim_;
+ Gambetta on, ii. 99.
+
+ Thile, Prussian Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, i. 305.
+
+ Thouvenel, M., i. 44, 63, 66, 67.
+
+ Three Emperors Alliance, ii. 131, 145, 237.
+
+ _Thunderer_, H.M.S., ii. 239.
+
+ _Times_, references to, ii. 258, 303, 335, 343, 358.
+
+ Tirard, M., Minister of Commerce, ii. 253.
+
+ Tissot, M., i. 350, ii. 205;
+ at Constantinople, ii. 210, 300.
+
+ Tonquin, French affairs in, ii. 302, 307, 318, 320, 322, 327, 334,
+ 337, 340, 342, 344, 350, 360, 369, 380.
+
+ Toulon, i. 349.
+
+ Tours, i. 315, 324, 345.
+
+ _Trent_ case, i. 29, 54-78, 101, 103.
+
+ Tripartite Treaty, ii. 141, 142.
+
+ Triple Entente foreseen by Thiers, ii. 39.
+
+ Tripoli, ii. 105; Italy in, ii. 251.
+
+ Trochu, General, i. 303, 307, 318, 345, 354, 358, 359, 361.
+
+ Trower, Major, ii. 424.
+
+ Troyes, i. 197.
+
+ Tuilleries, balls at the, i. 245, 288.
+
+ Tunis, i. 8, 221;
+ French position in, i. 199, ii. 55, 139, 154, 163, 164, 173, 238,
+ 350;
+ French Protectorate established, ii. 243;
+ proposed Commission at, i. 206;
+ Germany in, ii. 55;
+ Italy in, ii. 105, 139.
+
+ Tunis, Bey of, i. 148.
+
+ Turkey, financial affairs, i. 146, 149, _et seq._, ii. 208;
+ bankruptcy of, ii. 84;
+ navy of, i. 151;
+ condition in 1866, i. 159;
+ in Crete, i. 208;
+ in Egypt, ii. 272, 276, 281, 321;
+ policy of Russia in, i. 159, 166, 351;
+ Prussian opinion of, i. 193.
+
+ Turco-Greece affairs, i. 206, 209, 210.
+
+ Turkey, Sultan of, and Khedive Ismail, i. 221;
+ and French Ambassador, ii. 32.
+
+ Tuscany, i. 2, 7.
+
+
+ Ultramontane Party in Belgium, ii. 68.
+
+ Ultramontanes, Bismarck's contest with, ii. 49, 50, 55, 81.
+
+ United States Legation, represents Prussia in France, i. 308, 309.
+
+ _Univers_, the, ii. 51.
+
+
+ Vacoufs, question of secularization, i. 147.
+
+ Varna, ii. 137, 138.
+
+ Varzin, Bismarck at, i. 299, ii. 70.
+
+ Vattel, i. 64.
+
+ Venables, Mrs. Lister, ii. 417.
+
+ Versailles, diplomatic meetings at, i. 330, 337, 345, 358;
+ peace negotiations at, i. 368;
+ National Assembly established at, i. 373;
+ Government retires to, i. 376;
+ Thiers at, ii. 3, 21;
+ MacMahon at, ii. 44.
+
+ Vevey, ii. 90.
+
+ Victor Emmanuel (King of Italy), i. 178, 183, 201.
+
+ Victor, Prince, expulsion from France, ii. 366.
+
+ Victoria, Queen, letter to President Buchanan, i. 26;
+ and _Trent_ case, i. 61;
+ Sultan's wish to visit, i. 171;
+ reported plot against, i. 188;
+ visit to Paris, i. 197, 198;
+ on France in Belgium, i. 211;
+ and the Empress Eugénie, i. 222;
+ on Prussian disarmament, i. 250;
+ on French disarmament, i. 259;
+ and the Hohenzollern candidature i. 297;
+ and exiled royalties, ii. 23;
+ opening speech on Russo-Turkish war, ii. 123;
+ projected visit to Paris Exhibition, ii. 162;
+ and Lyons, i. 76, 144, ii. 354, 397.
+
+ Vienna, i. 140.
+
+ Villiers, Colonel the Hon. George, report on French army, ii. 310.
+
+ Vinoy, General, i. 345.
+
+ Virginia, i. 60, 85, 93.
+
+ Vivian, Mr., H.B.M. Agent at Cairo, ii. 172, 173, 177.
+
+ Vogué, Comte de, ii. 32.
+
+
+ Waddington, M., Minister for Foreign Affairs, ii. 119;
+ and foreign policy, ii. 123;
+ on Egyptian affairs, ii. 133, 171, 176, 180, 338, 389;
+ and Bismarck, ii. 168;
+ internal policy, ii. 147, 148, 195;
+ despatches, ii. 158;
+ resigns office, ii. 201;
+ a Free Trader, ii. 257;
+ and the Ferry Ministry, ii. 313;
+ Lyons on, ii. 145.
+
+ Wagner, opera in Paris, ii. 403.
+
+ Wales, Prince of (Edward VII.), visit to Canada, i. 24, 25;
+ visit to U.S.A., i. 27, 86, 117;
+ visits to Paris, i. 199; ii. 136, 139, 162, 328;
+ at Paris Exhibition, ii. 161;
+ proposed visit to South of France ii. 26;
+ visit to Paris abandoned, ii. 311;
+ and Thiers, ii. 29;
+ attacked in French press, ii. 152;
+ interview with Gambetta, ii. 156;
+ anti-Turkish opinions, i. 162.
+
+ Wales, Princess of (Queen Alexandra), i. 99, 199.
+
+ Walker, Colonel, British military attaché at Berlin, i. 219, 372.
+
+ Walker, Mr., despatch to Lord Russell, i. 122.
+
+ Walpole, Lord, i. 6.
+
+ Warre, Mr., i. 14, 17, 87.
+
+ Washbourne, Mr., American Minister in Paris, i. 384.
+
+ Washington, Lyons appointed to Legation, i. 11;
+ Lyons at, i. 23;
+ society in, i. 87;
+ climate of, i. 119;
+ official figures of despatches to and from in 1864, i. 137;
+ work of the Chancery, i. 138.
+
+ Watt, engineer on the _Cagliari_, i. 9.
+
+ Weiss, appointment by Gambetta, ii. 266.
+
+ Welles, Mr., Secretary to U.S. Navy, i. 58, 101, 103, 119.
+
+ Werther, Prussian Ambassador at Paris, ii. 299.
+
+ West Indies, proposals for defence, i. 40.
+
+ Westminster Abbey, ii. 193.
+
+ Westmoreland, Lord, on Parliamentary vote, ii. 10.
+
+ Wheaton on international law, i. 40, 64.
+
+ White Flag manifesto, ii. 57, 58, 65, 66.
+
+ Wilhelmshöhe, i. 333.
+
+ Wilkes, Captain (of the _San Jacinto_), i. 58, 64, 100, 105.
+
+ Wilmington, Vigilance Committee at, i. 35.
+
+ Wilson, M. Daniel, on the Franco-Prussian war, i. 328.
+
+ Wilson, Sir C. Rivers, Minister of Finance in Egypt, ii. 153, 171,
+ 173, 175, 178, 188, 271, 313.
+
+ Winchester, Lyons at, i. 1.
+
+ Wistar, General, i. 112.
+
+ Woburn, Lyons at, ii. 219, 222, 424.
+
+ Wodehouse, Mr. Henry, i. 342, 377;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 343.
+
+ Wood, Mr., despatch from, ii. 55.
+
+ Wolff, Sir H. Drummond, question on Tunis, ii. 239;
+ mission to the Porte, ii. 376, 387, 389, 391, 407, 409.
+
+ Wolseley, Sir Garnet, in Egypt, i. 299, 358.
+
+ Würtemberg and Confederation, i. 193, 266.
+
+ Wurtzburg, Baron, i. 11, ii. 417.
+
+ Wurtzburg, Baroness, ii. 424.
+
+
+ Young Turk Party, i. 167.
+
+
+ Zanzibar, ii. 378.
+
+ Zululand expedition, ii. 190.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ LONDON AND BECCLES.
+
+ Telegrams:
+ "Scholarly, London." 41 and 43 Maddox Street,
+ Bond Street, London, W.
+ Telephone: _September, 1913._
+ No. 1883 Mayfair.
+
+ Mr. Edward Arnold's
+
+ AUTUMN
+ ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1913.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LORD LYONS.
+
+ A Record of British Diplomacy.
+
+ By the Right Hon. LORD NEWTON.
+
+ _With Portraits. In Two Volumes._ =30s. net.=
+
+The late Lord Lyons was not only the most prominent but the most trusted
+English diplomatist of his day, and so great was the confidence felt in
+his ability that he was paid the unique compliment of being offered the
+post of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.
+
+Lord Newton, who has now undertaken the task of preparing a memoir of
+him, enjoys the advantage of having served under him for five years at
+the Paris Embassy. The interest of this work lies, however, less in the
+personality of the Ambassador than in the highly important events in
+which he played so prominent a part.
+
+Lord Lyons was the British representative at Washington during
+the period of the Civil War; subsequently he was Ambassador at
+Constantinople for two years; and finally he spent twenty years--from
+1867 to 1887--as Ambassador at Paris. During the whole of this eventful
+period his advice was constantly sought by the Home Government upon
+every foreign question of importance, and his correspondence throws
+fresh light upon obscure passages in diplomatic history.
+
+In this book will be found hitherto unpublished information relating to
+such matters as the critical relations between England and the United
+States during the course of the Civil War; the political situation in
+France during the closing years of the Second Empire; the secret attempt
+made by the British Foreign Secretary to avert the Franco-German War,
+and the explanation of its failure; the internal and external policy
+of France during the early years of the Third Republic; the War Scare
+of 1875; the Congress of Berlin; the Egyptian Expedition; Anglo-French
+political relations, and many other matters of interest.
+
+The method selected by the writer has been to reproduce all important
+correspondence verbatim, and it may be confidently asserted that the
+student of foreign politics will find in this work a valuable record of
+modern diplomatic history.
+
+ LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET. W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF
+ GEORGE WILLIAM FREDERICK,
+ FOURTH EARL OF CLARENDON.
+
+ By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart.
+
+ _In Two Volumes. With Portraits. Demy 8vo._ =30s. net.=
+
+Born in the year 1800 and dying in 1870, Lord Clarendon lived through
+a period of social, political, and economic change more rapid probably
+than had been witnessed in any similar space of time in the previous
+history of mankind. It was his lot, moreover, to wield considerable
+influence over the course of affairs, inasmuch as his public service,
+extending over fifty years, caused him to be employed in a succession
+of highly responsible, and even critical, situations. British Minister
+at Madrid at the outbreak and during the course of the Carlist Civil
+War from 1833 to 1839, he was admitted into Lord Melbourne's Cabinet
+immediately upon returning to England in the latter year. He was Lord
+Lieutenant of Ireland throughout the memorable famine years, 1847-1852.
+Relieved of that arduous post, Lord Clarendon entered Lord Aberdeen's
+government in 1852 as Foreign Secretary, which office he retained
+through the Crimean War, and became responsible for the terms of the
+Treaty of Paris in 1856. On Lord Palmerston's death in 1865, he returned
+to the Foreign Office, and had to deal with the settlement of the
+"Alabama" claims.
+
+The annals of the first half of Queen Victoria's reign having been
+pretty thoroughly explored and dealt with by many competent writers, the
+chief interest in these pages will be found in Lord Clarendon's private
+correspondence, which has been well preserved, and has been entrusted to
+Sir Herbert Maxwell for the purpose of this memoir. Lord Clarendon was
+a fluent and diligent correspondent; Charles Greville and others among
+his contemporaries frequently expressed a hope that his letters should
+some day find their way into literature. Sir Arthur Helps, for instance,
+wrote as follows in _Macmillan's Magazine_: "Lord Clarendon was a man
+who indulged, notwithstanding his public labours, in an immense private
+correspondence. There were some persons to whom, I believe, he wrote
+daily, and perhaps in after years we shall be favoured--those of us
+who live to see it--with a correspondence which will enlighten us as
+to many of the principal topics of our own period." It is upon this
+correspondence that Sir Herbert Maxwell has chiefly relied in tracing
+the motives, principles, and conduct of one of the last Whig statesmen.
+Among the letters dealt with, and now published for the first time, are
+those from Lord Melbourne, Lord Palmerston, Lord Aberdeen, Lord Derby,
+M. Thiers, M. Guizot, the Emperor Louis Napoleon, etc., and many ladies.
+
+
+WILLIAM AUGUSTUS, DUKE OF CUMBERLAND, HIS EARLY LIFE AND TIMES,
+1721-1748.
+
+By the Hon. EVAN CHARTERIS,
+
+AUTHOR OF "AFFAIRS OF SCOTLAND, 1744-1746."
+
+_With Plans and Illustrations._ =12s. 6d. net.= [_In preparation._
+
+Mr. Charteris has a good subject in "Butcher" Cumberland, not only on
+account of the historical and romantic interest of his background, but
+also by reason of the Duke's baneful reputation.
+
+In the present volume the author has carried the career of the Duke of
+Cumberland down to the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. The period includes
+the Duke's campaigns in Flanders against Marshal Saxe, the Battle of
+Culloden, and the measures taken for the suppression of the Jacobites in
+Scotland. Mr. Charteris has had the exceptional advantage of studying
+the Cumberland Papers at Windsor Castle, and it is largely by the aid
+of hitherto unpublished documents that he is now able to throw fresh
+light on a character which has been the subject of so much malevolent
+criticism. At the same time the volume deals with the social and
+political conditions among which Cumberland was called on to play so
+important a part in the life of the nation. These have been treated by
+the author with some fulness of detail. Cumberland, in spite of his
+foreign origin, was remarkably typical of the characteristics of the
+earlier Georgian period, and an endeavour has been made in the present
+volume to establish the link between the Duke and the politics, the
+morals, the aims, and the pursuits of the age in which he lived.
+
+
+MY ART AND MY FRIENDS.
+
+THE REMINISCENCES OF SIR F. H. COWEN.
+
+_With Portrait. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+In the course of a long and distinguished musical career, Sir Frederic
+Cowen has had opportunities of visiting many parts of the world, of
+meeting all the most eminent artists of the last half-century, and
+of amassing material for an extremely diverting volume of personal
+recollections. As a child he enjoyed the privilege of being embraced
+by the great Piccolomini; as a young man he toured with Trebelli,
+and became acquainted with the famous Rubinstein, with Bülow, and
+with Joachim. In later life he numbered such well-known musicians as
+Pachmann, Paderewski, Sir Arthur Sullivan, and the de Reszkes, among his
+friends. Nor was the circle of his intimates entirely confined to the
+world of music; he was on terms of the closest friendship with Corney
+Grain, with George Grossmith and Arthur Cecil; he capped the puns of
+Henry J. Byron and Sir Francis Burnand; he laughed at the practical
+jokes of Toole, at the caricatures which Phil May drew for him of
+his friends. To the public Sir Frederick Cowen is well known as the
+conductor of Covent Garden Promenade and Philharmonic Concerts, as the
+composer of such celebrated songs as "The Better Land" and "The Promise
+of Life," of "The Corsair" and "The Butterfly's Ball." In these pages
+he shows himself to be a keen but kindly student of human nature, who
+can describe the various experiences of his past life with a genial but
+humorous pen. The inexhaustible fund of anecdote from which he draws
+tends still further to enliven an amusing and lively volume.
+
+
+A CIVIL SERVANT IN BURMA.
+
+By Sir HERBERT THIRKELL WHITE, K.C.I.E.
+
+_With 16 Pages of Illustrations. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+Sir Herbert Thirkell White, who has but recently retired from the post
+of Lieutenant-Governor of Burma, which he filled with ability and
+distinction, has now written what he modestly calls a "plain story" of
+more than thirty years of official life in India. In this volume are
+narrated the experiences of an Indian Civilian who has devoted the best
+part of his existence to the service of the Empire, and is in a position
+to speak with assurance of the many complicated problems with which the
+white man in India is continually faced. Sir Herbert's acquaintance with
+Burma began in 1878; since then he has had every opportunity of judging
+the peculiar habits, customs, and characteristics of the native Burmese,
+and has been able to compile a valuable record of the impressions they
+have made upon his mind. It was his fate to hold official positions
+of increasing importance during the Viceroyalties of Lord Ripon, Lord
+Dufferin, and Lord Curzon; he was privileged to serve such distinguished
+chiefs as Sir Charles Bernard and Sir Charles Crosthwaite, and witnessed
+that pacification of Burma which the last-named Chief Commissioner has
+described so eloquently in his well-known book on the subject. Sir
+Herbert writes clearly and with knowledge of every aspect of Burmese
+life and character, and this volume of his recollections should prove
+extremely popular among English readers who are interested in the
+government of our Indian Empire and the daily routine of the Indian
+Civil Servant.
+
+
+THIRTY YEARS IN KASHMIR.
+
+By ARTHUR NEVE, F.R.C.S.E.
+
+_With Illustrations and a Map. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+The stupendous natural surroundings amidst which they dwell have
+inspired sojourners in Kashmir and other Himalayan countries to produce
+some of the finest books of travel to be found. Among them will have to
+be included in future this book of Dr. Arthur Neve's, so effectively
+does the author reveal the wonders of the land of towering peaks and
+huge glaciers where he has made his home for the last thirty years.
+
+Going out to Kashmir in 1882 under the auspices of the Church Missionary
+Society, Dr. Neve took over the charge of the Kashmir Mission Hospital
+at Srinagur from Dr. Edmund Downes, who was retiring, and has stayed
+there ever since. In his earlier chapters he gives some account of the
+Punjab and Kashmir in the eighties, and also of the work of the mission.
+He then gets to the principal motif of the book--the exploring tours and
+mountaineering expeditions to which he has devoted his spare time. Nanga
+Parbat, Nun Kun, and many other Himalayan giants, are within hail of
+Srinagur, and before he has finished with the book the reader will find
+he has acquired the next best thing to a first-hand knowledge of this
+magnificent country. Dr. Neve has also a great deal that is interesting
+to tell about the people of various races and religions who inhabit the
+valleys, and from whom his medical help gained him a warm welcome at all
+times.
+
+A series of rare photographs gives a pictorial support to the
+letter-press.
+
+
+SPORT AND FOLK-LORE IN THE HIMALAYA.
+
+By Captain H. L. HAUGHTON.
+
+(36TH SIKHS.)
+
+_With Illustrations from the Author's Photographs. One Volume._
+
+_Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+Captain Haughton has written a book which should prove a welcome
+addition to the library of every sportsman, as well as being of supreme
+interest to the naturalist and the student of folk-lore. On the subject
+of sport the author writes with that thorough insight and sympathy
+which are the fruits of many years' practical experience with rod and
+rifle, in the jungle, on river-bank or mountain-side. In his agreeable
+society the reader may stalk the markhor or the ibex, lightly throw his
+"Sir Richard" across some Kashmiri trout-stream, or lie in wait for the
+Himalayan black bear on its way to feed; and if the author's description
+of his many amusing and exciting adventures and experiences is eminently
+readable, the value of his work is still further enhanced by his
+intimate knowledge of natural history, and by the introduction of many
+of those old Indian legendary tales that he has culled from the lips of
+native Shikaris round the camp-fire at night. The book is illustrated
+throughout with a series of remarkably interesting photographs taken by
+the author in the course of his many sporting expeditions.
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS OF A PENINSULAR VETERAN.
+
+By the late Lieut.-Colonel JOSEPH ANDERSON, C.B., K.H.
+
+_With Photogravure Portrait. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+The late Lieut.-Colonel Joseph Anderson was born in 1790, and from the
+age of fifteen, when he received a commission as Ensign in the 78th
+Regiment, to within a few years of his death in 1877, his career was
+almost continuously as adventurous as it was distinguished. In 1806
+he saw active service for the first time, when he took part in the
+expedition to Calabria; in the following year he served in the Egyptian
+Campaign of that date; and during the Peninsular War he fought at the
+battles of Maida, Busaco, Fuentes d'Onoro, was wounded at Talavera, and
+accompanied Wellington on the retreat to the lines of Torres Vedras. A
+few years later Captain Anderson, now a Captain in the York Chasseurs,
+was sent with his regiment to Barbadoes, and was present at the capture
+of Guadeloupe in 1815. He was appointed Colonel Commandant of the Penal
+Settlement at Norfolk Island in 1834, where his humane endeavours to
+reform the prevailing penal system, and his efforts to quell mutinous
+convicts, met with marked success. Nine years later Colonel Anderson
+went to India to take part in the Mahratta Campaign, and at the Battle
+of Punniar (where he commanded a Brigade) was severely wounded when
+charging the enemy's guns. After retiring from the Service, Colonel
+Anderson settled down in Australia, and it was at his home near
+Melbourne that these memories were compiled, during the later years of a
+strenuous and active life, for the edification of his family. They are
+written in a simple, unaffected style, which renders them peculiarly
+readable, and form a most instructive record of the manners and customs,
+of the mode of warfare, and the military and social life of a past age,
+and a bygone generation.
+
+
+MEMORIES OF A SOLDIER'S LIFE.
+
+By Major-General Sir H. M. BENGOUGH, K.C.B.
+
+_With Portrait. Demy 8vo._ =8s. 6d. net.=
+
+Major-General Sir H. M. Bengough joined the army in 1855, and retired
+in 1898, after more than forty years of distinguished service in all
+quarters of the Empire. His first experience of active warfare dates
+from the Crimea; later on he took the field in the Zulu War and the
+Burma Expedition of 1885. In days of peace he held various high commands
+in India, South Africa, and Jamaica, and finally commanded a brigade
+of infantry at Aldershot. In this volume of personal recollections the
+author narrates the many varied incidents and experiences of a long
+military career and vividly describes the campaigns in which he took
+part. He also gives an interesting account of his adventures in the
+realm of sport--pig-sticking, tiger-shooting, and pursuing other forms
+of game in India and elsewhere; subjects upon which a long experience
+enables him to write with expert knowledge. It will be strange indeed if
+so interesting an autobiographical volume from the pen of a deservedly
+popular soldier and sportsman fails to appeal to a wide public.
+
+
+ZACHARY STOYANOFF.
+
+Pages from the Autobiography of a Bulgarian Insurgent.
+
+Translated by M. POTTER.
+
+_One Volume. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+In this volume Zachary Stoyanoff gives us the narrative of his personal
+experiences during the Bulgarian outbreaks of 1875 and 1876. Almost
+by accident he became an "apostle" of rebellion, and was sent out
+forthwith to range the country, stirring up the villagers and forming
+local committees. It is an amazing story. With unsurpassable candour
+he portrays for us the leaders, their enthusiasm, their incredible
+short-sightedness, and the pitiful inadequacy of their preparations.
+The bubble burst, and after a miserable attempt at flight, Stoyanoff
+was taken prisoner and sent to Philippopolis for trial. There is no
+attempt at heroics. With the same Boswellian simplicity he reveals his
+fears, his cringing, his mendacity, and incidentally gives us a graphic
+picture, not wholly black, of the conquering Turk. The narrative ends
+abruptly while he is still in peril of his life. One is glad to know
+that, somehow, he escaped. A very human document, and a remarkable
+contrast to the startling exhibition of efficiency given to the world by
+the Bulgarians in their latest struggle with the Turks.
+
+
+SPLENDID FAILURES.
+
+By HARRY GRAHAM,
+
+AUTHOR OF "A GROUP OF SCOTTISH WOMEN," "THE MOTHER OF PARLIAMENTS," ETC.
+
+_With Portraits. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+It is perhaps unlikely that any two individuals will agree as to the
+proper definition of the term "A Splendid Failure"--a phrase of which
+the origin would appear to be obscure. It may, however, be roughly
+stated that the "Splendid Failures" of the past divide themselves
+naturally into three classes: those whom their contemporaries invested
+with a fictitious or exaggerated splendour which posterity is quite
+unable to comprehend or appreciate; those whom the modern world regards
+with admiration--but who signally failed in impressing the men of
+their own generation; and those who, gifted with genius and inspired
+with lofty ideals, never justified the world's high opinion of their
+talents or fulfilled the promise of their early days. In this volume of
+biographical essays, the author of "A Group of Scottish Women" and other
+popular works has dealt with a selection of "splendid failures" of whose
+personal history the public knows but little, though well acquainted
+with their names. Wolfe Tone, "the first of the Fenians"; Benjamin
+Haydon, the "Cockney Raphael"; Toussaint L'Ouverture, the "Napoleon
+of San Domingo"; William Betty, the "Infant Roscius"; and "Champagne"
+Townshend, the politician of Pitt's day, may be included under this
+category. The reader cannot fail to be interested in that account which
+the author gives of the ill-fated Archduke Maximilian's attempt to found
+a Mexican monarchy; in his careful review of the work and character
+of Hartley Coleridge; and in his biographical study of George Smythe,
+that friend of Disraeli whom the statesman-novelist took as his model
+for the hero of "Coningsby." This book, which should appeal strongly
+to all readers of literary essays, is illustrated with eight excellent
+portraits.
+
+
+THE CORINTHIAN YACHTSMAN'S HANDBOOK.
+
+By FRANCIS B. COOKE.
+
+_With 20 Folding Plates of Designs for Yachts, and numerous black and
+white Illustrations. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+This new handbook covers the sport of yachting in all its branches. The
+writer, who has had many years' experience of cruising and racing in
+yachts and boats of all types, has treated the subject in a thoroughly
+practical manner. The book is divided into six parts.
+
+In Part I., which deals with the selection of a yacht, the various types
+and rigs suitable for Corinthian yachting are discussed. The designing
+and building of new craft are also dealt with at some length, and
+designs and descriptions of a number of up-to-date small cruisers are
+given.
+
+In Part II. some hints are given as to where to station the yacht. All
+available headquarters within easy reach of London are described, and
+the advantages and disadvantages of each pointed out.
+
+Part III. is devoted to the equipment of yachts, and contains a wealth
+of information as to the internal arrangement, rigging, and fittings of
+small cruisers.
+
+Part IV. treats of the maintenance of small cruising vessels, with
+notes on the cost of upkeep, fitting out and laying up. Other matters
+dealt with in this section are the preservation of sails and gear, and
+insurance.
+
+Part V., on seamanship, covers the handling of fore-and-aft vessels
+under all conditions of weather, and upon every point of sailing.
+
+Part VI. covers the racing side of the sport in a comprehensive manner.
+An exhaustive exposition of the International Sailing Rules is followed
+by hints on racing tactics. The appendix contains, _inter alia_, an
+illustrated description of the British Buoyage System.
+
+Mr. Cooke's well-known handbooks have come to be regarded by yachtsmen
+as standard works, and a new and more ambitious work from his pen can
+hardly fail to interest them.
+
+
+THE FALL OF PROTECTION.
+
+By BERNARD HOLLAND, C.B.,
+
+AUTHOR OF "IMPERIUM ET LIBERTAS."
+
+_One Volume. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+This volume is a political-historical study of the great change which
+took place in British commercial and financial policy mainly between
+the years 1840 and 1850. The writer examines the state of things in
+these respects which existed before this revolution, and describes the
+previous protective system, navigation system, and colonial system.
+He then narrates the process by which those systems were overthrown,
+devoting special attention to the character, career, and changes in
+opinion of Sir Robert Peel, and to the attitude and action of the Tory,
+Whig, and Radical parties, and of their leading men, especially Mr.
+Disraeli, Lord John Russell, and Mr. Cobden. He analyses with care
+the arguments used on all sides in these controversies, especially
+with regard to the Repeal of the Corn Laws, and he shows the extent to
+which questions of imperial preference and the relations between the
+United Kingdom and the Colonies entered into the issues. One chapter is
+devoted to the Bank Act of 1844, and to the consideration of its causes
+and results. The author concludes by tracing very briefly the chain of
+events which connect the period in question with our own day, in respect
+of commercial and fiscal policy, and expresses his own views as to
+existing tendencies and future developments.
+
+Mr. Bernard Holland is known as the author of the Life of the Duke
+of Devonshire, and of "Imperium et Libertas." In a sense the present
+volume is a continuation of the latter book, or rather is an attempt to
+deal more expansively and in detail with certain history and questions
+connected with the same theme, for the full treatment of which there was
+insufficient space in that book. Mr. Holland having acted for a number
+of years as Private Secretary to two successive Secretaries of State for
+the Colonies, has been brought into close touch in a practical way with
+colonial questions. This book, it is hoped, will be of some service both
+to students of economic history and to politicians in active life.
+
+
+PAINTING IN THE FAR EAST.
+
+By LAURENCE BINYON.
+
+_A New Edition, thoroughly Revised, with many new and additional
+Illustrations. Crown 4to._ =21s. net.=
+
+Since the first edition of this book was published in 1907, much has
+happened, and a quantity of new material has been brought to light.
+
+Interest in the subject has been immensely widened and strengthened.
+The museums of Europe and America are vying with each other to procure
+fine specimens of Chinese and Japanese art. The opening this autumn of
+a new museum at Cologne, exclusively devoted to the arts of Eastern
+Asia, is a symptom of the times. Collections, public and private, both
+European and American, have been greatly enriched; and the exhibition in
+1910 at Shepherd's Bush, of treasured masterpieces lent from Japanese
+collections, has provided a standard for the student.
+
+Six years ago, again, scarcely any of the voluminous literature of art
+existing in Chinese and Japanese had been translated. On this side, too,
+an added store of information has been made accessible, though still in
+great part scattered in the pages of learned periodicals. Above all,
+the marvellous discoveries made of recent years in China and Chinese
+Turkestan have substituted a mass of authentic material for groping
+conjectures in the study of the art of the early periods.
+
+In preparing a new edition of this book and bringing it up to date,
+Mr. Binyon has therefore been able to utilize a variety of new sources
+of information. The estimates given of the art of some of the most
+famous of the older masters have been reconsidered. The sections
+dealing with the early art have been in great measure rewritten; and
+the book has been revised throughout. In the matter of illustrations it
+has been possible to draw on a wider range and make a fuller and more
+representative selection.
+
+
+PAINTING IN EAST AND WEST.
+
+By ROBERT DOUGLAS NORTON,
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE CHOICE."
+
+_Crown 8vo._ =5s. net.=
+
+The art of painting, which in the days of Gothic church-building
+contributed so much both to the education and the pleasure of the
+community at large, has admittedly come to appeal to ever-narrowing
+circles, until to-day it cannot be said to play any part in popular
+life at all. This book seeks to discover the causes of its decline
+in influence. A brief review of the chief contemporary movements in
+painting gives point to a suggestion made by more than one thoughtful
+critic that the chief need of Western painting is spirituality.
+Since this is a quality which those competent to judge are at one in
+attributing to Eastern art, the author, in a chapter on Far Eastern
+Painting, sets forth the ideals underlying the great painting of China
+and Japan, and contrasts these ideals with those which have inspired
+painters and public in the West. This leads to an inquiry into the
+uses of imagination and suggestion in art, and to an attempt to find a
+broad enough definition for "spirituality" not to exclude many widely
+divergent achievements of Western painting. Finally, the possibility of
+training the sense of beauty is discussed in the light of successful
+instances.
+
+Incidentally the book touches on many questions which, though of
+interest to picture-lovers, often remain unasked; such, for instance,
+as what we look for in a picture; how far subject is important; why it
+may happen that the interest of one picture, which pleases at first,
+soon wanes, while that of another grows steadily stronger; the value of
+technique, of different media of expression, of mere resemblance, etc.
+
+Without going into the technicalities of aesthetics, the author aims at
+investigating certain first principles which are overlooked at times by
+possessors of even the widest knowledge of individual schools.
+
+
+SHAKESPEARE'S STORIES.
+
+By CONSTANCE MAUD and MARY MAUD.
+
+AS YOU LIKE IT--THE TEMPEST--KING LEAR--TWELFTH NIGHT--THE MERCHANT OF
+VENICE--A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM--MACBETH--HAMLET--ROMEO AND JULIET.
+
+_With Illustrations from the famous Boydell prints. Crown 8vo._
+
+=5s. net.=
+
+Miss Constance Maud is the author of "Wagner's Heroes" and "Wagner's
+Heroines," two books on similar lines to these tales which have had a
+great vogue among young people of all ages. In the present volume she
+tells the charming stories of nine of the most famous of Shakespeare's
+Tragedies and Comedies in prose of delightful and unstudied simplicity.
+On occasion the actual text has been used for familiar passages and
+phrases. These great world-tales, regarded merely as tales, with the
+elemental motives and passions displayed in them, appeal strongly to the
+imagination, and when narrated by a competent pen there cannot be finer
+or more absorbing reading. In addition to this, he must be a dull reader
+in whom they do not awaken a desire to make a closer acquaintance with
+the plays themselves.
+
+The book forms a companion volume to Sir A. T. Quiller-Couch's
+well-known "Historical Tales from Shakespeare."
+
+
+THE MUSE IN MOTLEY.
+
+By HARRY GRAHAM.
+
+AUTHOR OF "RUTHLESS RHYMES FOR HEARTLESS HOMES," ETC., ETC.
+
+_With 24 Illustrations by_
+
+LEWIS BAUMER.
+
+_Fcap. 4to._ =3s. 6d. net.=
+
+All lovers of humorous verse will welcome a fresh volume of lyrics by
+the author of "Deportmental Ditties," "Canned Classics," and other
+deservedly popular products of the Minor Muse. Readers of Captain
+Graham's new collection of light verse will agree with the _Daily
+Chronicle_ in describing its author as "a godsend, a treasure trove, a
+messenger from Olympus; a man who really does see the ludicrous side of
+life, a man who is a genuine humorist." Once again the author of these
+amusing poems attempts to "shoot Folly as she flies," and genially
+satirizes the foibles of the age in a fashion that will certainly add
+to his reputation as a humorist; and his work is rendered still more
+delightful by the drawings of Mr. Lewis Baumer, the well-known _Punch_
+artist, with which it is lavishly illustrated. "It is a great and good
+thing," as the _Pall Mall Gazette_ remarked with reference to another
+of Captain Graham's books, "to have a man among us who is witty all the
+time and lets himself go. We ought to be duly thankful. And we are!"
+
+
+HANNIBAL ONCE MORE.
+
+By DOUGLAS W. FRESHFIELD, M.A.,
+
+VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY; TREASURER OF THE
+HELLENIC AND ROMAN SOCIETIES; FORMERLY PRESIDENT OF THE ALPINE CLUB.
+
+_8vo._ =5s. net.=
+
+In this little volume Mr. Freshfield has put into final shape the
+results of his study of the famous and still-debated question: "By which
+Pass did Hannibal cross the Alps?" The literature which has grown up
+round this intricate subject is surprisingly extensive, and various
+solutions have been propounded and upheld, with remarkable warmth and
+tenacity, by a host of scholars, historians, geographers, military men,
+and mountaineers. Mr. Freshfieid has a solution of his own, which,
+however, he puts forward in no dogmatic spirit, but in such a fashion
+that his book is practically a lucid review of the whole matter in each
+of its many aspects. To an extensive acquaintance with ancient and
+modern geographical literature he unites a wide and varied experience as
+an alpine climber and a traveller, and a minute topographical knowledge
+of the regions under discussion; and these qualifications--in which many
+of his predecessors in the same field of inquiry have been conspicuously
+lacking--enable him to throw much new light on a perennially fascinating
+problem.
+
+
+THE PASTORAL TEACHING OF ST. PAUL.
+
+By the Rev. Canon H. L. GOUDGE,
+
+PRINCIPAL OF THE THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE, ELY; AUTHOR OF "THE MIND OF ST.
+PAUL," ETC.
+
+_Crown 8vo. Cloth._ =2s. 6d. net.=
+
+These lectures were delivered at the end of May, 1913, at the Palace,
+Gloucester, to the clergy of the diocese, and are now published in
+response to the request of those who heard them. They do not constitute
+a detailed commentary on the Pastoral Epistles, though a good deal of
+detailed exegesis necessarily finds a place in them. The writer's aim
+has been to collect and arrange St. Paul's teaching as to the work of
+the Christian pastor, and to point out its applicability to modern
+conditions and modern difficulties. The writer has often found, through
+his experience in conducting Retreats, that the Pastoral Teaching of
+St. Paul is of the greatest value to the clergy to-day, but that this
+teaching is often obscured by the unsystematic character of St. Paul's
+writing and by the passing controversies with which he has to deal. In
+these lectures the First Epistle to Timothy is used as the basis, but
+continually illustrated by passages from the other Pastoral Epistles,
+and from St. Paul's earlier writings. The first lecture deals with the
+pastor's aim, the second with the pastor's character, the third with
+the pastor's work, and the fourth with the adaptation of his message to
+men and to women, to old and to young, to rich and to poor. The ground
+already covered by the writer's earlier book, "The Mind of St. Paul,"
+has been carefully avoided, but it is hoped that the one book may throw
+light upon the other. An index of texts has been added for those who
+may wish to use this second book, as far as that is possible, as a
+commentary.
+
+
+_NEW NOVELS_
+
+SOMETHING AFAR.
+
+By MAXWELL GRAY,
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE SILENCE OF DEAN MAITLAND," "THE GREAT REFUSAL," ETC.
+
+_Crown 8vo. Cloth._ =6s.=
+
+The scene of Maxwell Gray's new story is laid in London and in Italy,
+where the gradual unfolding of an elaborate but absorbing plot holds
+the reader's attention until the very last page of the book. This is a
+tale of heroism, of self-sacrifice, of romance, full of incident and
+adventure, illumined by those tender and imaginative touches, that vivid
+portrayal of character, which the public has learnt to expect from
+the author of "The Silence of Dean Maitland." From these pages we may
+learn that there is "something afar from the sphere of our sorrow," the
+highest aspiration of the lover, the artist, the poet and the saint,
+which, beautiful beyond all that man's heart can divine, is yet within
+the reach of every one of us.
+
+
+THE GENTLE LOVER.
+
+A Comedy of Middle Age.
+
+By FORREST REID,
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE BRACKNELLS," "FOLLOWING DARKNESS," ETC.
+
+_Crown 8vo._ =6s.=
+
+This extremely interesting story, of which the title gives a most apt
+description, is written in a lighter vein than the author's previous
+work. It is a love story, and while the tale itself is enthralling,
+it depends in great measure for its charm on the attractiveness of
+the characters who figure in the drama and who are all very pleasant
+company. The book is essentially human, the note is never forced, yet
+the interest goes on increasing right up to the end. It is actual life
+with its comedy and tragedy so closely intermingled that it is not
+always easy to distinguish one from the other. The scene is laid abroad,
+partly in Bruges, and partly in Italy, but the characters are, with one
+or two exceptions, natives of that part of Ireland with which the author
+is most familiar, and they lose none of their individuality by being
+transplanted to those beautiful old-world cities where we follow their
+varied fortunes. Mr. Reid's previous novels have already secured for
+his work the warm appreciation of some of the best judges of literary
+values, and the present novel may be confidently stated to exhibit his
+undoubted power as a writer of fiction in an advanced and progressive
+stage.
+
+
+_NEW SCIENTIFIC WORKS_
+
+INDUSTRIAL POISONING
+
+From Fumes, Gases, and Poisons of Manufacturing Processes.
+
+By Dr. J. RAMBOUSEK,
+
+PROFESSOR OF FACTORY HYGIENE, AND CHIEF STATE HEALTH OFFICER, PRAGUE
+
+Translated and Edited by Dr. T. M. LEGGE,
+
+H.M. MEDICAL INSPECTOR OF FACTORIES.
+
+_Fully Illustrated. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+
+MALINGERING
+
+And Feigned Sickness.
+
+By Sir JOHN COLLIE, M.D., J.P.,
+
+MEDICAL EXAMINER, LONDON COUNTY COUNCIL; CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER,
+METROPOLITAN WATER BOARD; CONSULTING MEDICAL EXAMINER TO THE SHIPPING
+FEDERATION; MEDICAL EXAMINER TO THE SUN INSURANCE OFFICE, CENTRAL
+INSURANCE COMPANY, LONDON, LIVERPOOL, AND GLOBE INSURANCE COMPANY,
+AND OTHER ACCIDENT OFFICES; LATE HOME OFFICE MED. REF. WORKMEN'S
+COMPENSATION ACT.
+
+Assisted by ARTHUR H. SPICER, M.B., B.S. (Lond.), D.P.H.
+
+_Illustrated, xii + 340 pp. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+In this work Sir John Collie, whose wide experience has eminently fitted
+him for the task, has given an interesting and lucid description of the
+methods and peculiarities of the malingerer. He describes fully and in
+detail the methods of examination for the detection of malingering and
+the diseases usually simulated, and discusses the attitude required by
+the medical attendant towards unduly prolonged illness.
+
+
+OLD AGE:
+
+Its Care and Treatment in Health and Disease.
+
+By ROBERT SAUNDBY, M.D., F.R.C.P., LL.D., J.P.,
+
+MEMBER GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL; EX-PRESIDENT BRITISH MEDICAL
+ASSOCIATION; PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE, UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM; PHYSICIAN
+TO THE BIRMINGHAM GENERAL HOSPITAL.
+
+_320 pp._ =7s. 6d. net.=
+
+No English writer having recently dealt with this subject, it has
+been felt that there is room for a book which should bring together
+the various contributions made to it in modern times, including the
+results of the author's extensive experience during forty years of
+medical practice. The author discusses the principles of health, by
+due attention to which healthy old age may be attained. The diseases
+to which the aged are especially liable are fully described, their
+causes are clearly indicated, and the author shows in a practical way
+by what means they may be avoided and how they may be appropriately
+treated. Special attention is given to such important subjects as
+diet, exercise, etc. Suggestive dietary tables are given, both for
+use in health and in particular diseases, while the chapters devoted
+to methods of exercise most suitable in advanced age will also prove
+of value.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET, W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Transcriber notes: |
+ | |
+ | P.30. 'Chiselhurst' changed to 'Chislehurst' |
+ | P.42. 'Gortchakoff' changed to 'Gortschakoff' |
+ | P.88. 'attribute' changed to 'attributed'. |
+ | P.268. 'Commerical' changed to 'Commercial'. |
+ | P.277. 'Commerical' changed to 'Commercial'. |
+ | P.294. 'futher' changed to 'further'. |
+ | P.358. 'in in' changed to 'in'. |
+ | P.376. 'Débats' changed to 'Débuts'. |
+ | P.378. 'the the' changed to 'the'. |
+ | P.388. 'Agenu' changed to 'Agence' as in Agence Havas. |
+ | P.397. 'radicle' changed to 'radical'. |
+ | P.401. 'Schraebelé" changed to 'Schnaebelé'. |
+ | P.417. 'D'Israeli' changed to 'Disraeli'. |
+ | P.419. 'holdiay' changed to 'holiday'. |
+ | P.432. 'Amabssador' changed to 'Ambassador'. |
+ | P.437' 'Gortchakoff' changed to 'Gortschakoff'. |
+ | P.440. 'Maréchal' changed to 'Maréchale'. |
+ | P.440. 'Malot' changed to 'Malet'. |
+ | P.442. 'Caroina' changed to 'Carolina'. |
+ | P.443. 'Pasquior' changed to 'Pasquier'. |
+ | P.443. 'd'Audiffrot' changed to 'd'Audiffret'. |
+ | P.445. 'Stowart' changed to 'Stewart'. |
+ | P.446. 'Secreatry' changed to 'Secretary'. |
+ | Fixed Various punctuation. |
+ | |
+ | Please note, text surrounded by =this= is bold, and |
+ | text surrounded by _this_ is italics. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Lyons: A Record of British
+Diplomacy, Vol. 2 of 2, by Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 44143-8.txt or 44143-8.zip *****
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Lyons: A Record of British Diplomacy,
+Vol. 2 of 2, by Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: Lord Lyons: A Record of British Diplomacy, Vol. 2 of 2
+
+Author: Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2013 [EBook #44143]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Brian Foley, Jane Robins and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i_000.png" width="325" height="500" alt="" /><a name="FRONTISPIECE" id="FRONTISPIECE"></a>
+<div class="caption"><p><em>Lord Lyons,<br />
+at the age of 65.</em></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">london: edward arnold.</span></p>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h1>LORD LYONS</h1>
+
+<p class="p2"><span class="bigish">A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY</span></p>
+
+<p class="p4"><strong>BY</strong></p>
+
+<h2>LORD NEWTON</h2>
+
+<p class="p4"><strong>IN TWO VOLUMES</strong><br />
+<strong>VOLUME II</strong></p>
+
+<p class="p4"><strong>WITH PORTRAITS</strong></p>
+
+<p class="p4"><strong>LONDON</strong><br />
+<span class="bigish">EDWARD ARNOLD</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1913<br />
+<em>All rights reserved</em></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. II</h2>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_1">PAGE 1</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">The Third Republic</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1871-1873</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">Thiers as Chief of the Executive&mdash;Negotiations respecting a new
+Anglo-French Commercial Treaty&mdash;Return of the Princes&mdash;Embarrassment
+caused by the Comte de Chambord&mdash;Question
+of voting in the House of Lords&mdash;Thiers elected President&mdash;State
+of parties in France&mdash;Irritation in Germany against Thiers&mdash;Diplomatic
+incident at Constantinople&mdash;Signature of Anglo-French
+Commercial Treaty&mdash;Death of the Emperor Napoleon&mdash;Lord
+Odo Russell on Bismarck's policy&mdash;Fall of Thiers&mdash;Bismarck
+and Arnim</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_47">PAGE 47</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">Marshal MacMahon's Presidency</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1873-1875</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">MacMahon as President of the Republic&mdash;Franco-German relations&mdash;Bismarck's
+confidences to Lord Odo Russell&mdash;Political confusion
+in France&mdash;The war scare of 1875&mdash;Rumoured intention
+of Khedive to sell his Suez Canal shares&mdash;Lord Odo Russell on
+Bismarck's Foreign Policy&mdash;Purchase of Khedive's shares by
+H.M. Government</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_95">PAGE 95</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">The Eastern Question</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1876-1878</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">The Powers and Turkey: England and the Andrassy Note&mdash;Gambetta
+on French Politics&mdash;Simplicity of Marshal MacMahon&mdash;Political
+consequences of French military re-organisation&mdash;Struggle
+between the Marshal and Parliament&mdash;The Constantinople<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span>
+Conference: Determination of Lord Derby to do nothing&mdash;Intrigues
+of the Duc Décazes&mdash;Constitutional crisis in
+France&mdash;Defeat of Marshal MacMahon: new Radical Ministry
+formed under Dufaure with Waddington as Foreign Minister&mdash;Treaty
+of San Stefano; nervousness of French Government&mdash;Determination
+of H.M. Government to secure a Conference&mdash;Invitation
+to Lord Lyons to be the British representative at
+Berlin&mdash;Resignation of Lord Derby: appointment of Lord
+Salisbury&mdash;Lord Salisbury's circular of April 1st, 1878&mdash;Inquiry
+of Lord Salisbury respecting French desire for Tunis&mdash;The Anglo-Turkish
+Convention&mdash;The Congress of Berlin&mdash;Reception in
+France of the Anglo-Turkish Convention&mdash;Waddington and
+Tunis&mdash;Sir H. Layard on the Treaty of Berlin</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_161">PAGE 161</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">M. Grévy's Presidency</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1878-1879</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">Paris Exhibition of 1878: desire of Queen Victoria to visit it
+incognito&mdash;Tunis&mdash;Resignation of MacMahon: Election of
+Grévy&mdash;Waddington Prime Minister: his difficulties&mdash;Anglo-French
+policy in Egypt&mdash;Question of deposing the Khedive
+Ismail&mdash;Differences between British and French Governments
+with regard to Egypt&mdash;Deposition of the Khedive by the Sultan&mdash;Death
+of the Prince Imperial: effect in France&mdash;Proposed
+visit of Gambetta to England: his bias in favour of English
+Conservatives&mdash;Resignation of Waddington: Freycinet Prime
+Minister&mdash;Coolness between France and Russia</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_209">PAGE 209</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">The Revival of France</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1880-1881</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">Change of Government in England and reversal of Foreign Policy&mdash;The
+French Embassy in London: Freycinet's model Ambassador&mdash;Personal
+characteristics of Lord Lyons: <em>On ne lui connait
+pas de vice</em>&mdash;The work at the Paris Embassy&mdash;The Eastern
+Question: Mr. Goschen at Constantinople&mdash;The Dulcigno
+Demonstration and the difficulties of the European Concert&mdash;Proposal
+to seize Smyrna&mdash;Opportune surrender of the Sultan&mdash;H.M.
+Government and the Pope: Mission of Mr. Errington,
+M.P.&mdash;Gambetta on the European situation&mdash;French expedition
+to Tunis&mdash;Ineffectual objections of H.M. Government&mdash;Establishment
+of French Protectorate over Tunis&mdash;Irritation in England
+and Italy&mdash;Distinction drawn between Tunis and Tripoli&mdash;Attempt
+to negotiate a new Anglo-French Commercial
+Treaty: Question of Retaliation</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_258">PAGE 258</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">Arabi's Rebellion</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1881-1882</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">Egypt: the <em>coup d'état</em> of the Colonels: joint Anglo-French action&mdash;Gambetta
+as Prime Minister&mdash;His desire to remain on good
+terms with England&mdash;Egypt: the Dual Note&mdash;Gambetta in
+favour of a more resolute joint policy&mdash;Fall of Gambetta after
+two months of office&mdash;Ministry formed by Freycinet&mdash;French
+vacillation with regard to Egypt&mdash;Decision of H.M. Government
+to employ force&mdash;Bombardment of Alexandria&mdash;Decision
+of French Government to take no part in expedition&mdash;Fall of
+Freycinet&mdash;Invitation to Italy to join in expedition declined&mdash;Effect
+produced in France by British military success in Egypt&mdash;French
+endeavour to re-establish the Control in Egypt&mdash;Madagascar
+and Tonquin</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_305">PAGE 305</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">Anglophobia</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1883-1885</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">Death of Gambetta&mdash;General discontent in France&mdash;Change of
+Government: Jules Ferry Prime Minister&mdash;Waddington appointed
+Ambassador in London&mdash;Insult to King of Spain in
+Paris&mdash;Growth of French ill-will towards English influence in
+Egypt&mdash;Baron de Billing and General Gordon&mdash;Establishment
+of French Protectorate over Tonquin&mdash;Egyptian Conference
+in London&mdash;Renewed request to Lord Lyons to vote in House
+of Lords&mdash;Anti-English combination with regard to Egypt&mdash;Jules
+Ferry on the necessity of delivering a <em>coup foudroyant</em> upon
+China&mdash;French reverse in Tonquin: resignation of Jules Ferry&mdash;New
+Government under Freycinet&mdash;Bismarck and the persons
+whom he disliked&mdash;Funeral of Victor Hugo&mdash;Return of Lord
+Salisbury to the Foreign Office&mdash;Anglophobia in Paris: scurrilities
+of Rochefort</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a></h3>
+
+<p class="p1"><a href="#Page_360">PAGE 360</a></p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">The Last Year's Work</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">1886-1887</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="p3">Lord Rosebery at the Foreign Office&mdash;His surprise at ill-feeling
+shown by French Government&mdash;Proceedings of General Boulanger&mdash;Princes'
+Exclusion Bill&mdash;Boulanger at the Review of
+July 14th&mdash;Causes of his popularity&mdash;General Election in
+England: Lord Salisbury Prime Minister&mdash;The Foreign Office
+offered to Lord Lyons&mdash;Egyptian questions raised by French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
+Government&mdash;Apprehension in France of a German attack&mdash;Embarrassment
+caused by Boulanger&mdash;Unofficial attempt on behalf
+of French Government to establish better relations with England&mdash;Application
+by Lord Lyons to be permitted to resign&mdash;Pressed
+by Lord Salisbury to remain until end of the year&mdash;Desire
+of French Government to get rid of Boulanger&mdash;Lord
+Salisbury's complaints as to unfriendly action of the French
+Government in various parts of the world&mdash;Resignation of
+Lord Lyons&mdash;Created an Earl&mdash;His death</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<h3><a href="#APPENDIX">APPENDIX</a></h3>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left">Lord Lyons in Private Life. By <span class="smcap">Mrs. Wilfrid Ward</span> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_415">415</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_429">429</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>LIST OF PLATES IN VOL. II</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right"><span class="smcap">FACING PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Lord Lyons at the Age of 65</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#FRONTISPIECE"><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">William Henry Waddington</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">General Boulanger</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_370">370</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The British Embassy, Paris</span></td><td align="right"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#Page_420">420</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">(<cite>Photograph by F. Contet, Paris.</cite>)</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a><br /><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>LORD LYONS<br />
+<br />
+A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapter" />
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">THE THIRD REPUBLIC</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>(1871-1873)</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Strictly speaking, the existence of the National
+Assembly which had been summoned to ratify the
+Preliminaries of Peace, had now<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> come to an end, but
+under prevailing circumstances, it was more convenient
+to ignore Constitutional technicalities, and
+the Government proceeded to carry on the business
+of the country on the basis of a Republic. Thiers had
+been elected Chief of the Executive, and it was
+astonishing how rapidly his liking for a Republic
+increased since he had become the head of one.
+It was now part of his task to check the too reactionary
+tendencies of the Assembly and to preserve
+that form of government which was supposed to
+divide Frenchmen the least. The feeling against the
+Government of National Defence was as strong as
+ever, and the elections of some of the Orleans princes
+gave rise to inconvenient demonstrations on the part
+of their political supporters, who pressed for the
+repeal of the law disqualifying that family. Thiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+realized plainly enough that the revival of this
+demand was premature, and would only add to the
+general confusion, and had therefore induced the
+princes to absent themselves from Bordeaux, but the
+question could no longer be avoided.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 6, 1871.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Thiers has been hard at work 'lobbying,' as the
+Americans say, but could not come to any settlement with
+the Assembly, and so begged them to postpone the question
+of the elections of the Princes of Orleans till the day after
+to-morrow. One of the plans proposed was that the
+provisional state of things should be formally continued
+for two years, by conferring his present powers on Thiers
+for that period. This would, it was hoped, keep the Republicans
+quiet and allay the impatience of the monarchical
+parties, by giving them a fixed time to look forward
+to. But this, it seems, the majority in the Assembly
+would not promise to vote. On the other hand, Thiers
+is said to be afraid of having the Duc d'Aumale and perhaps
+Prince Napoleon also, speaking against him in the Assembly,
+and attacking him and each other outside. Then comes
+the doubt as to the extent to which the fusion between the
+Comte de Chambord and the other Princes, or rather that
+between their respective parties, really goes. Altogether
+nothing can be less encouraging than the prospect. The
+Duc d'Aumale, as Lieutenant Général du Royaume, to
+prepare the way for the Comte de Chambord, is, for the
+moment, the favourite combination. In the meantime
+Thiers has thrown a sop to the majority by putting an
+Orleanist into the Home Office. The idea at Versailles
+yesterday was that Thiers and the Assembly would come
+to a compromise on the basis that the Orleans elections
+should be confirmed, but with a preamble repeating that
+nothing done was to be held to prejudge the question of
+the definitive government of France.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When the question came up, Thiers yielded on
+the point of the admission of the Princes, and the
+majority were highly pleased at having extorted this
+concession. Lord Lyons, dining at Thiers's house
+at Versailles, a few days after the debate in the
+Assembly, met there the German General von
+Fabrice, the Prince de Joinville, the Duc d'Aumale,
+and the Duc de Chartres, and mentions the significant
+fact that M. and Madame Thiers and the rest of the
+company treated these Princes with even more than
+the usual respect shown to Royal personages. In
+private conversation Thiers expressed great confidence
+in soon getting the Germans out of the Paris
+forts, but both he and Jules Favre complained that
+Bismarck was a very bad creditor, and insisted upon
+having his first half-milliard by the end of the
+month: in fact, the Germans were so clamorous for
+payment that they hardly seemed to realize how
+anxious the French were to get rid of them, and that
+if the money was not immediately forthcoming, it
+was only because it was impossible to produce it.</p>
+
+<p>What was of more immediate concern to the
+British Government than either the payment of the
+indemnity or the future of the Orleans princes, was
+the prospect of a new Commercial Treaty. This
+was sufficiently unpromising. Lord Lyons had
+pointed out during the Empire period, that under a
+Constitutional <i xml:lang="fr">régime</i> in France, we were not likely
+to enjoy such favourable commercial conditions as
+under personal government, and the more liberal
+the composition of a French Government, the more
+Protectionist appeared to be its policy. Thiers
+himself was an ardent Protectionist, quite unamenable
+to the blandishments of British Free Traders,
+who always appear to hold that man was made for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+Free Trade, instead of Free Trade for man, and the
+Finance Minister, Pouyer Quertier, entertained the
+same views as his chief. But, even if the Emperor
+were to come back, it was more than doubtful
+whether he would venture to maintain the existing
+Commercial Treaty as it stood, and there was every
+probability that the Bordeaux wine people and other
+so-called French Free Traders would turn Protectionist
+as soon as they realized that there was no
+prospect of British retaliation. What cut Lord
+Lyons (an orthodox Free Trader) to the heart, was
+that, just as the French manufacturers had got over
+the shock of the sudden introduction of Free Trade
+under the Empire and had adapted themselves to
+the new system, everything should be thrown back
+again. It was likely, indeed, that there would be
+some opposition to Thiers's Protectionist taxes, but
+he knew well enough that there were not a sufficient
+number of Free Traders in the Assembly, or in the
+country, to make any effective resistance to the
+Government. When approached on the subject, the
+French Ministers asserted that all they wanted was
+to increase the revenue, and that all they demanded
+from England was to be allowed to raise their tariff
+with this view only, whereas, in their hearts, they
+meant Protection pure and simple. Lord Lyons's
+personal view was that England would be better off
+if the Treaty was reduced to little more than a most
+favoured nation clause. 'The only element for
+negotiation with the school of political economy now
+predominant here,' he sadly remarked, 'would be a
+threat of retaliation, and this we cannot use.' It
+will be found subsequently that this was the one
+predominant factor in all commercial negotiations
+between the two Governments.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A long conversation with Thiers, who was
+pressing for a definite reply from Her Majesty's
+Government on the subject of a new Treaty showed
+that matters from the British point of view were as
+unsatisfactory as they well could be. Thiers, whose
+language respecting England was courteous and
+friendly, made it clear that Her Majesty's Government
+must choose between the proposed modifications
+in the tariff and the unconditional denunciation
+of the whole Treaty, and that if the Treaty were
+denounced, England must not expect, after its
+expiration, to be placed upon the footing of the most
+favoured nation. He considered that he had a right
+to denounce the Treaty at once, but had no wish to
+act in an unfriendly spirit, and had therefore refrained
+from doing so, and although he and his
+colleagues considered that the existing Treaty was
+disadvantageous and even disastrous to France, they
+had never promoted any agitation against it, and
+had confined themselves to proposing modifications
+of the tariff, which their financial necessities and the
+state of the French manufacturing interests rendered
+indispensable. Coal and iron, which were articles
+of the greatest importance to England, were not
+touched, and all that had, in fact, been asked for was
+a moderate increase on the duties on textile fabrics.
+As for the French Free Traders, whatever misleading
+views they might put forward in London, their
+influence upon the Assembly would be imperceptible,
+and it remained therefore for Her Majesty's Government
+to decide whether they would agree to the
+changes he had proposed to them, or would give up
+altogether the benefits which England derived from
+the Treaty.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers's real motive was disclosed later on, when,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+whilst asserting that he should always act in a
+friendly spirit towards England, he admitted that
+'England was a much more formidable competitor
+in commerce than any other nation.' Concessions
+which might safely be made to other countries might
+very reasonably be withheld from her. For instance,
+privileges which might be safely granted to the
+Italian merchant navy might, if granted to Great
+Britain, produce a competition between English and
+French shipping very disadvantageous to France.
+It would also be certainly for the interest of France
+that she should furnish herself with colonial articles
+brought direct to her own ports rather than resort, as
+at present, to the depôts of such goods in Great
+Britain. Nothing could be further from his intentions
+than to be influenced by any spirit of retaliation,
+nor, if the Treaty should be denounced, would
+he, on that account, be less friendly to England in
+political matters; but it was evident that, in making
+his financial and commercial arrangements, the
+interests and necessities of France must be paramount.
+In conclusion he pressed for an immediate answer
+from Her Majesty's Government in order that the
+French Government might complete their plans,
+which were of urgent importance.</p>
+
+<p>To the impartial observer the opinions expressed
+by Thiers seem to be logical, natural, and reasonable,
+unless the principle of looking after one's own
+interests is unreasonable; but to the ardent devotees
+of Free Trade, they must have appeared in the light
+of impiety. Lord Lyons, in reporting the interview,
+remarked that 'nothing could have been more unsatisfactory
+than Thiers's language,' and added significantly
+that he himself had managed to keep his
+temper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Thiers did not get his definite answer, and the
+wrangle continued until in February, 1872, the
+French Government, with the general approval of
+the nation, gave notice of the termination of the
+Commercial Treaty of 1860.</p>
+
+<p>The Bill abrogating the proscription of the French
+Royal families had been passed by the Assembly, and
+the elections of the Duc d'Aumale and the Prince de
+Joinville consequently declared valid, but these
+princes having established their rights, wisely remained
+in the background. Not so another illustrious
+Royalist, the Comte de Chambord. This prince, who
+was also included in the reversal of the disqualifying
+law, returned to France and issued a proclamation from
+the Château of Chambord in July which spread consternation
+in the Royalist camp. After explaining
+that his presence was only temporary and that he
+desired to create no embarrassment, he declared that
+he was prepared to govern on a broad basis of
+administrative decentralization, but that there were
+certain conditions to which he could not submit. If
+he were summoned to the throne he would accept,
+but he should retain his principles, and above all the
+White Flag which had been handed down to him by
+his ancestors. This announcement seemed, to say
+the least, premature, and the supporters of a Republic
+must have warmly congratulated themselves
+upon having to encounter an enemy who played
+so completely into their hands.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 11, 1871.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Comte de Chambord seems to have upset the Legitimist
+coach. The Legitimist Deputies have been obliged
+to repudiate the White Flag, being sure that they could
+never be elected to a new Chamber under that Banner,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+and of course fusion between the Orleans Princes and their
+cousin is now out of the question.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers said to me last night that he did not regard the
+Comte de Chambord's declaration in favour of the White
+Flag as irrevocable&mdash;and that it looked as if it had been
+made in a moment of ill-temper. According to Thiers, both
+the Comte de Chambord and the Comte de Paris eagerly
+desire to be kings&mdash;most people doubt, however, whether
+the Comte de Chambord does really wish it. All that has
+occurred tends to strengthen and prolong Thiers's hold on
+power, and he is rejoicing accordingly. Indeed, there is
+hardly a Frenchman who professes to doubt that Thiers's
+Government is the only Government possible at the
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta is not considered by Thiers to be dangerous;
+he declares that he will only maintain a constitutional or
+legal opposition so long as the Government is Republican,
+and if he and his supporters stick to this, Thiers will certainly
+have no great cause to dread them. If Rouher had
+been elected he would have been a formidable opponent,
+though he has been too much accustomed to lead an
+applauding and acquiescing majority to be good at speaking
+to a hostile audience. Thiers says that the rejection of
+Rouher will be a good thing for his own health and repose,
+as he should have found it very fatiguing to have to answer
+the great Imperialist orator.</p>
+
+<p>The hurry with which the new duties were rushed
+through the Assembly on Saturday is disquieting. Thiers
+and Jules Favre protest, however, that they are determined
+to do nothing irregular regarding the Commercial Treaties.
+The Swiss Minister tells me his Government is determined
+to insist upon the strict execution of the Swiss Treaty,
+without admitting any alteration of the tariffs, but then
+the Swiss Treaty does not expire for five or six years. I
+take care to give no opinion as to what we shall or shall
+not do. Thiers talked again last night of conferring with
+me soon about the details of the changes. I am not very
+anxious that he should do so, as confusion is much more
+likely than anything else to arise from carrying on the
+discussion in both places at once.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Half my time is taken up with the affairs of the
+unfortunate English prisoners. It is necessary to be
+cautious, for the French Authorities are extremely touchy
+on the subject. There does not appear to be any danger
+of their being executed, as fortunately they are a very insignificant
+and unimportant set of insurgents, if insurgents
+they were; but they are kept a long time without examination,
+and some do run the risk of being shipped off to
+New Caledonia.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Comte de Chambord, having effectually
+destroyed the chances of his own party for the time
+being, now disappeared from the scene, and nothing
+more was heard of him or his White Flag for a considerable
+period.</p>
+
+<p>The summer of 1871 did not pass without the old
+question of voting in the House of Lords cropping
+up again. In July, Lord Lyons received an intimation
+from the Liberal Whip that his vote was wanted
+on the following day, accompanied by a letter from
+Lord Granville in the same sense. He declined to
+come, on the same ground as formerly, viz. that he
+considered it advisable that a diplomatist should
+keep aloof from home politics, and also because he
+was extremely reluctant to give votes on questions
+of which he had little knowledge. The particular
+question involved was presumably a vote of censure
+on the Government in connection with the Army
+Purchase Bill, and he seems to have taken it for
+granted that Lord Granville would make no objection.
+A letter from the latter showed that he was mistaken.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, July 17, 1871.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I cannot agree with the principle you lay down&mdash;Lord
+Stuart, my father, the late Lord Cowley, and Lord
+Normanby when Ambassador at Paris used to vote when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+specially summoned. So did Lord Cowley, although he
+served under successive Governments. So did Lord
+Westmoreland and others. I find no recommendation of
+your principle in the report of the Committee of the
+House of Commons, and although Lord Derby may have
+given evidence in favour of it, his father gave practical
+proof in several instances that he entirely disagreed
+with it.</p>
+
+<p>A Foreign Government can hardly believe in the
+confidential relations of this Government and her Ambassador,
+if the latter being a Peer abstains from supporting
+them when a vote of want of confidence, or one amounting
+to it, is proposed against them.</p>
+
+<p>Clarendon brought before the Cabinet your disinclination
+to vote on the question of the Irish Church. They
+unanimously decided that we had a claim upon you, and
+you were good enough to consent, stating the grounds you
+mention in your letter of yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>It is of course too late for any practical result to our
+controversy as regards to-night, but I hope you will consider
+that I have a claim on you for the future, when your
+vote is of importance. I shall never ask you unnecessarily
+to come over.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>An intimation of this kind from an official chief
+could not well be disregarded, but the reply to Lord
+Granville's letter is conclusive in its arguments.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 27, 1871.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Your letter of the 17th about my voting in the House
+of Lords goes farther than Lord Clarendon did on the
+previous occasion. Lord Clarendon originally acquiesced
+in my not voting on the Irish Church Bill, and when he
+subsequently begged me to come over, unless I objected
+to the Bill, he founded his request principally upon a strong
+opinion of Mr. Gladstone's that it was the duty of a peer
+not to abstain from voting, and that every vote was of
+consequence. On this ground he expressed a hope that
+I should come over unless I was opposed to the Bill.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Of my predecessors, the only one who was in a position
+resembling mine, was the present Lord Cowley; and
+certainly he will always be a high authority with me.</p>
+
+<p>I have been for more than thirty years, and I still am,
+devoted to my own profession, and I am sure that if I
+can be of any use in my generation, and do myself any
+credit, it must be as a diplomatist. I have worked my
+way up in the regular course of the profession, and have
+served under successive Governments, both before and
+since I became a peer, without any reference to home
+politics. In fact, I received my original appointment to
+the service from Lord Palmerston; I was made paid
+attaché by Lord Aberdeen; I was sent to Rome by Lord
+Russell; to Washington by Lord Malmesbury; to Constantinople
+by Lord Russell; and finally to Paris by Lord
+Derby. The appointment was given to me in the ordinary
+way of advancement in my profession, and I was told
+afterwards by Lord Clarendon that my being wholly
+unconnected with any party at home had been considered
+to be a recommendation. I have myself always thought
+that a regular diplomatist could only impair his efficiency
+by taking part in home politics, and I have throughout
+acted upon this conviction. During the thirteen years or
+thereabouts which have elapsed since I succeeded to my
+father's peerage, I have given only one vote in the House
+of Lords; the question, the Irish Church vote, was one on
+which there really did seem to be a possibility that the
+decision might turn upon one vote; and the question, as
+it stood before the House, was hardly a party question.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to all this, I must say that while I have a
+very great reluctance to give blind votes, I do not wish
+to be diverted from my diplomatic duties by having to
+attend to home questions; also, I would rather give my
+whole energies to carrying out the instructions of the
+Government abroad, without having continually to consult
+my conscience about voting in the House of Lords.</p>
+
+<p>I did not intend to have given you the trouble of reading
+a long answer to your letter, but I have just received
+another summons from Lord Bessborough. I hope, however,
+you will not press me to come over to vote on Monday.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+You were at all events good enough to say that you should
+never ask me to come unnecessarily; but if, after considering
+my reasons, you insist upon my coming, I must
+of course defer to your opinion and do what you desire.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is difficult to believe that Lord Granville,
+who was one of the most amiable and considerate
+of men, was acting otherwise than under pressure
+in thus endeavouring to utilize an Ambassador as
+a party hack. His arguments certainly do not bear
+much investigation. If a foreign government could
+not feel any confidence in an Ambassador who failed
+to support his party by a vote in Parliament, what
+confidence could they possibly feel in him if his
+party were out of office, and he continued at his
+post under the orders of political opponents? If
+the Clarendon Cabinet really decided that they had a
+claim upon diplomatists as party men it only showed
+that they were conspicuously wanting in judgment
+and a prey to that dementia which occasionally
+seizes upon British statesmen when a division is
+impending. That state of mind is intelligible when
+a division in the House of Commons is concerned, but
+what passes comprehension is that pressure should be
+put upon members of the House of Lords to vote,
+whose abstention is obviously desirable, whilst
+scores of obscure peers are left unmolested. One
+peer's vote was as good as another's in 1871, just
+as it is now; but in the division on the vote of censure
+on the Army Purchase Bill only 244 peers voted
+out of a House containing about double that number.</p>
+
+<p>Before long the question of the prolongation
+of Thiers's powers for a fixed period became the
+chief topic of interest. He was infinitely the most
+important personage in France, and a large number<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+of members were desirous of placing him more or
+less in the position of a constitutional sovereign,
+and obliging him to take a Ministry from the
+majority in the Assembly. The majority in the
+Assembly not unnaturally thought that their ideas
+ought to prevail in the Government, and they
+resented being constantly threatened with the withdrawal
+of this indispensable man, an action which,
+it was thought, would amount to little short of a
+revolution. What they wanted, therefore, was to
+bestow a higher title upon him than Chief of the
+Executive Power, which would exclude him from
+coming in person to the Assembly; and it was only
+the difficulty of finding some one to take his place,
+and the desire to get the Germans out of the Paris
+forts that kept them quiet. Like many other
+eminent persons considered to be indispensable,
+Thiers now began to give out that he really desired
+to retire into private life, and that it was only the
+country which insisted upon his staying in office, while
+as a matter of fact, he was by no means as indifferent
+to power as he fancied himself to be. In the Chamber
+he damaged his reputation to some extent by displays
+of temper and threats of resignation, but there was
+never much doubt as to the prolongation of his
+powers.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Aug. 25, 1871.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Thiers quitted the Tribune in a pet yesterday, and the
+whole series of events in the Assembly has very much
+lowered his credit. In the one thing in which he was
+thought to be pre-eminent, the art of managing a deliberative
+body, he completely failed: and his first threatening
+to resign, and then coming back and half giving in, has
+very much damaged him. Nevertheless the general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+opinion is that the prolongation of his powers will pass,
+upon his making it a condition, as a vote of confidence, of
+his remaining. But it is difficult to believe, even if it be
+passed by a considerable majority, that things can go on
+smoothly between him and the Assembly very long. If
+any party had a leader and courage, it might do almost
+anything in France at this moment.</p>
+
+<p>Arnim<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> is expected on Saturday. I knew him years ago
+at Rome. I doubt his being a conciliatory negotiator.
+The French believe that Bismarck is so anxious to obtain
+commercial advantages for Alsace, that he will give them
+great things in return. He is supposed to wish, in the first
+place, to conciliate his new subjects; and, in the second, to
+divert for a time from Germany the torrent of Alsatian
+manufactures which would pour in if the outlets into France
+were stopped up. The French hope to get the Paris forts
+evacuated in return for a continuance of the free entrance
+of Alsatian goods into France until the 1st of January, and
+they even speculate upon getting the Prussians to evacuate
+Champagne, and content themselves with keeping the
+army, which was to have occupied it, inside the German
+frontier, the French paying the expenses, as if it were still
+in France. All this to be given in return for a prolongation
+of commercial privileges for Alsace. It would be
+ungenerous of 'most favoured nations' to claim similar
+privileges.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers was too full of the events of the afternoon in the
+Assembly to talk about the Commercial Treaty. I don't
+believe he has brought the Committee round to his duties
+on raw materials.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>At the end of August, the Assembly by a very large
+majority passed a bill conferring upon Thiers the title
+of President of the Republic and confirmed his powers
+for the duration of the existing Assembly, adopting
+at the same time a vote of confidence in him personally.
+The result of these proceedings was that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+the attempt to make a step towards the definite
+establishment of a Republic and to place Thiers
+as President for a term of years in a position independent
+of the Assembly, failed. The bill asserted
+what the Left had always denied, viz. the constituent
+power of the Assembly, and declared that the
+President was responsible to it. So far, it expressed
+the sentiments of the moderate men, and the
+minority was composed of extreme Legitimists
+and extreme Republicans. It also proved that
+Thiers was still held to be the indispensable man.</p>
+
+<p>The Assembly, which had adjourned after the
+passing of the above-mentioned bill, met again in
+December, and was supposed to be more Conservative
+than ever, owing to the fear created by Radical
+progress in the country. Thiers's Presidential
+Message did not afford much satisfaction to the
+extreme partisans on either side, and it was evident
+that he did not desire any prompt solution of the
+Constitutional question, preferring to leave himself
+free, and not to be forced into taking any premature
+decision. As for the Legitimist, Orleanist, and
+Moderate Republican groups, their vacillation tended
+only to the advantage of two parties, the Bonapartists
+and the Red Republicans.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 26. 1871.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The New Year will open gloomily for France. The
+Germans appear to be alarmed, or at all events irritated,
+by Thiers's military boasts and military preparations.
+The boasts are certainly unwise, and preparations or anything
+else which encourages the French to expect to get
+off paying the three milliards are extremely imprudent.
+The Germans mean to have their money and keep the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+territory they have taken, and they say that they had
+better have it out with France now that she is weak, than
+wait till she has got strong again. The irritation of the
+French against the Germans seems to grow, and the Germans
+are angry with the French for not loving them, which after
+the conditions of peace, to say nothing of the events of the
+war, seems somewhat unreasonable.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers so far holds his own, and no party seems willing
+to displace him, while no party agrees with him. The one
+thing in which men of all parties seem to agree is in abusing
+Thiers, and I must say that a good deal of the abuse is
+exceedingly unjust. But with the members of the Assembly
+in this inflammable state of feeling towards him, an unexpected
+spark may at any moment make them flare up
+and turn him out almost before they are aware of it. The
+general idea is that the Assembly would appoint the Duc
+d'Aumale to succeed him; the acceptance of the Duc
+d'Aumale by the country would depend upon the amount
+of vigour he showed in putting down illegal opposition by
+force. There are members of the Assembly who wish to
+declare that in case of Thiers's abdication or dethronement,
+the President of the Assembly is to exercise the Executive
+Power. This is with a view of bringing forward Grévy,
+who is an honourable, moderate man, but an old thoroughbred
+Republican. The immediate event people are looking
+forward to with interest and anxiety is the election of a
+deputy for Paris on the 7th of next month. No one will be
+surprised if a Red is returned, in consequence of the men
+of order declining to vote. The Legitimists and the
+Orleanists seem to be at daggers drawn again.</p>
+
+<p>Arnim says that Bismarck's fierce despatch was partly
+intended to strengthen Thiers's hands in resisting violence
+against the Germans. If this is so, the ferocity went too
+far beyond the mark to be successful, great as the provocation
+on the French side was.</p>
+
+<p>I will write a mild disclaimer of the accuracy of Jules
+Favre's accounts of his communications with me. There
+is no <em>malus animus</em>, I think, in them. My Russian and
+Italian colleagues are very much annoyed by the language
+he attributes to them.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The fierce despatch referred was a harsh communication
+from Bismarck complaining of the
+recent acquittal of some Frenchmen who had assassinated
+German soldiers of the army of occupation.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of 1871, the Bonapartist Party,
+although scarcely represented in the Assembly,
+appeared to be that which caused the Government
+the most anxiety. That party had undoubtedly
+made progress in the country; it held out the hope
+of a vigorous and determined maintenance of public
+order, and a vast number of Frenchmen were so
+much out of heart, so wearied and disgusted by the
+results of the attempts at political liberty, and so
+much afraid of the triumph of the Commune, that
+they were prepared to sacrifice anything in order
+to be assured of peace and tranquillity. The
+peasants, shopkeepers, and even many of the workmen
+in the towns, sighed for the material prosperity
+of the Empire. They believed that the Emperor
+had been betrayed by his Ministers and Generals,
+and were willing to excuse his personal share even
+in the capitulation of Sedan. If more confidence
+could have been felt in his health and personal
+energy, the advocates of a restoration of the Empire
+would have been still more numerous. As it was,
+a great mass of the ignorant and the timid were in
+favour of it, and it was the opinion of so impartial
+an observer as the British Ambassador, that if a
+free vote could have been taken under universal
+suffrage a majority would probably have been
+obtained for the re-establishment upon the throne
+of Napoleon III. If the Imperialists could by any
+means have seized upon the executive Government
+and so directed the operations of a plébiscite, there
+was little doubt as to their securing the usual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+millions of votes under that process. With them,
+as with the other parties, the difficulty lay in bringing
+about such a crisis as would enable them to act,
+and the Emperor himself was disinclined to take
+any adventurous step.</p>
+
+<p>The Legitimists had the advantage of holding
+to a definite principle, but it was a principle which
+carried little weight in the country in general.
+Their chief, the Comte de Chambord, had shown
+himself to be so impracticable, that it really seemed
+doubtful whether he wished to mount the throne,
+and the party had more members in the existing
+Assembly than it was likely to obtain if a fresh
+general election took place; added to which it had
+quarrelled with the Orleanists, a union with whom
+was essential to the attainment of any practical end.</p>
+
+<p>The Orleanists were weakened by their dissensions
+with the Legitimists and discouraged by what
+they considered the want of energy and enterprise
+of the Princes of the family. The members of the
+Orleans party suffered from the want of a definite
+principle, and consisted chiefly of educated and
+enlightened men who held to Constitutional Monarchy
+and Parliamentary Government; in reality
+they were a fluctuating body willing to accept
+any Government giving a promise of order and
+political liberty.</p>
+
+<p>The moderate Republicans included in their
+ranks many honest and respected men, but they had
+to contend with the extreme unpopularity of the
+Government of National Defence in which they had
+formed the chief part, and although the existing
+Government was nominally based upon their principles,
+they did not appear to be gaining ground. The
+extreme Republicans endeavoured to make up by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+violence what they wanted in numerical strength,
+and as they saw no prospect of obtaining office in a
+regular manner, founded their hopes upon seizing
+power at a critical moment with the help of the
+Paris mob.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst this collection of parties stood Thiers's
+Government, supported heartily by none, but
+accepted by all. By skilful management, by
+yielding where resistance appeared hopeless, and by
+obtaining votes sometimes from one side of the
+Assembly, and sometimes from the other, Thiers
+had carried many points to which he attached importance,
+and had never yet found himself in a
+minority. His Government was avowedly a temporary
+expedient, resting upon a compromise
+between all parties, or rather upon the adjournment
+of all constitutional questions. To the monarchical
+parties which formed the majority of the Assembly,
+Thiers's apparent adoption of the Republican
+system rendered him especially obnoxious. On the
+other hand, the Republicans were dissatisfied because,
+the whole weight of the Government was not unscrupulously
+used for the purpose of establishing
+a Republic permanently, with or without the consent
+of the people.</p>
+
+<p>On the centralization of the administration, on
+military organization, on finance, and on other
+matters, Thiers's personal views were widely different
+from those generally prevalent in the Assembly, and
+there was plenty of censure and criticism of him in
+private; but no one party saw its way to ensuring
+its own triumph, and all were weighed down by the
+necessity of maintaining endurable relations with
+Germany. In forming such relations, Thiers had
+shown great skill and obtained considerable success<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+in his arduous task. Bismarck, in imposing the
+hardest possible conditions of peace, had acted
+avowedly on the principle that it was hopeless to
+conciliate France, and that the only security for
+Germany lay in weakening her as much as possible.
+This policy having been carried out, the German
+public and the German press appeared to be quite
+surprised that France was slow to be reconciled to
+her conquerors, and even to doubt whether already
+France was not too strong for their safety. The
+apparent recovery of the French finances may well
+have surprised them disagreeably, but Thiers was not
+over careful to avoid increasing their distrust.
+His intention to create a larger army than France
+had ever maintained before, and his frequent praises
+of the army he already possessed, was not reassuring
+to them. It was, therefore, not altogether surprising
+that they should have felt some doubts as to
+the consequences of finding themselves confronted by
+an immense army, when they called upon France to
+pay the remaining three milliards in 1874. Nevertheless
+the German Government had expressed its
+confidence in Thiers, and it would have been almost
+impossible for any new Government to have placed
+matters on as tolerable a footing.</p>
+
+<p>All things considered, therefore, it seemed not
+improbable that the existing Government might
+last for some time, although its life was somewhat
+precarious, since it was liable to be upset by commotions
+and conspiracies, and having no existence
+apart from Thiers, its duration was bound to depend
+on the health and strength of a man nearly seventy-four
+years old.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1872, Thiers, in consequence of a
+dispute in the Chamber over the question of a tax<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+on raw materials, tendered his resignation, but was
+persuaded with some difficulty to reconsider it.
+'I have never known the French so depressed and
+so out of heart about their internal affairs,' wrote
+Lord Lyons. 'They don't believe Thiers can go on
+much longer, and they see nothing but confusion
+if he is turned out. The Legitimists and Orleanists
+are now trying for fusion. They are attempting
+to draw up a constitution on which they can all
+agree, and which, when drawn up, is to be offered
+to the Comte de Chambord, and if refused by him,
+then to the Comte de Paris. I hear they have not
+yet been able to come to an understanding on the
+first article. It all tends to raise the Bonapartists.
+Many people expect to hear any morning of a coup
+by which Thiers and the Assembly will be deposed,
+and an <em>appel au peuple</em>, made to end in a restoration
+of the Empire.' Probably it was the knowledge
+of a Bonapartist reaction in the country that led
+Thiers to make a singularly foolish complaint against
+an alleged military demonstration in England in
+favour of the ex-Emperor.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 9, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Thiers said to me yesterday at Versailles that he
+had been told that a general of the name of Wood had
+marched 6000 of Her Majesty's troops to Chislehurst to be
+reviewed by the Emperor Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>M. Thiers went on to say that no one could appreciate
+more highly than he did the noble and generous hospitality
+which England extended to political exiles, and that he
+had indeed profited by it in his own person. He admired
+also the jealousy with which the English nation regarded
+all attempts from abroad to interfere with the free exercise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+of this hospitality. He should never complain of due
+respect being shown to a Sovereign Family in adversity.
+But he thought that there was some limit to be observed
+in the matter. For instance, he himself, while on the best
+terms with the reigning dynasty in Spain, still always
+treated the Queen Isabella, who was in France, with great
+respect and deference. Nevertheless, when Her Majesty
+had expressed a desire to go to live at Pau, he had felt it
+to be his duty to ask her very courteously to select a
+residence at a greater distance from the frontier of Spain.
+In this, as in all matters, he felt that consideration for the
+exiles must be tempered by a due respect for the recognized
+Government of their country. Now if the Emperor
+Napoleon should choose to be present at a review of British
+troops, there could be no objection to his being treated
+with all the courtesy due to a head which had worn a
+crown. It was, however, a different thing to march troops
+to his residence to hold a review there in his honour.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Thiers had not taken the trouble to substantiate
+his ridiculous complaint, and his action was an
+instance of the extreme gullibility of even the most
+intelligent French statesmen, where foreign countries
+are concerned, and so perturbed was the
+French Government at the idea of a Bonapartist
+restoration, that according to Captain Hotham,
+British Consul at Calais, two gunboats, the <em>Cuvier</em>
+and <em>Faon</em>, were at that time actually employed in
+patrolling the coast between St. Malo and Dunkirk
+with a view to preventing a possible landing of the
+Emperor Napoleon. A little later, the Duc de
+Broglie, French Ambassador in London, made a
+tactless remonstrance to Lord Granville with regard
+to the presence of the Emperor and Empress at
+Buckingham Palace, on the occasion of a National
+Thanksgiving held to celebrate the recovery of the
+Prince of Wales from a dangerous illness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, March 1, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Duc de Broglie told me to-day that he had been
+rather surprised when he heard of the Emperor and Empress
+having been at Buckingham Palace on so public an occasion
+as that of last Tuesday, that I had not mentioned it to him
+on Monday afternoon, when we had had a long conversation.
+It would have enabled him to write to M. de Rémusat,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and
+thus have prevented any of the effect which a sudden
+announcement in the papers might create in France.</p>
+
+<p>I told him that I had not been consulted and did
+not know the fact of the invitation when I saw him, and
+that if I had, I should probably have mentioned it to
+him, although not a subject about which I should have
+written.</p>
+
+<p>I should have explained to him that it was an act of
+courtesy of the Queen to those with whom she had been
+on friendly relations, and that it was analogous to many
+acts of courtesy shown by the Queen to the Orleanist
+Princes.</p>
+
+<p>He laid stress on the publicity of the occasion, and on
+the few opportunities which he, as Ambassador, had of
+seeing the Queen, of which he made no complaint; but
+it made any attentions to the Emperor on public occasions
+more marked. He was afraid that the announcement
+would produce considerable effect, not upon statesmen,
+but upon the press in France.</p>
+
+<p>I repeated that the admission of the Emperor and
+Empress had no political significance, but had been in
+pursuance with the long-established habit of the Queen to
+show personal courtesy to Foreign Princes with whom she
+had been formerly on friendly relations.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The fall of the Finance Minister, Pouyer Quertier,
+in the spring had given rise to hopes that the French
+commercial policy would become more liberal, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+the letters quoted below show how powerless were
+the arguments of the British Government and how
+completely wasted upon the French Ministers were
+the lamentations of the British free traders, and
+their prognostications of ruin to those who were
+not sufficiently enlightened to adopt their policy.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 5, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I suppose Pouyer Quertier is really out, but we see so
+many changes from hour to hour in resolutions here, that
+I shall not report it officially until his successor is gazetted.
+We cannot have a more Protectionist successor; but, after
+all, no one is so bigoted a Protectionist as Thiers himself.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless the change of Minister will give a chance
+or an excuse for a change of policy to some extent. I think
+that with a view to this some stronger expression of displeasure,
+or rather perhaps of regret than we have hitherto
+ventured upon, might have a good effect. The new
+Minister and perhaps even Thiers himself might be struck
+by a report from Broglie that you had put strongly before
+him the impossibility, whatever efforts the Government
+might make, of preventing public opinion in England
+becoming hostile to France if the present commercial
+policy is persisted in. It is in fact plain that there is no
+probability of France obtaining the concessions from the
+Treaty Powers, on which Thiers professed to reckon. The
+result already is that, whatever may have been the intention,
+the Mercantile Marine Law is in practice a blow
+which falls on England, and not on other European Powers.
+Unless the French Government means to give us a real
+most favoured nation clause, the result of denouncing our
+treaty will be to place us, when it expires, at a special
+disadvantage as compared with other nations. And what
+it now asks us to effect by negotiation, is to hasten the
+moment at which it can accomplish this. It is quite idle
+to talk of special friendship for us, when its measures
+practically treat us much worse than they do the Germans.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+M. de Rémusat and some other people are fond of saying
+that it is quite impossible that France could bear to see
+two nations so friendly as Belgium and England placed
+exceptionally in a position inferior to Germany. But
+France seems to bear this with great equanimity so far as
+our merchant navy is concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The demand we have made to be exempted from the
+<em>surtaxes de pavillon</em> under our most favoured nation
+clause would give the French Government a means of
+remedying the injustice <em>if it wished to do so</em>. At any rate
+some strong expressions of discontent on our part might
+increase the disinclination of the Assembly and some
+members of the Government to insist on imposing the
+duties on the raw materials. It would be very convenient
+if there were some retaliatory measures to which we could
+resort, without injuring ourselves or departing from our
+own Free Trade principles. The French Government
+grossly abuses, in order to influence the Assembly, our
+assurances of unimpaired good will, and reluctance to
+retaliate; and so, in my opinion, is preparing the way for
+the real diminution of good will which its success in carrying
+its protectionist measures, to our special injury, must
+produce in the end.</p>
+
+<p>The present Government of France does not gain
+strength; far from it. The Imperialists are gaining
+strength, as people become more and more afraid of the
+Reds, and feel less and less confidence in the power either
+of Thiers, or the Comte de Chambord, or the Comte de
+Paris, to keep them down. The end will probably be
+brought about by some accident when it is least expected.
+It would not be wise to leave out of the calculation of
+possibilities, the chance of Thiers's Government dragging
+on for some time yet, and it would be very difficult to
+predict what will succeed it. At present the Legitimists
+and Orleanists seem to have lost, and to be daily losing
+prestige, and naturally enough, to be bringing down with
+them the Assembly in which they are or were a majority.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps I ought to say that the despatch which I send
+you to-day about the sojourn of our Royal Family in the
+South of France applies exclusively to them. Everybody<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+knows or ought to know that affairs are uncertain in France,
+but I should not think it necessary or proper to warn
+private people against coming to France or staying there.
+The conspicuous position of members of the Royal Family
+increase the risk of their being placed in awkward circumstances,
+and circumstances which would be of little consequence
+in the case of private people, would be very
+serious and embarrassing if they affected members of the
+Royal Family of England.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The last passage referred to a stay at Nice
+contemplated by the Prince of Wales. In the event
+of any change of Government, it was always feared
+that disorders would take place in the southern
+towns of France.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 14, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The commercial disputes with the French Government
+which, as you know, I always apprehended, are coming
+thick upon us. I foresaw what was coming and begged
+Thiers, Rémusat and other members of the Government
+over and over again to guard against vexations in the
+execution of the Treaty while it lasted. I make little
+doubt, notwithstanding, that all these violent and unfair
+proceedings are prompted, not checked, from Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The Spaniards have found out the only way to deal
+with the Protectionist spirit here. The slightest hint at
+retaliation would have such an effect in the Assembly as
+to stop the onward career of illiberality. As things now
+are, the extortioners have the game in their own hands.
+They levy what duty they please, and pay just as much
+or as little attention as may suit them, to our remonstrances.
+It is a very disagreeable affair for one who, like myself, is
+really anxious that there should be good feeling between
+the two countries. We are in a fix. On the one hand, we
+cannot, without injuring ourselves and abandoning our
+principles, retaliate; and on the other hand, while they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+feel sure we shall do no more than remonstrate, the Protectionist
+officials will care very little. If indeed the general
+opinion is to be relied upon, the present Government and
+its chief may come down with a crash at any moment,
+but I don't know whether a change would benefit us
+commercially.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons, like Lord Granville and other
+English public men and officials of the day, was a
+Free Trader, as has already been stated. But it
+would be difficult for the most ardent Protectionist
+to make out a stronger case against the helplessness
+of a Free Trade policy when negotiating with a
+foreign Government than is disclosed in these
+letters, and there are any number of others all in
+the same strain. All the protestations of goodwill,
+of sympathy, and benefit to the human race, etc.,
+were, and presumably are still, a pure waste of time
+when addressed to a country about to frame a
+tariff in accordance with its own interests, unless
+the threat of retaliation is used in order to retain
+some bargaining power, as apparently the Spaniards
+had already discovered.</p>
+
+<p>It has already been stated that Thiers's plans
+of military re-organization and his somewhat imprudent
+language had caused some agitation in
+Germany, and when the German Ambassador, Count
+Arnim, returned to his post at Paris in the spring of
+1872, it was freely rumoured that he was the bearer
+of remarkably unpleasant communications. These
+apprehensions turned out to be exaggerated, and
+Thiers in conversation always assumed a lamb-like
+attitude of peace. He denied that the Germans
+had addressed any representations to him, said that
+all suspicions against him were grossly unjust, that
+it would be absolute madness for France to think of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+going to war, and that, for his part, the keystone
+of all his foreign policy was peace. As for his
+army reform schemes, he was a much misunderstood
+man. He was undoubtedly reorganizing the military
+forces of France, and it was his duty to place
+them upon a respectable footing, and so provide a
+guarantee for peace. It was, however, quite false
+to say that he was arming, for that term implied
+that he was making preparations for war, and that
+he was putting the army into a condition to pass
+at once from a state of peace to a state of war. He
+was doing nothing of the sort; on the contrary, his
+efforts were directed to obtaining the evacuation
+of the territory, by providing for the payment of
+the war indemnity to Germany, and it could hardly
+be supposed that if he were meditating a renewal
+of the contest, he would begin by making over three
+milliards to her.</p>
+
+<p>From Arnim's language, it appeared that the
+German public was irritated and alarmed at the
+perpetual harping of the French upon the word
+'Revenge,' and that the German military men (the
+<em>militaires</em> who were always so convenient to Bismarck
+for purposes of argument) conceived that
+the best guarantee for peace would be to keep their
+soldiers as long as possible within a few days' march
+of Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The German fears were, no doubt, greatly
+exaggerated, but if they existed at all they were
+largely due to Thiers's own language, who, while
+not talking indeed of immediate revenge, was fond
+of boasting of the strength and efficiency of the
+French army, and even of affirming that it was at
+that very moment equal to cope with the Germans.
+That he was conscious of having created suspicion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+may be inferred from the fact that when the Prince
+of Wales passed through Paris on his way from
+Nice to Germany, he begged H.R.H. to use his
+influence at the Court of Berlin to impress upon the
+Emperor and all who were of importance there,
+that the French Government, and the President
+himself in particular, desired peace above all things,
+and were resolved to maintain it. A letter from
+the British Ambassador at Berlin throws some light
+upon the prevalent German feeling.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Mr. Odo Russell<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">British Embassy, Berlin, April 27, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Since your letter of the 9th inst. reached me feelings
+have changed in Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers's Army bill and Speech have irritated the
+Emperor, Bismarck and indeed everybody.</p>
+
+<p>The Generals tell the Emperor it would be better to
+fight France before she is ready than after; but Bismarck,
+who scorns the Generals, advises the Emperor to fight
+France <em>morally</em> through Rome and the Catholic alliances
+against United Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Although he denies it, Bismarck probably caused those
+violent articles against Thiers to appear in the English
+newspapers, and he tells everybody that Thiers has lost
+his esteem and may lose his support. The next grievance
+they are getting up against him is that he is supposed to
+have made offers through Le Flô to Russia against Germany.</p>
+
+<p>In short, from having liked him and praised him and
+wished for him, they are now tired of him and think him
+a traitor because he tries to reform the French Army on
+too large a scale!</p>
+
+<p>Gontaut<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> does not appear to do anything beyond play
+the agreeable, which he does perfectly, and every one likes
+him. But it is said that <em>Agents</em>, financial Agents I presume,
+are employed by Thiers to communicate through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+Jewish Bankers here indirectly with Bismarck. Through
+these agents Thiers is supposed to propose arrangements
+for an early payment of the 3 milliards and an early withdrawal
+of the German troops of occupation,&mdash;the payment
+to be effected by foreign loans and the guarantee of European
+Bankers,&mdash;in paper not in gold. Bismarck has not
+yet pronounced definitely, but the Emperor William won't
+hear of shortening the occupation of France. Indeed, he
+regrets he cannot by Treaty leave his soldiers longer still
+as a guarantee of peace while he lives, for he is most anxious
+to die at peace with all the world.</p>
+
+<p>So that nothing is done and nothing will be done before
+Arnim returns to Paris. He has no sailing orders yet and
+seems well amused here.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Mr. Odo Russell.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 7, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Many thanks for your interesting letter.</p>
+
+<p>Arnim's account of public opinion at Berlin entirely
+confirms that which you give, only he says Bismarck would
+be personally willing to come to an arrangement with
+France for payment of the milliards and the evacuation of
+the territory, but that he will not run any risk of injuring
+his own position by opposing either Moltke or public opinion
+on this point.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think the Germans need the least fear the
+French attacking them for many years to come. The
+notion of coming now to destroy France utterly, in order to
+prevent her ever in the dim future being able to revenge
+herself, seems simply atrocious. The French are so foolish
+in their boasts, and the Germans so thin-skinned, that I am
+afraid of mischief.</p>
+
+<p>I should doubt Bismarck's being wise in setting himself
+in open hostility to the Vatican. The favour of the Holy
+See is seldom of any practical use, so far as obtaining acts
+in its favour, to a Protestant or even to a Roman Catholic
+Government; but the simple fact of being notoriously in
+antagonism to it, brings a vast amount of opposition and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+ill-will on a Government that has Catholic subjects. The
+fear of this country's being able at this moment to work the
+Catholic element in Germany or elsewhere against the
+German Emperor appears to me to be chimerical.</p>
+
+<p>I wish the Germans would get their milliards as fast
+as they can, and go: then Europe might settle down,
+and they need not be alarmed about French vengeance,
+or grudge the French the poor consolation of talking
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>Arnim was a good deal struck by the decline in Thiers's
+vigour, since he took leave of him before his journey to
+Rome, but he saw Thiers some days ago, when the little
+President was at his worst.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Mr. Odo Russell to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">British Embassy, Berlin, May 11, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have nothing new to say about the relations of France
+and Germany, but my friends here seem so alarmed at the
+idea that France cannot pay the much longed for three
+milliards, that if Thiers really does pay them, all the rest
+will be forgiven and forgotten, and the withdrawal of the
+German troops will then be impatiently called for. Like
+yourself I write the impressions of the moment and am not
+answerable for future changes of public opinion. Clearly
+the thing to be desired for the peace of the world is the
+payment by France and the withdrawal by Germany, after
+which a normal state of things can be hoped for&mdash;not
+before.</p>
+
+<p>The Pope, to my mind, has made a mistake in declining
+to receive Hohenlohe. He ought to have accepted and in
+return sent a Nuncio to Berlin, thereby selling Bismarck,
+and controlling his German Bishops and the Döllinger
+movement.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck is going away on leave to Varzin. He is so
+irritable and nervous that he can do no good here at
+present, and rest is essential to him.</p>
+
+<p>Your letter of the 7th is most useful to me, many thanks
+for it. I shall not fail to keep you as well informed as I can.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In reality, the Germans made little difficulty
+about the arrangements for the payment of the
+indemnity and evacuation of French territory, and
+early in July Thiers was able to state confidently
+that he felt certain of being able to pay the whole
+of the indemnity by March, 1874, and that he had
+only obtained an additional year's grace in order to
+guard against accidents.</p>
+
+<p>A curious incident which occurred in July, 1872,
+showed how, if sufficient ingenuity be employed, a
+trivial personal question may be turned to important
+political use. The Comte de Vogué, French
+Ambassador at Constantinople, who possessed little
+or no diplomatic experience, before proceeding on
+leave from his post, had an audience of the Sultan.
+The Sultan received him standing, and began to
+talk, when Vogué interrupted His Majesty, and
+begged to be allowed to sit down, as other Ambassadors
+had been accustomed to do, according to him,
+on similar occasions. What the Sultan actually did
+at the moment was not disclosed, but he took dire
+offence, and telegrams began to pour in upon the
+Turkish Ambassador at Paris desiring him to represent
+to the French Government that if Vogué
+came back his position would be very unpleasant&mdash;intimating
+in fact that his return to Constantinople
+must be prevented. The French Foreign Minister,
+however, refused this satisfaction to the Sultan, and
+the Turkish Ambassador in his perplexity sought
+the advice of Lord Lyons, who preached conciliation,
+and urged that, at all events, no steps ought to be
+taken until Vogué had arrived at Paris, and was able
+to give his version of the incident. The French,
+naturally enough, were at that moment peculiarly
+susceptible on all such matters, and more reluctant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+to make a concession than if they were still on
+their former pinnacle of grandeur at Constantinople,
+although Vogué was clearly in the wrong, for Lord
+Lyons admitted that he had himself never been
+asked to sit. The importance of the incident
+consisted in the fact that it gave an opportunity
+of cultivating the goodwill of Russia, as the traditional
+enemy of Turkey. No Frenchman had ever
+lost sight of the hope that some day or other an
+ally against Germany might be found in Russia,
+and there were not wanting signs of a reciprocal
+feeling on the part of the latter. It had, for instance,
+been the subject of much remark, that the Russian
+Ambassador at Paris, Prince Orloff, had recently
+been making immense efforts to become popular
+with all classes of the French: Legitimists, Orleanists,
+Imperialists, Republicans, and especially newspaper
+writers of all shades of politics. As it was
+well known that neither Prince nor Princess Orloff
+were really fond of society, these efforts were almost
+overdone, but nevertheless they met with a hearty
+response everywhere, from Thiers downwards, for
+all Frenchmen were eagerly hoping for a quarrel
+between Russia and Germany, and were ready to
+throw themselves into the arms of the former in
+that hope. Russia, on her side, was clearly not
+unwilling to cultivate a friendship which cost
+nothing, and might conceivably be of considerable
+profit.</p>
+
+<p>On November 5 the new Anglo-French Commercial
+Treaty was signed, indignant British Free
+Traders striving to console themselves with the
+thought that France would soon discover the error
+of her ways and cease to lag behind the rest of the
+civilized world in her economic heresy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 12, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I saw Thiers on Friday after I wrote to you on that day;
+and I dined with him on Saturday. He looked remarkably
+well, and was in high spirits and in great good humour, as
+he ought to be, with us. He spoke, as indeed he always
+does, as if he felt quite sure that he should have his own
+way with the Assembly in all things. As regards the
+organic measures, he talked as if the fight would be entirely
+with the Right; but both sections of the Left have declared
+against organic changes to be made by this Assembly.
+I suppose, however, Thiers is pretty sure to get his own
+powers prolonged for four years certain, and this is what he
+cares about.</p>
+
+<p>I do not, however, find in my Austrian, German, and
+Russian colleagues so unqualified an acquiescence in
+Thiers remaining in power as they professed before I went
+away. It is said that the three Emperors at Berlin were
+alarmed at the prospect of the definitive establishment of
+any Republic, and still more so at the apparent tendency
+of M. Thiers's policy to leave the country to drift into a
+Red Republic, whenever he quitted the scene. However
+this may be, there is certainly a change in the language of
+their Representatives here, not very marked, but nevertheless
+quite perceptible. Orloff in particular talks as if an
+immediate Imperialist restoration were not only desirable
+but probable. If he really thinks it probable, he is almost
+alone in the opinion.</p>
+
+<p>The Prince de Joinville, who came to see me yesterday,
+said that he had been a great deal about in the country,
+and that he found everywhere an absolute indifference to
+persons and dynasties, and a simple cry for any Government
+which would efficiently protect property. He thought
+that Thiers would be supported for this reason, but that
+whatever institutions might be nominally established, they
+would last only as long as Thiers himself did, and that
+afterwards everything would be in question, and the
+country probably divide itself into two great parties,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+Conservatives and Reds, between whom there would be
+a fierce struggle notwithstanding the great numerical
+superiority of the former.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In the absence of exciting internal topics, the
+year closed with a slight sensation provided by
+Gramont, who, it might have been supposed, would
+have preferred not to court further notoriety.
+Count Beust had recently asserted that he had warned
+France against expecting help from Austria in the
+event of a war with Prussia. Gramont replied by
+publishing a letter in which the following statement
+occurred. 'L'Autriche considère la cause de la
+France comme la sienne, et contribuera au succès
+de ses armes dans les limites du possible.' This
+quotation was supposed to be taken from a letter
+from Beust to Metternich, dated July 20, 1870
+(the day after the declaration of war), and left by
+Metternich with Gramont, who took a copy and
+returned the original. Metternich was believed to
+have shown the letter also to the Emperor Napoleon
+and to Ollivier. The letter was represented as going
+on to say that the neutrality proclaimed by Austria
+was merely a blind to conceal her armaments, and
+that she was only waiting till the advance of winter
+rendered it impossible for Russia to concentrate
+her forces.</p>
+
+<p>It was generally believed that there was plenty
+of evidence that an offensive and defensive alliance
+was in course of negotiation between France and
+Austria in 1869, though no treaty was signed, and
+the record appears to have consisted in letters exchanged
+between the two Emperors, but as Gramont
+had nothing more than a copy of a letter from Beust
+to Metternich his evidence was legally defective,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+whatever its moral value, and it was questionable
+whether as an ex-Minister he had any right to
+disclose such secrets.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 31, 1872.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Gramont's further revelations confirm what I told you
+in my letter of the 24th. The question is becoming tiresome.
+I conceive there is no doubt that Beust at Vienna,
+and Metternich here, fanned the flame of French discontent
+after Sadowa, with a view to avenging themselves when
+Austria and France should be ready, and circumstances
+favourable. I think also that Gramont came back from
+Vienna full of Beust's warlike ideas, and very well inclined
+to carry them out. What exchange of letters may have
+taken place between the two Emperors, or what record
+of any kind there may be of engagements between the
+two countries to help one another, it is more difficult to
+say.</p>
+
+<p>The assertion is that after war had been declared,
+Austria engaged to move on the 15th September. Others
+say that she also required that France should have an
+army in Baden.</p>
+
+<p>This is not inconsistent with her having dissuaded
+France from war in July, 1870, when she knew positively
+it would be premature for herself, and probably had some
+suspicion that France was also not really prepared.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Early in January, 1873, the Emperor Napoleon
+died at Chiselhurst. The view of Thiers was that
+this event would render the Bonapartists, for the
+time, more turbulent and less dangerous. He
+believed that the Emperor's personal influence had
+been used to quiet the impatience of his followers,
+while, on the other hand, his death removed the
+only member of the family who was popular enough
+in France to be a formidable candidate. Thiers's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+childish susceptibility with regard to the Bonapartists
+showed itself in his expressed hope that
+the Emperor's death would be followed by the disappearance
+of the public sympathy in England with
+the family in its misfortunes.</p>
+
+<p>The opinions of Thiers seem to have been generally
+prevalent. The Emperor was remarkably kind
+and courteous to all who approached him; he was
+a firm friend; not, as a rule, an implacable enemy,
+and he inspired no small number of people with a
+warm attachment to him personally. He was also
+generally popular, and the glittering prosperity
+of the early part of his reign was attributed by a
+large part of the common people to his own genius
+and merits, while they were prone to consider that
+its disastrous close was due to treason. No other
+member of the family excited feelings of the same
+kind, and in France a cause was always so largely
+identified with an individual that there was no
+doubt that the hold of the Imperialists upon the
+country was largely weakened by the loss of their
+chief.</p>
+
+<p>It is perhaps worth noting that Lord Lyons,
+although it was notoriously difficult to extract any
+such opinions from him, did in after years admit
+reluctantly to me, that although he liked Napoleon
+III. personally, he had always put a low
+estimate upon his capacity.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Jan. 31, 1873.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I cannot say that the political atmosphere grows clearer.
+The Right are in their hearts as anxious as ever to depose
+Thiers. They believe as firmly as ever that if he makes
+the new elections, he will have a Chamber, not only of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+Republicans, but of very advanced Republicans. They see
+that all their little endeavours to restrain him and to establish
+ministerial responsibility will have no political effect.
+The death of the Emperor has not strengthened Thiers's
+position with regard to the Right. On the contrary, they
+are less disposed to bear with him since the removal of the
+candidate for the Throne of whom they were most afraid,
+and from whom they justly thought that Thiers would
+make every effort to shield them. They are consequently,
+even more than they usually are, employed in casting about
+for something to put in Thiers's place. The Fusion is
+again 'almost' made, and MacMahon is again talked of as
+ready to take the Government during the transition from
+the Republic to the King.</p>
+
+<p>Orloff, the Russian Ambassador, propounded to me
+to-day a plan of his own for preventing conflicts between
+Russia and England in Central Asia. So far as I understood
+it, it was that England and Russia should enter into
+a strict alliance, should encourage and protect, by force of
+arms, commerce between their Asiatic Dominions, and
+unite them at once by a railroad. He said there was a
+Russian company already formed which desired to connect
+the Russian railway system with the Anglo-Indian railways.
+He told me that Brünnow was always writing
+that war between England and Russia was imminent
+and that England was preparing for it. If Brünnow's
+vaticinations are believed, they may perhaps have a not
+unwholesome effect upon the Russian Government.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Prince Orloff seems to have had in contemplation
+that Trans-Persian Railway which has met
+with the approval of the Russian and British
+Governments at the present day. The Russian
+advance in Central Asia in 1872 and 1873 had been
+the subject of various perfectly futile representations
+on the part of Her Majesty's Government, but Baron
+Brünnow must have been a singularly credulous
+diplomatist if he really believed that we were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+making preparations for a war with Russia or any
+one else.</p>
+
+<p>If Orloff with prophetic insight foresaw a Trans-Persian
+Railway, Thiers might be acclaimed as
+being the first person to suggest the project of the
+Triple Entente between England, France, and
+Russia. Strangely enough it was the affairs of
+Spain that put this notion into his head, the idea
+prevalent in France being that Germany was bent
+on making that country a dangerous neighbour to
+France, and bestowing a Hohenzollern prince upon
+her as sovereign. The prospect of an 'Iberic
+Union,' which was being discussed at the time, was
+considered to be exceptionally threatening to
+France, and Thiers had had quite enough of united
+states on the French frontier.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 4, 1873.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Thiers spoke to me last night very confidentially
+about Spain and Portugal. The Spanish question was, he
+said, becoming so serious that it could hardly be considered
+an internal question. Among other things, the independence
+of Portugal was at stake. Now, in his opinion, the
+best chance of avoiding a collision between the Powers of
+Europe would be that England, France, and Russia should
+come to an understanding on the subject. He did not
+think that there would be any difficulty in effecting such
+an understanding; and indeed he had reason to believe
+that Russia was at this moment particularly well disposed
+to act in concert with England. He was far from being so
+absurd as to propose a new Holy Alliance; indeed, he
+desired to avoid all show and ostentation&mdash;indeed all
+publicity. He simply wished that, without any parade,
+the three Powers he had named should concert measures
+in order to avert events which might imperil the peace of
+Europe. After some further conversation, he observed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+that it would be impossible to avert a collision, if the
+Peninsula were formed into one Iberic state with a Hohenzollern
+for a monarch.</p>
+
+<p>I did not invite M. Thiers to state more definitely in
+what form he proposed that the understanding between
+France, Russia, and England should be effected, or what
+combined action he proposed they should adopt. I thought
+indeed that it would be very dangerous for France to enter
+into any sort of an alliance with Foreign Powers against
+Germany at this moment, and that the smallest result
+might be to delay the evacuation of French territory.
+Nor indeed did I know that there was any evidence that
+Germany was actively pursuing designs in Spain in such
+a way and to such a degree, as would render it proper or
+advantageous to try the hazardous experiment of undertaking
+to settle a European question without her, not to
+say in spite of her.</p>
+
+<p>I consequently only listened to what M. Thiers said. He
+concluded by telling me to treat his idea as most strictly
+confidential and to confide it only to your ear in a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the state of Spain, M. Thiers said that he
+believed the Federal Party was after all the party of
+order; that at all events it was predominant in all the
+outer circumference of Spain; that the Unitarians existed
+only in Madrid and the central provinces, and that the
+North was Carlist or Federal. This being the case, his
+advice to the Government of Madrid had been to make concessions
+to the Federals. He did not think that, if properly
+managed, their pretensions would go much beyond what
+was called in France 'decentralisation administrative.'</p>
+
+<p>The view of the Federals being the party of order in
+Spain was new to me, but M. Thiers was beset by a host
+of deputies and I could not continue the conversation.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A letter from Lord Odo Russell<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> to Lord Lyons
+admirably defines the attitude of Germany, and is
+an exceptionally lucid summary of Bismarckian
+policy in general.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>British Embassy, Berlin, March 14, 1873.</h5>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Thanks for yours of the 4th instant.</p>
+
+<p>As regards Spain, Thiers, and Bismarck I cannot add
+anything more definite or more precise. Bismarck and the
+Emperor William are so far satisfied that the Republic
+will make room for the Alphonsists so that they can afford
+to wait and look on.</p>
+
+<p>What Bismarck intends for Spain later, no one can
+guess, but clearly nothing favourable or agreeable to France.</p>
+
+<p>The two great objects of Bismarck's policy are:</p>
+
+<p>(1) The supremacy of Germany in Europe and of the
+German race in the world.</p>
+
+<p>(2) The neutralization of the influence and power of the
+Latin race in France and elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>To obtain these objects he will go any lengths while he
+lives, so that we must be prepared for surprises in the future.</p>
+
+<p>A change has come over the Emperor and his military
+advisers in regard to the evacuation of French territory,
+as you have seen by his speech on opening the German
+Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>His Majesty is now prepared to withdraw his garrison
+as soon as the fifth and last milliard shall have been paid
+by Paris and received at Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>So that if it is true that Thiers proposes to pay the fifth
+milliard in monthly instalments of 250,000,000 fs. beginning
+from the 1st of June, the evacuation might be expected in
+October and France be relieved of her nightmare.</p>
+
+<p>This I look upon as a most desirable object. It appears
+to me that the re-establishment of the future balance of
+power in Europe on a general peace footing, is <em>the</em> thing
+Diplomacy should work for, and that nothing can be done
+so long as the Germans have not got their French gold, and
+the French got rid of their German soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans, as you know, look upon the war of revenge
+as unavoidable and are making immense preparations for it.</p>
+
+<p>Germany is in reality a great camp ready to break up
+for any war at a week's notice with a million of men.</p>
+
+<p>We are out of favour with the Germans for preferring
+the old French alliance to a new German one, as our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+commercial policy is said to prove, and this impression has
+been lately confirmed by Thiers's <em>exposé des motifs</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers is again out of favour at Berlin, because the
+Russian Government has warned the German Government
+that Thiers is working to draw Russia into the Anglo-French
+Alliance contrary to their wishes. I believe myself
+that the alliance or understanding between Russia and
+Germany, Gortschakoff and Bismarck is real, intimate, and
+sincere; and that they have agreed to preserve Austria
+so long as she obeys and serves them, but woe to Austria
+if ever she attempts to be independent!</p>
+
+<p>Then the German and Slav elements she is composed
+of, will be made to gravitate towards their natural centres,
+leaving Hungary and her dependencies as a semi-oriental
+vassal of Germany and Russia. However, those are things
+of the future, at present I can think of nothing but the crisis
+at home and the deep regret I feel at losing my kind benefactor
+Lord Granville as a chief. My only consolation is
+that he will the sooner return to power as our Premier, for
+he is clearly the man of the future.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you will write again occasionally.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord O. Russell.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, April 8, 1873.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Many thanks for your most interesting letter of the
+14th. I entirely agree with you that the one object of
+diplomacy should be to re-establish the balance of power
+in Europe on a peace footing. The payment of the indemnity
+and the departure of the German troops from
+France are of course necessary to the commencement of
+anything like a normal state of things. The French all
+more or less brood over the hope of vengeance, and the
+Germans give them credit for being even more bent upon
+revenge than they really are. So Germany keeps up an
+enormous army, and France strains every nerve to raise
+one; and what can diplomatists do?</p>
+
+<p>In Germany they seem to attach a great deal more than
+due importance to the Commercial Treaty, as a sign of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+tendency towards a renewal of the Anglo-French Alliance.
+But then the Germans have always been more angry with
+us for not helping to blot France out of Europe than the
+French have been with us for not helping them out of the
+scrape they got into by their own fault. Germans and
+French are to my mind alike unreasonable, but we only
+suffer the ordinary fate of neutrals.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers professes to have no thought of forming any
+alliance at present; and to consider that it would be
+absurd of France to try for more at this moment than to
+ward off great questions, and live as harmoniously as she
+can with all Foreign Powers, without showing a preference
+to any. This is no doubt the wise and sensible policy. Thiers
+certainly acts upon it so far as England is concerned. Does
+he also act upon it as regards Russia? I cannot say. I think
+there is a little coquetry between him and the Russians.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Granville appears to have sent through
+the Duchesse de Galliera a private message warning
+Thiers of the dangers of his advances to Russia;
+but the latter asserted that although the French
+Ambassador at St. Petersburg had been directed
+to maintain the most cordial relations with the
+Russian Government, matters had not gone further
+than that, and that he had made no communications
+which he should object to Germany knowing of.
+Thiers's tenure of power was, however, destined
+shortly to come to an end. On May 24, the veteran
+who had rendered such invaluable services to the
+country was defeated by a combination of opponents,
+and Marshal MacMahon became President of the
+Republic in his stead. The change of Government
+was received quietly by the country; the elaborate
+precautions which had been taken in case of disorder
+proved superfluous, and the funds rose on the
+assumption that the Marshal was to prove to be
+the new saviour of society. MacMahon, who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+reluctantly accepted the honour thrust upon him,
+was generally regarded as a French General Monk,
+but which of the three pretenders was to be his
+Charles the Second remained a matter of complete
+uncertainty. The fickle crowd hastened to prostrate
+itself before the rising sun, and the first reception
+held by the new President at Versailles constituted
+a veritable triumph; swarms of people of
+all sorts attending, particularly those members of
+smart society who had long deserted the salons
+of the Préfecture. Amongst the throng were particularly
+noticeable the Duc d'Aumale and his
+brothers, wearing uniform and the red ribands
+which they had never been known to display before.
+All looked smooth and tranquil, as it usually did at
+the beginning; but the Government so far had not
+done anything beyond changing Prefects and Procureurs.
+The political situation, for the time being,
+might be summed up in the phrase that the French
+preferred to have at their head a man <em>qui monte à
+cheval</em>, rather than a man <em>qui monte à la tribune</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Although the dismissal of Thiers savoured of
+ingratitude, it was not altogether unfortunate for
+him that he had quitted office at that particular
+moment, for little doubt was felt that, with or
+without any error of policy on his own part, the
+country was gradually drifting towards communism.
+At any rate, he could compare with just
+pride the state in which he left France to the state
+in which he found her. Although the last German
+soldier had not yet left French soil, the credit of
+the liberation of the country was due to him, and
+by his financial operations, successful beyond all
+expectations, he had not only paid off four milliards,
+but provided the funds for discharging the fifth, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+so admirably conducted the negotiations that the
+German Government was willing to withdraw the
+rest of the occupying force.</p>
+
+<p>The fall of Thiers caused searchings of heart at
+Berlin, and a conversation with Count Arnim, the
+German Ambassador at Paris, in June showed that
+the German Government regarded MacMahon with
+anything but favour. Arnim stated that displeasure
+had been felt at Berlin, both at language
+held by the Marshal before his appointment, and
+at his neglect in his former position to act with
+proper courtesy towards the Emperor's Ambassador
+in France. The German Government did not doubt
+that the remainder of the indemnity would be paid,
+but Thiers indulged less than other Frenchmen in
+hostile feelings towards Germany, and he and a few
+of the people about him seemed to be the only
+Frenchmen who could bring themselves to act with
+propriety and civility in their relations with Germans.
+In fact, Thiers's foreign policy had been
+wise and conciliatory, but as for his internal policy,
+he, Count Arnim, avowed that he entirely concurred
+in the opinion that it would have thrown the country
+in a short time into the hands of the Red Republicans.</p>
+
+<p>The unfortunate Arnim was apparently at this
+time unconscious of his impending doom, although,
+as the following interesting letter from Lord Odo
+Russell to Lord Lyons shows, his fate had been
+sealed months before.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>British Embassy, Berlin, Jan. 18, 1873.</h5>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>What I have to say to-day grieves me to the soul, because
+it goes against my excellent friend and landlord Harry
+Arnim.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Said friend, it is said, could not resist the temptation
+of turning an honest penny in the great War Indemnity
+Loan at Paris, and the Jew Banker he employed, called
+Hanseman, let it out to Bismarck, who could not understand
+how Arnim was rich enough to buy estates in Silesia and
+houses in Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>Now Bismarck, who is tired of Arnim, and thinks him
+a rising rival, will make use of this discovery with the
+Emperor whenever he wants to upset Arnim and send a
+new man to Paris.</p>
+
+<p>He thinks him a rising rival because Arnim went to
+Baden last autumn and advised the Emperor, behind
+Bismarck's back, to go in for an Orleanist Monarchy and
+drop Thiers, in opposition to Bismarck's policy, who wishes
+to drop all Pretenders and uphold Thiers as long as he lives.</p>
+
+<p>Besides which Arnim hinted at a readiness to take office
+at home if Bismarck came to grief.</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor is fond of Arnim and listened with complacency
+and told Bismarck when he returned from Varzin,&mdash;Bismarck
+has vowed revenge! I have not written all
+this home because it would serve no purpose yet,&mdash;but it
+may be useful to you as a peep behind the curtain. Meanwhile
+Bismarck has appointed one of his <em>secret</em> agents as
+Commercial Secretary to the Paris Embassy to watch
+Arnim. His name is Lindau and as he is a very able man
+and an old friend of mine, I have given him a letter to you.
+He might become useful some day.</p>
+
+<p>Let me add <em>in confidence</em> that he corresponds privately
+and secretly with Bismarck behind Arnim's back.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p>It will be observed that the views expressed by
+Arnim to Lord Lyons in June are not altogether
+consistent with those attributed to him in the above
+letter, but Lord Odo Russell's opinion that his
+implacable chief would crush him at the first opportunity
+was only too well justified before long.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">MARSHAL MACMAHON'S PRESIDENCY</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>(1873-1875)</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The new French Government had been received
+with great favour by the upper classes, while the
+remainder of the population remained indifferent,
+but the Marshal was credited with the wish to place
+the Comte de Chambord on the throne, and the
+language of his entourage was strongly Legitimist,
+auguries being drawn from a frequent remark of
+the Maréchale, who was supposed to dislike her
+position: <em>nous ne sommes pas à notre place!</em></p>
+
+<p>As the confused political situation began to clear,
+it became evident that everything depended upon
+the Comte de Chambord himself, and if he could be
+brought to adopt anything like a reasonable attitude,
+it was generally felt that there would be a large
+majority in his favour in the Assembly. The
+historic White Flag manifesto issued from Salzburg
+at the end of October effectually ruined the Legitimist
+cause.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 31, 1873.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Royalists were counting up new adhesions and
+expecting a letter from the Comte de Chambord which was
+to be read from the tribune at the last moment and rally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+the waiters upon Providence and the waverers to them,
+when, to their utter consternation, the actual letter arrived,
+and fell like a shell with a violent explosion in the midst of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what they are to do. All plans for making
+the Comte de Paris or the Duc d'Aumale Regent will be
+voted against by the present Legitimists, unless the Comte
+de Chambord approves them. It is very doubtful whether
+any explanation could do away with the impression the
+letter will have produced throughout the country, which
+was already averse from the idea of the Legitimist King.</p>
+
+<p>The maintenance of MacMahon and the present Ministry
+seems the best mode of postponing trouble, but it cannot
+do much more than postpone.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 3, 1873.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>If the Chamber met to-morrow, I suppose it would vote
+the prolongation of MacMahon's powers; and though no
+one can answer for what a day or an hour may bring forth,
+I suppose this is what must be done. It is said that the
+Marshal himself insists upon a term of six years, if not ten.
+This is rather hard to understand, if, as I believed, he really
+wished to be out of the thing, and I doubt its adding
+practically to the stability of his Government. On the
+other hand, the Conservatives want to have the prolongation
+voted in such a way as to make it apparent that
+MacMahon is <em>their</em> President. It would not suit them
+that he should be elected unanimously, or nearly so, as
+he perhaps might be. This would put him, they think, in
+a position too like that which Thiers held. The preposterous
+notion of making a Lieutenant General of the
+Kingdom to govern in the name of a King of full age and
+in possession of all his faculties, who would undoubtedly
+repudiate and denounce his representative, has been put
+an end to by the refusal of the Princes of Orleans, one and
+all, it is affirmed, to accept the post.</p>
+
+<p>Thiers told me the day before yesterday that he did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+not intend to oppose the Government this session, and that
+we might count on a quiet winter. We shall see.</p>
+
+<p>The Legitimists are furious with their King, as well they
+may be. How long this may last, one cannot say, but the
+numbers of those who adore him <em>quand même</em>, as a sort
+of fetish, have certainly fallen off.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>MacMahon had been as much disappointed with
+the Chambord manifesto as the ultra-Legitimists
+themselves, and had looked forward to retiring from
+a position which he found distasteful; but as no
+king was available, and he was looked upon as the
+only guarantee for order, obviously the best course
+was to secure the prolongation of his powers for as
+long a period as possible. After many long and
+stormy discussions MacMahon was declared President
+of the Republic for seven years, and a committee
+of thirty was appointed to consider the Constitutional
+Laws. This result was so far satisfactory to
+the Right, that it enabled them to retire from the
+dangerous position in which they were placed by
+the attempt to put the Comte de Chambord on the
+throne, but it failed to establish a durable Government,
+and the whole period of MacMahon's Presidency
+was marked by a ceaseless struggle with his
+Republican opponents, which only terminated with
+his fall four years later.</p>
+
+<p>The anxieties of French Ministers were, however,
+not confined to internal difficulties. Although the
+fact was concealed as much as possible, the anti-Ultramontane
+campaign of Bismarck created serious
+alarm in the beginning of 1874, and in that year may
+be said to have originated the long series of panics,
+well or ill founded, which have prevailed in France
+ever since. MacMahon in conversation did not
+scruple to express his fear of a country which,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+according to him, could place 800,000 men on the
+Rhine in less than seventeen days, and made the
+interesting confession that the French military
+authorities had never credited the famous reports
+of Colonel Stoffel<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> as to Prussian military efficiency.
+The Foreign Minister, the Duc Décazes, expressed
+the strongest apprehensions.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 17, 1874.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The fall of France has never, I think, been brought so
+forcibly home to me, as when I listened yesterday to the
+humble deprecation which Décazes was obliged to make
+with regard to Bismarck's threats, in the same room in
+which I had so often heard the high language with which
+the Imperial Minister used to speak of the affairs of Europe.
+One can only hope that Odo may be right in thinking that
+Bismarck's menaces may subside, when he has carried
+his Army Bill at home. But may not his eagerness in his
+contest with the Ultramontanes continue and carry him
+on to language and even to measures against France from
+which it may be difficult for him to draw back? and of
+course there is a limit to the submission of the French
+Government, however disastrous it may know the consequences
+of resistance to be. It is difficult to persecute any
+religion in these days, but it is impossible for the French
+Government to set itself in violent opposition to the predominant
+religion in France. I do not know what means
+we may have of getting pacific and moderate counsels
+listened to at Berlin, but I do not think the weakness of
+France a sufficient safeguard to other countries against the
+perils of the present state of things to the peace of Europe.
+It may be very easy to bully and to crush France, but will
+it be possible to do this without raising a storm in other
+quarters?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What Bismarck wanted was that the French
+Government should attack the French bishops;
+and in order to conciliate him, a circular was issued
+by the Minister of the Interior remonstrating with
+them on the nature of the language in which their
+pastoral addresses were couched. The well-known
+clerical newspaper the <em>Univers</em> was suppressed, and
+although every effort was made to disguise the
+various acts of subserviency resorted to, it was perfectly
+well known to what cause they were due,
+and it was not surprising that the French writhed
+under the necessity of submitting to such dictation.
+In view of the military weakness of France, however,
+it was useless to think of resistance, the Duc
+d'Aumale, who commanded the most vulnerable
+district, having reported confidentially that there
+were neither fortresses nor an army which would
+have any chance of repelling a German invasion;
+added to which, owing to considerations of economy,
+the conscription was six months in arrear.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Odo Russell.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 3, 1874.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The French want above all things to keep the peace, or,
+to put it otherwise, to escape being attacked by Germany
+in their present defenceless state. What, in your opinion,
+should they do? Of course the temptation to the unprincipled
+war party in Germany to attack them while
+they are unable to defend themselves, is very great; and
+that party must know that a war this year would be much
+less hazardous than one next year, and so on, as each year
+passes.</p>
+
+<p>The next question I want your advice upon is what, if
+anything, can other Powers, and particularly England, do
+to help to preserve peace? This is a question peculiarly
+within your province, as the one thing to be considered in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+answering it, is the effect that anything we do may have
+at Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>I am not very hopeful, but I think the chances of peace
+will be very much increased if we can tide over this year
+1874.</p>
+
+<p>I can see no consolation for a fresh war. I suppose
+Bismarck would be ready to buy the neutrality of Russia
+with Constantinople, and that France will give Russia
+<em>anything</em> even for a little help.</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor Alexander has told General Le Flô<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> at
+St. Petersburg that there will not be war. Do you attach
+much importance to this?</p>
+
+<p>You will call this a <em>questionnaire</em> rather than a letter,
+but if you have anything to catechise me upon in return,
+I will answer to the best of my ability.</p>
+
+<p>The Lyttons' are, as you may suppose, a very great
+pleasure to me, and they have had a great success here.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>No one was better fitted than Lord Odo Russell,
+who was a <em>persona grata</em> with Bismarck, to answer
+these queries. The Emperor Alexander had been
+very emphatic in assuring General Le Flô on several
+occasions that there would be no war, but Lord
+Odo was in all probability quite correct in his
+opinion that this was no real safeguard.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Odo Russell to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, Feb. 20, 1874.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I was glad after a long interval to see your handwriting
+again, and doubly glad to find you inclined to renew our
+correspondence. You ask: <em>Firstly</em>, What in my opinion
+should the French do to escape being attacked by Germany
+in their present defenceless state?</p>
+
+<p>In my opinion nothing can save them <em>if</em> Bismarck is
+determined to fight them again; but then, is it France or is
+it Austria he is preparing to annihilate? In Bismarck's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+opinion, France, to avoid a conflict with him, should gag
+her press, imprison her bishops, quarrel with Rome, refrain
+from making an army or from seeking alliances with other
+Powers all out of deference to Germany.</p>
+
+<p><em>Secondly.</em> What can other Powers, and particularly
+England, do to help to preserve peace?</p>
+
+<p>A Coalition is impossible; advice or interference adds
+to Bismarck's excuses for going to war, so the only course
+Governments can follow is to let him do as he pleases and
+submit to the consequences, until he dies.</p>
+
+<p><em>Thirdly.</em> Do I attach any importance to the Emperor
+of Russia's pacific assurances?</p>
+
+<p>None whatever, because Bismarck is prepared to buy
+his co-operation with anything he pleases in the East.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck is now master of the situation at home and
+abroad. The Emperor, the Ministers, the Army, the
+Press, and the National majority in Parliament are instruments
+in his hands, whilst abroad he can so bribe the great
+Powers as to prevent a coalition and make them subservient
+to his policy. Now, his policy, as you know, is to
+mediatize the minor States of Germany and to annex the
+German Provinces of Austria, so as to make one great
+centralized Power of the German-speaking portions of
+Europe. To accomplish this he may require another war,
+but it may be with Austria and not with France, which he
+now puts forward to keep up the war spirit of the Germans
+and to remind Europe of his powers. Besides which he
+has to pass the unpopular Army Bill and War Budget
+which he failed in last summer.</p>
+
+<p>His anti-Roman policy will serve him to pick a quarrel
+with any Power he pleases by declaring that he has discovered
+an anti-German conspiracy among the clergy of
+the country he wishes to fight.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the situation, but it does not follow that we
+shall have war before another year or two are over or
+more, nor need we have war <em>if</em> Bismarck can carry out his
+plans without it.</p>
+
+<p>At present the tone of Bismarck and Bülow is quite
+pacific, and I notice a great desire for the co-operation of
+England in maintaining the peace of Europe generally.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons's own opinions were in exact agreement
+with Lord Odo Russell's, and the general
+uncertainty as to Bismarck's intentions continued
+to preoccupy both the French and the English
+Governments, although the Emperor of Russia
+persisted in assuring General Le Flô that there
+would be no war, and it was assumed in some
+quarters that the German Emperor disapproved of
+the Bismarckian policy.</p>
+
+<p>The general election in England at the beginning
+of 1874, resulting in the return of the Conservative
+party to power, placed Lord Derby again at the
+Foreign Office in the room of Lord Granville, and
+the long letter which follows was presumably intended
+to enlighten him on the subject of French
+politics generally. It is, at all events, a concise
+review of the situation.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 24, 1874.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I thank you cordially for your letter of yesterday, and
+I resume with very peculiar satisfaction my diplomatic
+correspondence with you. I wish the subject of it was as
+pleasant to me as is the fact of its renewal; but I cannot
+help being more than usually anxious about the prospects
+of Europe and of France in particular. This spring and
+summer are the especially critical seasons for France.
+She will be for a long time to come far too weak to indulge
+in aggression, except indeed as a secondary ally of some
+stronger Power, but even next year, she will not be in the
+absolutely helpless condition which is at this moment so
+strong a temptation to national hatreds, and to the military
+thirst for gold and glory which prevails with a party in
+Germany. I am afraid the peace of Europe depends
+entirely upon the view Bismarck may take of the easiest
+means of bringing all German-speaking nations under one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+rule. The wolf can always find reasons for quarrelling
+with the lamb, and as Bismarck himself told Odo Russell,
+he has had a good deal of experience of this kind of thing.
+The French lamb will not be skittish, and indeed will
+hardly venture to bleat, for some time. For my own part, I
+am constantly on the watch to forestall questions which may
+make difficulties between France and any other country;
+for if Bismarck wants war, it would suit him to be able to
+appear to be only taking his part in a quarrel already made.</p>
+
+<p>Italy is the most dangerous neighbour from this point
+of view, and the presence of the <em>Orénoque</em> at Civita
+Vecchia is the ticklish point. It is a very delicate matter
+to touch; for if the question came very prominently into
+notice, it might raise one of the storms in the press of all
+countries, which are so often the precursors of evil times.
+The ship is supposed to be at Civita Vecchia to give the
+Pope the means of leaving Italy, if he wishes to do so; and
+I suppose the Vatican might relieve the French of embarrassment
+by saying that she is not wanted. In fact, if the
+Italian Government intended to prevent the Pope's going
+away, they would of course stop him before he got to
+Civita Vecchia, and if they abstained (as would no doubt
+be the case) from interfering with his movements, he could
+get a ship to depart in, whenever he pleased.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know that there is any ill-feeling in Switzerland
+towards France, but the Ultramontane disputes give
+Bismarck a lever to work with.</p>
+
+<p>I believe the French Government have completely drawn
+in their horns about the Armenian Patriarch question and
+the Protectorate of the Latin Christians in the East, since
+Bismarck appeared on the field at Constantinople.</p>
+
+<p>In looking out for small beginnings of troubles, I have
+thought of Tunis. I suppose we may lay aside all apprehension
+of attempts of France to change the frontier or to
+bring the Regency into more complete dependency upon
+her, at the present moment. I find by a despatch from
+Mr. Wood, that the German commodore, in his conversation
+with the Bey, insisted particularly upon the interests
+of German subjects being put upon as good a footing as
+those of the subjects of any other country.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I think Décazes takes the humiliating position in which
+France, and he as her Foreign Minister, are placed, with
+more equanimity and temper than most Frenchmen would;
+and so long as the present, or any other Government, not
+absolutely unreasonable, is at the head of affairs, France
+will be prudent in her foreign relations.</p>
+
+<p>Of Marshal MacMahon's seven years' lease of power, only
+three months have elapsed; a time too short to give much
+foundation for conjecture as to its probable duration.
+Both he himself and his Ministers take opportunities
+of declaring that its continuance is above discussion, and
+that they will maintain it against all comers. There are
+two things against it. First, the extreme difficulty of
+giving it anything like the appearance of permanence and
+stability which would rally to it that great majority of
+Frenchmen who are ready at all times to worship the powers
+that be, if only they look as if they were likely to continue
+to be. Secondly, there is the character of the Marshal
+himself. He is honest and a brave soldier, but he does not
+take such a part in affairs as would increase his personal
+prestige. The danger, in fact, is that by degrees he may
+come to be looked upon as a <em>nullité!</em></p>
+
+<p>The Imperialists are agitating themselves and spending
+money, as if they were meditating an immediate coup.
+The wiser heads counsel patience, but the old horses, who
+sorely miss the pampering they had under the Empire,
+are getting very hungry, and are afraid that they themselves
+may die before the grass has grown.</p>
+
+<p>The fear of an Imperialist attempt has in some degree
+brought back to the Government the support of the
+Legitimists, and in fact the Comte de Chambord has
+quarrelled with his own party. The Fusion has put an
+end to the Orleanist Party, as a party for placing the Comte
+de Paris on the throne; but the question of appointing the
+Duc d'Aumale Vice-President, in order to have some one
+ready to succeed MacMahon in case of need, is seriously
+considered. I suppose, however, that MacMahon would
+look upon this as destructive of the arrangements between
+him and the Assembly. And then the whole system
+depends upon the maintenance by hook or by crook of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+a majority, which has not yet ceased to melt away, as
+seats become vacant and new elections take place.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Duc de Bisaccia, the new French Ambassador
+in London, even at his first interview with Lord
+Derby, did not scruple to avow that he felt quite
+certain that the Republican form of government
+would not last, and he went on to assert that Bismarck's
+head had been turned by success, and that
+he aimed at nothing less than the conquest of
+Europe, being quite indifferent either to the views
+of his Imperial Master, or of the Crown Prince.
+Whatever the prospects of the Republic, the prospects
+of Bisaccia's own party (Legitimist) were
+indisputably gloomy, for the prevailing sentiment
+in France at the time was hostility to the White
+Flag and to the clerical and aristocratic influences
+of which it was held to be the emblem. The great
+majority of the people were Republican, and the
+most numerous party after the Republican was the
+Imperial, but the Presidency of Marshal MacMahon
+was acquiesced in, for the moment, by all parties,
+because it was believed to be capable of preserving
+order, because it left the question of the definitive
+government of the country still undecided, and
+because no party saw its way to securing the pre-dominence
+of its own ideas.</p>
+
+<p>The existing state of things was accounted for
+by the history of the establishment of the seven-years
+Presidency.</p>
+
+<p>When the Orleans Princes tendered their allegiance
+to the Comte de Chambord in the previous
+autumn, the fusion, so long talked of, was complete,
+and it was supposed that a Parliamentary Monarchy
+with the Tricolour Flag, might be established under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+the legitimate head of the Bourbons; but the Comte
+de Chambord struck a fatal blow to these hopes by
+his celebrated letter, and the Conservatives felt that
+there was no time to be lost in setting up a Government
+having some sort of stability. The plan which
+they adopted was that of conferring power upon
+Marshal MacMahon for a fixed and long period.
+Had a short period been proposed, it would have
+been agreed to almost unanimously; but this was
+not their object. They wished it to be apparent
+to the country that the Marshal was specially the
+President of the Conservative majority: they asked
+for a term of ten years: obtained seven, and secured
+from the Marshal a declaration of adherence to their
+views. The slight modification of the Ministry
+which ensued, resulted in placing the Government
+more completely in the hands of the party pledged
+to a monarchical form of Government, and the
+Ministry thus reconstituted, set itself to the task
+of resisting the progress of Radicalism and Communism
+in the country.</p>
+
+<p>But the suspicion of favouring the White Flag
+clung to the Government, and although the latter,
+following the example of the Empire, had installed
+their partisans in office, as mayors, etc., by thousands
+throughout the country, the candidates
+supported by the Government had, in almost every
+instance, found themselves at the bottom of the poll
+when elections took place; and the results showed
+that a large accession of votes had been received
+by the Republican and Imperialist parties. Of these
+the former had gained most, but the latter possessed
+a backing in the country which was inadequately
+represented by their numbers in the Assembly.</p>
+
+<p>It should, however, be added that there did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+appear on any side a disposition to embarrass the
+Government by factious or bitter opposition with
+regard to the three departments, Finance, War, and
+Foreign Affairs, in which the practical interests of
+the country were most deeply involved. The financial
+policy of M. Magne<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> was generally supported;
+and with regard to votes for the Army and Navy,
+the Government had rather to resist a pressure to
+increase the expenditure on these heads, than to
+urge the necessity of considerable supplies.</p>
+
+<p>In the conduct of foreign affairs, the defenceless
+state of France had made the avoidance of an attack
+from Germany the one overwhelming care of the
+Government. To effect this object, to give Germany
+no pretext for a quarrel, and to make submission
+to the behests of Bismarck as little galling
+and in appearance as little humiliating as possible,
+had been the constant occupation of the Foreign
+Minister. In this effort he was seconded by the
+Assembly, and indeed every one in and out of that
+body, except a few clerical and Legitimist bigots,
+felt it to be a patriotic duty to abstain from embarrassing
+the Government in its relations with
+foreign Powers. Another reassuring feature in the
+situation was, that there were no symptoms of
+attempts to resist by force the authority of the
+Assembly, as no party seemed likely to venture to
+oppose by force a Government which disposed of the
+army; and the army in 1874 showed no prediction
+for any particular candidate for the throne sufficiently
+strong to overcome its habitual obedience
+to the Constitutional Government, whatever that
+Government might be.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As an instance of the dictation practised by
+Bismarck towards France in foreign affairs, it may
+be mentioned that in January, 1874,<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> Count Arnim
+formally announced to the Duc Décazes that the
+German Government would not tolerate the assumption
+by France of the suzerainty of Tunis, or of a
+Protectorate over that country. To this Décazes
+humbly replied that there had never been the least
+question of anything of the kind&mdash;a statement
+which can scarcely be described as accurate.</p>
+
+<p>Whether Bismarck entertained any designs with
+regard to Tunis is not known, but it was in this year
+that Germany began to show some signs of interest
+in the Philippines and other places supposed to be
+of some colonial value. The following extract from
+a letter written on the subject by the late Lord
+Lytton, who was at the time Secretary of Embassy
+at Paris, is a striking instance of rare and remarkable
+political prescience.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lytton to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 27, 1874.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Odo's impression (communicated to you) that Bismarck
+does not want colonies rather surprises me. It seems to
+me a perfectly natural and quite inevitable ambition on the
+part of a Power so strong as Germany not to remain an
+inland state a moment longer than it can help, but to get
+to the sea, and to extend its seaboard in all possible
+directions. Is there any case on record of an inland state
+suddenly attaining to the military supremacy of Europe
+without endeavouring by means of its military strength and
+prestige to develop its maritime power? But you can't
+be a Maritime Power without colonies, for if you have
+ships you must have places to send them to, work for them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+to do, and a marine Exercier-Platz for training seamen.
+That is why I have always thought that the English school
+of politicians which advocates getting rid of our colonies as
+profitless encumbrances, ought (to be consistent) to advocate
+the simultaneous suppression of our navy. Lord
+Derby says that though Germany may probably cherish
+such an ambition, she will have as much seaboard as she
+can practically want as long as she retains possession of
+the Duchies. But that is not a very convenient commercial
+seaboard, and I confess I can't help doubting the
+absence of all desire for more and better outlets to the sea,
+so long as her military power and prestige remain unbroken.
+Anyhow, there seems to be now a pretty general instinct
+throughout Europe, and even in America, that a policy of
+maritime and colonial development must be the natural
+result of Germany's present position: and such instincts,
+being those of self-preservation, are generally, I think,
+what Dizzy calls 'unerring' ones.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A letter from Lord Odo Russell written about
+this period throws a curious light upon Bismarck's
+imaginary grievances, and the difficulties which he
+was prepared to raise upon the slightest provocation.
+Probably no Minister of modern times ever uttered
+so many complaints, threatened so often to resign,
+and yet wielded such absolute power.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, Nov. 9, 1874.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I found Prince Bismarck in one of his confidential moods
+the other day, and he indulged me in a long talk about his
+own interests, past, present, and prospective.</p>
+
+<p>Among many other things, he said that his life had been
+strangely divided into phases or periods of twelve years
+each.</p>
+
+<p>Born in 1815, he had left home when he was twelve
+years old to begin his studies. At 24 he inherited his small
+patrimony and his father's debts, and entered upon the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+life and duties of a country gentleman. At 36 (1851) his
+diplomatic career began, and he was sent to Frankfort,
+Vienna, St. Petersburg and Paris. At 48 (1863) he was
+recalled to form the present Administration, which in
+twelve years had carried on three wars and made the
+German Empire. He was now 60 and worn out with the
+responsibilities and anxieties of office, and he was resolved
+to enter upon a new phase (of 12 years he hoped) by resigning
+and retiring into private life&mdash;a resolution he begged
+I would keep to myself for the present.</p>
+
+<p>I said I could well understand his wish for rest, but I
+did not believe the Emperor or the country would allow
+him to indulge in it, as he was well enough and strong
+enough to govern Germany for many years to come.</p>
+
+<p>He replied that he felt quite strong enough to govern
+Germany, but not to be governed himself any longer by
+the Emperor, whose obstinacy and narrow mindedness
+were more than he could bear.</p>
+
+<p>I said I had often heard him complain of his Court
+duties before, but it appeared to me that he always carried
+his points, and that after some resistance the Emperor gave
+way in the end and followed his advice.</p>
+
+<p>He replied that it was that very struggle with his
+Imperial Master that had worn him out and that he no
+longer felt strong enough to carry on after sixty. He then
+related to me a series of very curious anecdotes illustrating
+his struggles with the Crown, and what he called the want
+of confidence and ingratitude of the Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him whether anything had lately occurred
+calculated to increase his wish for rest.</p>
+
+<p>He said that his present difference with the Emperor
+related to the new army organization. The Emperor and
+his generals thought the sole object of the German Empire
+was to turn the nation into an army for the greater glory
+of the House of Hohenzollern; whilst he held that there
+must be some limit to the heavy strain of military obligations
+the Crown was ever anxious to impose on the people.</p>
+
+<p>I asked whether he was alluding to the Landsturm Bill,
+which placed every German from the age of 16 to 42 at the
+disposal of the War Department.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>He replied that he did not exactly allude to that, but
+there were other measures in contemplation, elaborated in
+the Emperor's military Cabinet, he could not give his
+sanction to, and which would consequently lead to another
+painful struggle. He considered that his great task had
+been completed in 1870 to 1872, and that he could now
+retire and leave the internal organization of Germany to
+other hands. The Crown Prince, he thought, might possibly
+govern on more Constitutional principles than his father,
+who, born in the last century, had not yet been able to
+realize what the duties of a Constitutional Sovereign were,
+and thought himself as King of Prussia above the Constitution,
+as the Emperor Sigismund thought himself above
+grammar when he wrote bad Latin. A danger to which
+the Crown Prince would be exposed as Sovereign was his
+love for intrigue and backstairs influence&mdash;'some one or
+other always concealed behind the door or curtain.' The
+Prince was not as straightforward as he appeared, and he
+suffered from the weakness of obstinacy and the obstinacy
+of weakness due to unbounded conceit and self-confidence&mdash;but
+at the same time he meant well.</p>
+
+<p>After a good deal more talk about his family, his property,
+and his longing for country life and pursuits, we
+parted.</p>
+
+<p>Without attaching undue importance to Prince Bismarck's
+oft-repeated threat of resignation, I do not suppose
+he would go out of his way to tell me and others so, without
+intention. My impression is that he wants to obtain
+something or other from the Emperor which he can make
+conditional on remaining in office, well knowing that His
+Majesty cannot do without him. Besides which, his
+retirement from office would have the appearance of a
+defeat, consequent on his failure to coerce the Pope and his
+legions. He is not the man to admit a defeat while he
+lives. Time will show what more he wants to satisfy his
+gigantic ambition.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The fear of war with Germany had died away
+temporarily in the summer, and the various political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+parties in France were free to continue their struggles
+and to reduce the situation to almost unexampled
+confusion. The motives of the Comte de Chambord
+and his followers were too remote for ordinary
+human understanding, and their object appeared
+to be to bring about a crisis and a dissolution of the
+Assembly on the most disadvantageous terms to
+themselves. Moderate Republicans were looking to
+the Duc d'Aumale as a safeguard against the Imperialists
+on the one hand, and the Reds on the
+other. Republicans of various shades, and the Reds
+in particular, were coquetting with Prince Napoleon,
+and he with them. Most men and most parties
+appeared to have particular objects, which they
+hated with a hatred more intense than their love
+for the object of their affections. Thiers, it was
+believed, would have rather seen anything, even a
+restoration of the Empire, than have the Duc de
+Broglie and the Orleanists in power. Notwithstanding
+the fusion, the Legitimists would have
+probably preferred Gambetta (or some one still
+more extreme) than an Orleans Prince&mdash;and so on.</p>
+
+<p>'I cannot make head or tail of French internal
+politics,' Lord Derby wrote, at the end of the year,
+'and presume that most Frenchmen are in the same
+condition. It looks as if nobody could see their way
+till the present Assembly is dissolved and a new
+one elected.'</p>
+
+<p>The beginning of the new year was signalized
+in Paris by the appearance of the Lord Mayor of
+London, who had been invited to attend the opening
+of the new Opera House. That functionary has
+always been invested in French popular opinion
+with semi-fabulous attributes, and he seems to
+have risen to the level of the occasion. 'The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+Lord Mayor,' wrote the unimpressionable Lord
+Lyons, 'is astonishing the Parisians with his sword,
+mace, trumpeters, and State coaches. So far, however,
+I think the disposition here is to be pleased
+with it all, and I keep no countenance and do what
+I have to do with becoming gravity.' A little later,
+however, he was constrained to add:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am afraid the Lord Mayor's head has been turned by
+the fuss which was made with him here, for he seems to
+have made a very foolish speech on his return to England.
+Strange to say the Parisians continued to be amused and
+pleased with his pomps and vanities to the end, although
+the narrow limits between the sublime and the ridiculous
+were always on the point of being over passed. I abstained
+from going to the banquets given to him, or by him, except
+a private dinner at the Elysée; but I had him to dinner here,
+and, I think, sent him away pleased with the Embassy,
+which it is always as well to do, and if so, I have reaped the
+reward of my diplomatic command over my risible muscles.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It was not perhaps surprising that the Lord
+Mayor should have been thrown off his intellectual
+balance, for the honours accorded to him far surpassed
+those paid to ordinary mortals and resembled
+rather those habitually reserved for crowned heads.
+When he visited the opera the ex-Imperial box was
+reserved for his use; the audience rose at his entry,
+and the orchestra played the English National
+Anthem. Twice he dined with the President of
+the Republic; the Prefect of the Seine gave a
+banquet in his honour; so did the authorities at
+Boulogne; and to crown all, the Tribunal of Commerce
+struck a medal in commemoration of his
+visit.</p>
+
+<p>The one thing that was fairly clear in French
+politics, besides abhorrence of the White Flag, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+the gradual progress of Bonapartism which was
+beginning to frighten Conservatives as well as Republicans,
+and the Bonapartists themselves were
+inclined to regret having helped to turn Thiers out
+of office, because the army was becoming more and
+more anti-Republican, and it would be much easier
+to turn it against a civilian than against its natural
+head, a Marshal of France.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Jan. 26, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Bonapartism is still in the ascendant, and certainly the
+Assembly is doing everything to give weight to the assertion
+that France is unfit for Parliamentary Government.
+No one believes in a moderate Republic, as a self-supporting
+institution unconnected with some particular individual.
+The 'Conservative Republic' was devised for M. Thiers.
+The Septennate Republic, if it be a Republic, would be
+scouted if MacMahon were not at the head of it. The
+Comte de Chambord is impossible. The Orleanists have
+cast in their lot with his, and besides, the Government they
+represent being constitutional or Parliamentary, is exactly
+what is most out of favour, with the exception of the White
+Flag. As I have said all along, the dispute is between a
+very advanced Republic and the Empire, and <em>confugiendum
+est ad imperium</em> is becoming more and more the cry
+of those who dread Communism. Those who have personal
+reasons for fearing the Empire are already taking their
+precautions. Friends of the Orleans Princes are believed
+to have seriously conferred (not with the knowledge or
+consent of the Princes themselves, so far as I have heard)
+with the Bonaparte leaders, in order to ascertain what the
+Orleans family would have to expect if the Prince Imperial
+returned. At any rate the Bonapartist papers have been
+insinuating that they would be allowed to stay in France
+and keep their property; and these insinuations are of
+course intended to relieve tender Orleanist consciences of
+scruples in coming round to the Imperial cause.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The officers in the army are becoming more and more
+averse from all idea of a permanent Republic. They
+would willingly wait to the end of MacMahon's time, but
+they are beginning to talk of the possibility of his being so
+much disgusted by the way in which he is worried by the
+Assembly, as to throw the Presidency up.</p>
+
+<p>In short France is at this moment in a fear of Bonapartism.
+It may, and very probably will, subside this
+time, but it differs from most intermittent fevers in this,
+that the attacks recur at shorter and shorter intervals,
+and increase instead of diminish in intensity.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Fear of the Imperialists drove Conservatives into
+voting with Gambetta and other advanced Republicans;
+a ministerial crisis took place; the
+Assembly gave contradictory decisions and generally
+discredited itself, and the confusion grew so great
+that it seemed impossible to unravel it.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'I have spent three afternoons at Versailles,' wrote
+Lord Lyons on February 26th, 'and have seen a Constitution
+made there. I have seen also such a confusion of
+parties and principles as I hope never to witness again.
+I found Décazes, Broglie, and a great number of Right
+Centre deputies at the MacMahons' last evening. They
+all, and particularly Décazes, looked to me very unhappy,
+and indeed they did not affect to be at all satisfied with
+the occurrences in the Assembly. Like the horse in the
+fable who invited the man to get on his back, the Right
+Centre have let the Left get on their backs to attack
+Bonapartism, and don't know how to shake them off
+again.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The ceaseless struggles between the various
+political parties in France, which were of little
+interest to the outside world, were temporarily
+interrupted in the spring of 1875 by the war scare
+which so greatly agitated Europe at the time, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+which subsequently became an almost annual phenomenon.
+Unfortunately, Lord Lyons was in England
+during the greater portion of this critical period, and
+there are wanting, consequently, documents which
+might have thrown light upon what has always been
+a somewhat mysterious episode, but it would appear
+that the symptoms of alarm on the part of the
+French first showed themselves about March 11.
+On that day the Duc Décazes drew the attention of
+the British Ambassador to three incidents which
+ought to engage the serious attention of those
+Governments who were desirous of maintaining
+peace in Europe. These were the threatening representation
+made by the German Minister at
+Brussels to the Belgian Government respecting the
+language and conduct of the Ultramontane Party
+in that country; the pointed communication to the
+French Government of this representation; and the
+prohibition of the export of horses from Germany.
+Prince Bismarck, said Décazes, seemed to become
+more and more inclined to revive old grievances
+and to require of foreign countries the exercise of
+an unreasonable and impossible control over the
+prelates and even over the lay members of the
+Roman Catholic Church, and as for the decree forbidding
+the export of horses, it was so inexplicable
+that it could only add to uneasiness. It might be
+easy for England, and for some other nations, to
+regard these things calmly, but to France they
+constituted a serious and immediate peril. In spite
+of the steps taken during the past year to conciliate
+Germany on the subject of the Bishop's charges,
+the German Government had never officially intimated
+that it considered the question to be closed,
+and Count Arnim had used the significant expression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+to him, that it was only closed 'so far as any
+question between you and us can ever be looked
+upon as closed.' He believed that it was only owing
+to the influence of other Powers, and of England in
+particular, that the danger had been averted in
+1874; and he now hoped that the same influence
+would be exerted in the same way. Décazes added
+a somewhat surprising piece of information which
+had been imparted to him in January, 1874, by
+Prince Orloff, the Russian Ambassador, viz. that
+in that month an order to occupy Nancy had absolutely
+been issued by the German Government to
+its troops, and that there were strong grounds for
+believing that this order has been rescinded chiefly
+owing to influence exerted at Berlin by Russia. So
+far as is known, there is no corroboration of this
+story, and it would appear that Prince Orloff was
+so anxious to convince France of the goodwill of
+Russia that he thought it advisable to drag England
+into the question, but it was not surprising that
+France should be sensitively alive to the danger she
+incurred, if Bismarck, irritated by his Ultramontane
+difficulties, should choose to throw the blame upon
+the Roman Catholics of other countries, or should
+resort to quarrels with foreign nations as a means
+of diverting public opinion in Germany from inconvenient
+questions at home.</p>
+
+<p>Prince Hohenlohe, the new German Ambassador,
+who also saw Lord Lyons on the same day, volunteered
+no opinion upon the representation to
+Belgium which had excited so much perturbation,
+but remarked with regard to the exportation of
+horses that the 'agriculturists might have been
+alarmed by the prospect of a drain of horses for
+foreign countries. He had no reason to suppose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+that purchases of horses had been made in Germany
+by the French Government for military purposes;
+but he had heard that a considerable number had
+lately been brought there for the Paris fiacres.'</p>
+
+<p>It will not have escaped notice that the German
+Government&mdash;or rather Bismarck&mdash;was fortunate in
+always having excellent reasons available, either
+for not complying with inconvenient requests, or
+for explaining away disquieting symptoms; thus, in
+1870, the insuperable difficulty to disarmament was
+the King of Prussia; during the peace negotiations,
+all harsh conditions were due to <em>les militaires</em>, and
+in 1875 the German agriculturists and the Paris
+cabs were responsible for any uneasiness that might
+be felt temporarily.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 16, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I saw Décazes last night and found him in a greater state
+of alarm about the intentions of Germany than anything
+specific he told me seemed to warrant. The retirement of
+Bismarck to Varzin will not reassure the French, because
+they remember that he was there when the war broke out
+in 1870.</p>
+
+<p>There is observable here, and not least among the
+Russians, a sort of impression that there is to be a movement
+of some kind in the East.</p>
+
+<p>In short, there is a great deal of vague uneasiness and
+fear that peace is in danger.</p>
+
+<p>The German Embassy here has certainly been taking
+great pains to put it about that the prohibition to export
+horses has been decreed solely from economical, and not
+from military motives. That Embassy keeps up very close
+relations with the <em>Times</em> correspondent<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> here, and his
+subordinates. Of course the trouble it has taken has
+increased instead of allaying alarm. Décazes constantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+harps on the string of the influence of England at Berlin,
+and the consolation it affords him to feel sure that it is
+exercised quietly on the side of peace. The position is a
+painful one. Without particular friendships and alliances,
+France is absolutely at the mercy of Germany, and if she
+tries to form such friendships and alliances, she may bring
+the wrath of the great Chancellor down upon her instantly.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Derby to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, March 16, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not know and cannot conjecture the cause of
+Décazes's anxiety. Nothing has passed or is passing in
+any part of Europe to justify alarm as to an early disturbance
+of general peace. But I hear of a similar feeling
+of uneasiness at Berlin; and the Russian Government is
+credited with designs as to the nature of which no two
+persons agree. Until we hear more, I shall be inclined to
+set down all these rumours of wars to the time of year, and
+to the absence of any exciting questions (so far as foreign
+relations are concerned) to occupy men's minds.</p>
+
+<p>I may tell you confidentially that Bismarck has given
+us through Odo Russell a serious warning against the unfriendly
+feelings of the Russian Government towards
+England. He may be only trying to stir up jealousy, a
+game which he often plays, or he may be sincere. I take
+his hint as one not to be slighted, yet not infallibly trusted.
+Gortschakoff is no doubt much disgusted about the Conference;
+the Czar also to some extent; and probably they
+both feel that they had miscalculated the effect of the
+Russian marriage on English policy. But beyond this I
+know no cause of quarrel. Dead calm for the moment.
+I cannot conceive any reason why you should not take
+your leave when you wish it. Paris is always within reach
+if anything new turns up.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is obvious from the above that neither Lord
+Derby nor Lord Lyons felt any very serious apprehensions,
+and the latter was permitted to go home on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+leave at the beginning of April. On April 10, Lord
+Odo Russell wrote to Lord Derby:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Bismarck is at his old tricks again&mdash;alarming the
+Germans through the officious Press, and intimating that
+the French are going to attack them, and that Austria and
+Italy are conspiring in favour of the Pope, etc. Now
+he has succeeded in making the Emperor and the Crown
+Prince believe that France is meditating an invasion of
+Germany through Belgium! And, not knowing any better,
+they are in despair and have ordered the War Department
+to make ready for defence. This crisis will blow over like
+so many others, but Bismarck's sensational policy is very
+wearisome at times. Half the Diplomatic Body have been
+here since yesterday to tell me that war was imminent, and
+when I seek to calm their nerves and disprove their anticipations,
+they think that I am thoroughly bamboozled by
+Bismarck.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In the middle of April there appeared in the
+<em>Berlin Post</em> the celebrated article entitled: 'Is War
+in Sight?' and as it was well known that such
+articles were not written except under official inspiration,
+something akin to a real panic took place,
+more especially when other German papers began to
+write in a similar strain. Letters from Mr. Adams,
+who had been left as Chargé d'Affaires at Paris,
+show the pitiable condition of terror to which the
+French Government was reduced, and the efforts
+made by Décazes to obtain British support. Décazes
+urged that England ought to take an active part
+in protesting against the new theory that one nation
+was justified in falling upon another for no other
+reason than that the latter might possibly prove
+troublesome in the future. He said that he had protested
+to the German Ambassador against the attitude
+of the German Government, after all the assurances<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+that it had received from the French Government,
+and added that if war took place in August, as he
+feared, he should advise MacMahon to retire with
+his army beyond the Loire without firing a shot
+and wait there 'until the justice of Europe should
+speak out in favour of France.' The idea of openly
+identifying England with the French cause did not
+commend itself apparently to Mr. Disraeli.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'I had a rather long conversation about French politics
+with Mr. Disraeli,' Lord Lyons wrote to Mr. Adams on
+April 21st, 'and I found him thoroughly well up in the
+subject. He wishes to encourage confidence and goodwill
+on the part of France towards England, but sees the danger
+to France herself of any such appearance of a special and
+separate understanding as would arouse the jealousy of
+Bismarck.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p>'With a little variation in the illustrations, Décazes's
+language to you was just what he used to me before I left
+Paris. Germany can, I suppose, overrun France whenever
+she pleases, a fortnight after she determines to do so; and
+no one can tell how suddenly she may come to this determination.
+Whether Décazes is wise in perpetually crying
+"wolf" I cannot say. He is naturally anxious to keep
+Europe on the alert, but I am not sure that the repetition
+of these cries does not produce the contrary effect.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>During the second half of April the tension
+began to diminish, but Lord Odo Russell, who was
+certainly no alarmist, felt convinced that, so long
+as Bismarck remained in office, the peace of Europe
+was in jeopardy, for his power had now become
+absolute, and neither the Emperor nor the Crown
+Prince were capable of withstanding him. Writing
+on April 24, he remarks: 'The prospect of another
+war fills me with horror and disgust, and if Bismarck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+lives a few years longer I do not see how it can be
+prevented. The Emperor's powers of resistance are
+over; he does what Bismarck wishes, and the Crown
+Prince, peace-loving as he is, has not sufficient independence
+of character to resist Bismarck's all-powerful
+mind and will.'</p>
+
+<p>A few days later the Belgian Minister at Berlin
+reported to Lord Odo Russell an alarming communication
+made to him by Count Moltke.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, May 1, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Since writing to you to-day, at this late hour my Belgian
+colleague Baron Nothomb has called to tell me that he had
+a long conversation with Moltke yesterday fully confirming
+what is said in my despatch. Moltke added that, much as
+he hated war, he did not see how Germany could avoid it
+<em>next year</em>, unless the Great Powers 'coalesced' to persuade
+France to reduce her armaments to a reasonable peace
+establishment.</p>
+
+<p>Then Nothomb told me that Bismarck had sent Bülow
+to him with the following confidential message: 'Tell
+your King to get his army ready for defence, because
+Belgium may be invaded by France sooner than we
+expect.'</p>
+
+<p>This message Nothomb writes to Brussels to-day. He
+is under an impression that in the event of war, Bismarck
+intends to occupy Belgium, as Frederick the Great occupied
+Saxony when he suspected Maria Theresa of wanting to
+take her revenge for the loss of Silesia. This is curious,
+and you will probably hear more about it from Brussels.
+I write in haste for the Messenger.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The evident desire of Bismarck to fasten a quarrel
+upon France aroused the indignation of Lord Derby,
+who realized that the intervention of Russia was the
+best method of preventing it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Derby to Lord O. Russell.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, May 3, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You seem reassured as to the immediate prospect, and
+the panic in Paris has subsided, but great uneasiness
+remains. Lumley<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> writes to me that the state of things
+seems to him most critical, and the language which you
+report as held by Moltke is unpleasant enough. Münster<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
+has not called for the last few days: when last I saw him,
+his language about French armaments tallied exactly with
+that which you and others report as being held by German
+representatives throughout Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Is there no hope of Russian interference to maintain
+peace? It cannot be the interest of Russia to have France
+destroyed and Germany omnipotent. If the Czar were to
+say that a new war must not take place, and that he would
+not allow it, Bismarck would hardly undertake to fight
+Russia and France combined. I see little other prospect
+of averting mischief, and if it begins, where is it to
+end?</p>
+
+<p>Even here, and notwithstanding the sympathy felt in
+the main for the Protestant German Empire, the outrageous
+injustice of picking a quarrel with France, because she
+does not choose to remain disarmed, would produce its
+effect. There would be a great revulsion of feeling; not
+unlike that which took place when the first Napoleon had
+begun to show his real character and objects. The English
+public knows little about foreign concerns, but it does
+understand that hitting a man when he is down is not fair
+play, and I think in the rest of Europe fear and jealousy
+of the predominant Power would give France many
+adherents.</p>
+
+<p>I do what I can to point this out in a quiet and friendly
+way; but without being sanguine.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p5">May 4. The conversation about Belgium in the House
+of Lords last night led to no result. I think I see a growing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+feeling, indicated by the language of the press, that the
+German demands are not necessarily unreasonable, and
+that we should at least hear more of the case before pronouncing
+judgment.</p>
+
+<p>To judge by the reports which Nothomb sends to his
+own Government, he has been thoroughly frightened, and
+is ready to advise unconditional acceptance of German
+proposals. Is he disposed to be an alarmist? Or has
+Bismarck established a personal hold over him?</p>
+
+<p>We are quiet at this office, busy in Parliament; the
+Session threatens to be long, but it will not be eventful.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On May 6, Lord Odo Russell reported that
+Count Schouvaloff, the Russian Ambassador in
+London, had just arrived at Berlin from St.
+Petersburg, and was the bearer of important tidings.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The good news he brought respecting our relations
+with Russia filled me with delight after the dark allusions
+made to me here at Court and by the Chancellor during
+the winter. As regards Germany and the war rumours,
+Count Schouvaloff gave me the most satisfactory and
+welcome news that the Emperor of Russia is coming to
+Berlin on Monday next, will insist on the maintenance of
+peace in Europe, even at the cost of a rupture with Germany,
+and that he can reckon on the support of Austria in doing so.</p>
+
+<p>How Bismarck will meet the humiliating blow of being
+told by his allies, Russia and Austria, that he must keep
+the peace with France, when he has proclaimed to the
+world that France is ready to take her revenge, it is difficult
+to foretell. But we must not be surprised if it hastens on
+the outburst it is intended to prevent. I hope not, and do
+not expect it, but I shall not be surprised if it does, because
+Austria has really joined Russia. She has become an
+obstacle in the way of German development, which Bismarck
+will try to remove.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It had, of course, been the object of Bismarck
+to sow dissension between England and Russia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+and he had taken elaborate pains to convince the
+British Government that Russia was animated by
+the most hostile feelings. Consequently the extremely
+frank and friendly sentiments expressed by
+Count Schouvaloff were in the nature of an agreeable
+surprise, but the effusion of the Russian Envoy was so
+great that he seems to have slightly overdone the part.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, May 8, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I did not report Schouvaloff's conversation because he
+was going to tell you all he had to say in great detail as soon
+as he reached London. His frankness is fascinating, but
+on reflection it does not inspire absolute confidence. I feel
+at first inclined to believe all he says; but when I think it
+over, it appears too good to be true.</p>
+
+<p>If all he represents himself to have said to Bismarck
+about the power of Russia to coerce Germany under certain
+circumstances be strictly true, Bismarck would scarcely
+want him to succeed Gortschakoff, as he does, if he did not
+feel that he could make a tool of him (Schouvaloff).</p>
+
+<p>According to Schouvaloff, the Czar and Gortschakoff are
+to tell Bismarck next week that a new war must not take
+place, and that if he does not submit and agree, Russia,
+with the concurrence of Austria, is prepared to side with
+France to render war impossible. In all probability, their
+conferences will end in mutual assurances of peace and
+good will, and we shall hear no more of war rumours and
+French armaments until those of Germany are ready; and
+as Bismarck is a match both for the Czar and Gortschakoff,
+I shall not be surprised to hear that he has persuaded them
+to let him have his own way in the end. But this is mere
+conjecture; we shall know more about it all a week hence.</p>
+
+<p>The whole of Bismarck's policy now tends to produce a
+coalition of the peaceful Powers against Germany, and his
+Church policy, to produce dissensions in Germany and
+arrest the progress of unification. It is therefore evident
+that he seeks a conflict for purposes of his own.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I may be wrong, but I cannot but think that he wants
+to mediatize the smaller German Powers and weaken
+Austria so as to render her alliance useless to Russia, France,
+and Italy.</p>
+
+<p>If I understand Schouvaloff correctly, Bismarck endeavoured
+to set Russia against us, as he attempted to set
+us against Russia, and he seemed to expect that Bismarck
+would make Gortschakoff various offers in return for
+Russian co-operation or neutrality. Indeed, he insinuated
+that he thought Bismarck a little out of his mind at times.</p>
+
+<p>The importance of the Czar's language and attitude
+at Berlin is so great that I look forward with anxious
+interest to the results of next week's conferences. For my
+part I have been careful to hold the language you tell me
+you hold at home on these matters in a friendly spirit to
+Germany and in the interest of European Peace.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On the same date (May 8), the Emperor Alexander
+and Prince Gortschakoff started on the journey to
+Berlin from which so much was anticipated, and the
+British Government addressed a despatch to Lord
+Odo Russell which was also circulated at Paris,
+Vienna, St. Petersburg, and Rome, instructing him
+to use all his power to put an end to the misunderstanding
+which had arisen between France and
+Germany. It is worthy of note that when this
+despatch was communicated to the Austrian Government,
+that Government alone declined to instruct
+their Ambassador at Berlin in the sense desired, on
+the ground that it would irritate Bismarck.</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor Alexander and Gortschakoff arrived
+at Berlin on May 10, and the question of peace or
+war must have been decided with extreme rapidity,
+for Lord Odo Russell dined with Bismarck on that
+night, and the latter took the opportunity to express
+his thanks 'for the very friendly offer, which he
+highly appreciated, as a proof of good will and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+confidence on the part of Her Majesty's Government.'
+At the same time he expressed some naïve
+surprise at the offer, maintaining that all his efforts
+tended in the direction of peace; that the war
+rumours were the work of the stockjobbers and the
+press, and that France and Germany were on
+excellent terms! Under the circumstances, it is
+highly creditable to Lord Odo Russell that he
+received this communication with becoming gravity.</p>
+
+<p>Gortschakoff who made his appearance after the
+dinner professed great satisfaction at Bismarck's
+language; but in conversation with Lord Odo
+Russell on the following day (May 11), Bismarck
+spoke with much irritation of Gortschakoff's intervention,
+which he attributed to senile vanity, and
+stated that he had refused Gortschakoff's request
+for a categorical promise not to go to war, because
+such a promise would have implied the existence
+of an intention which he repudiated.</p>
+
+<p>On May 12, Gortschakoff sent a telegram to St.
+Petersburg which gave dire offence: <em>La paix est
+assurée:</em> and the Emperor of Russia requested
+Lord Odo to inform Her Majesty's Government
+that he felt certain of the maintenance of peace.
+Bismarck, secretly furious at the frustration of his
+plans, outwardly betrayed no ill-humour and put
+a good face upon his failure.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, May 15, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Although Bismarck is as civil, confidential, and amiable
+to me as ever, I fancy that he must be frantic at our combined
+action with Russia in favour of peace, which took
+him by surprise. However that matters little, and he will
+get over it, as he wishes to keep well with us. But he will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+seek an opportunity of paying out Gortschakoff for having
+come the Peacemaker and Dictator over Germany again.</p>
+
+<p>For my part, I was delighted at the course pursued by
+Her Majesty's Government and at the instructions you
+sent me, which I feel sure will do good, both at home and
+abroad.</p>
+
+<p>The old Emperor William, whose bodily health is
+wonderful, but whose mental powers are declining, will have
+been surprised and grieved at the Queen writing to the
+Czar instead of to himself. Bismarck thinks it is due to an
+intrigue of the Empress Augusta to spite him. His hatred
+and abuse of the Empress is a perfect mania. The Crown
+Prince sent for me to talk the incident over. He asked
+many questions, but was himself reserved, beyond deploring
+Bismarck's nervous state and policy which had been the
+cause of such useless alarm. He asked whether I saw any
+likely successor to Bismarck if his health broke down. I
+said plenty would be found in Germany when there was
+a demand for them, which Bismarck's popularity at
+present excluded. The Prince, though reserved, was very
+cordial and very anxious for information.</p>
+
+<p>Your conversation with Schouvaloff is word for word
+what he said to me. I note one mistake on his part. He
+spoke with certainty of Austrian co-operation, which failed
+us at the last moment.</p>
+
+<p>I was much impressed by the warmth and eloquence of
+the Czar's utterances of friendship for England. He
+seemed really to feel deeply what he said, and to wish with
+all his heart for an alliance with us. Gortschakoff was less
+ardent: it is not in his nature; but he was persuasive and
+consistent in his friendly assurances. Schouvaloff's attitude
+and language will show whether my impressions are correct
+or not.</p>
+
+<p>Münster's assurances to you in regard to the German
+army are quite correct, I believe; only it is better prepared
+for war than any other army in the world, and at ten days'
+notice. But when Bismarck tells him to lament the alarm
+he has created himself, and to ascribe it to Ultramontane
+influences in the press, Münster must feel rather ashamed
+of his master.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>We may certainly reckon on peace for this year. Next
+year peace must depend on the state of Bismarck's combinations
+for the completion of his task&mdash;the unification of
+Germany&mdash;Russia permitting. He left for Varzin this
+morning, which will do him good; but he returns on the
+27th instant to receive the King and Queen of Sweden who
+stay three days in Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>I did not mention in my official report that the Czar
+asked me to tell him frankly, if I was at liberty to do so,
+whether I thought Bismarck had designs on Austria. I
+told him what the wishes of the National Party were,
+and what they expected of Bismarck their leader, and
+that I believed he contemplated weakening Austria to
+strengthen Germany. The Czar thanked me and said
+that although suspicion had been suggested to him from
+many sides, he could not get himself to believe in so much
+perfidy.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Such then in brief is the story of the great war
+scare of 1875, a tale which has been told by many
+writers with embellishments suggested by either
+Anglophil or Russophil proclivities. Which of the
+two countries, England or Russia, contributed most
+towards the preservation of peace will probably
+always remain a subject of discussion, but Bismarck
+at all events never forgave Gortschakoff his vainglorious
+telegram, and he used afterwards to maintain
+that, whereas the English had 'behaved like
+gentlemen,' the conduct of the Russian Government
+came under a distinctly opposite category.
+It is a remarkable fact that in spite of the indisputable
+evidence furnished not only by the foregoing
+correspondence, but from other sources, Bismarck
+subsequently had the hardihood to assert that the
+war scare of 1875 was a myth invented partly by
+Décazes for stockjobbing purposes and partly by
+the Ultramontane press&mdash;even the English press<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+being according to his assertions under Ultramontane
+influence. In the authoritative work 'Bismarck:
+his Reflections and Reminiscences' it is
+lightly dismissed as an elaborate fiction. 'So far
+was I from entertaining any such idea at the time,
+or afterwards, that I would rather have resigned
+than lent a hand in picking a quarrel which would
+have had no other motive than preventing France
+from recovering her breath and her strength.'
+Busch, in his better-known narrative, is also discreetly
+reticent on the subject, and the only reference
+to it occurs in some notes dictated to him by
+Bismarck in 1879. 'As far back as 1874 the threads
+of the Gortschakoff-Jomini policy are to be found in
+the foreign press&mdash;oglings and advances towards
+an intimacy between Russia and France of <em>la
+revanche</em>. The rejection of these addresses is due
+rather to France than to Russia. This policy does
+not appear to have originated with the Emperor
+Alexander. It culminated in the period 1875-77,
+when the rumour was circulated that Gortschakoff
+had saved France from us, and when he began one
+of his circular despatches with the words, <em>Maintenant
+la paix est assurée</em>. You remember Blowitz's
+report in the <em>Times</em>. Read it again and mention
+the matter. His account was correct, except when
+he spoke of an anti-French military party in Prussia.
+No such party existed.'</p>
+
+<p>It is instructive to compare with these passages
+the statements made in the 'Memoirs and Letters
+of Sir Robert Morier.'</p>
+
+<p>The crisis was definitely passed when Lord
+Lyons returned to Paris, and he found the French
+overflowing with gratitude for the exertions of Her
+Majesty's Government in favour of peace. Both<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+Marshal MacMahon and the Duc Décazes were profuse
+in their expressions, and the latter, in particular,
+said that he attached immense importance to the
+fact that the same sentiments in favour of peace
+had been expressed simultaneously at Berlin by
+England and Russia. At the same time, while
+much encouraged at the thought that the danger
+of an attack from Germany had been averted, he
+affirmed very positively that he should not on this
+account relax his endeavours to avoid giving umbrage
+to the German Government. On its being
+pointed out to him that it was obvious that the vast
+and increasing sums which figured in the Budget
+of the French War Department had produced in
+Germany a very general impression that France
+was preparing for an immediate retaliatory war,
+he gave the somewhat unconvincing assurance that
+a vote for clothing the reserve would be struck out,
+but would be replaced by a supplementary vote
+introduced in the winter, when a vote for clothing
+might seem 'natural and unimportant.' According
+to Décazes, both the Emperor of Russia and Gortschakoff
+had, on more than one occasion, used language
+which showed that they viewed with satisfaction
+the efforts of France to restore her military
+power, and he endeavoured to impress upon the
+Ambassador that Holland first, and then Belgium,
+were next to France most in danger from German
+ambition. Finally, he pointed out with great satisfaction
+that Russia had not lent an ear to the offers
+which had, he presumed, been made to her at Berlin,
+to forward any ambitious views she might have in
+the East, and he said that he considered this particularly
+important, because it removed the only obstacle
+which might have interfered with a cordial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+co-operation, on the part of the British and Russian
+Governments, for the preservation of the peace of
+Europe. Whether any such offers were made or
+refused is not known, but as the next few years were
+to show, Décazes's conclusion was about as faulty
+a one as could well be imagined.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'As regards public opinion in this country,' said Lord
+Lyons. 'I find no diminution of the conviction that at
+the present moment a war with Germany would be fatal
+to France, and that very many years must elapse before
+France will be able to undertake such a war with any
+prospect of success. All Frenchmen are earnestly desirous
+that their army should be as speedily as possible placed
+upon such a footing as to give them some security against
+attack, and some influence in the world&mdash;but few look forward
+to there being a time when they can contend with
+Germany, unless they have a powerful ally to fight beside
+them in the field.</p>
+
+<p>'In the meantime I must confess that the gratitude
+towards England, which I hear expressed by men of all
+parties, far exceeds anything that I could have expected.
+On the one hand it shows perhaps the greatness of the
+terror from which the French have just been relieved;
+but on the other, it is, I think, an indication of a sincere
+disposition to accept heartily and ungrudgingly any proof
+of good will from England.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which
+broke out in the summer of 1875, and the Turkish
+bankruptcy which followed a little later, provided
+the French with fresh cause for apprehension, as
+it was realized that the Eastern Question was once
+again reopened, and that any differences that might
+arise between England and Russia would be to the
+disadvantage of France. The French, who now saw
+the hand of Bismarck in everything, believed that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+he had a plan of sending the Austrian army into the
+Herzegovina, and the Russian army into some other
+part of Turkey, with a view to sending the German
+army into France, and much as the Government
+would have liked to have done something for the
+French bondholders, and at the same time to have
+recovered some of the influence formerly enjoyed
+at Constantinople, it was afraid to take any action
+which might irritate the omnipotent chancellor.
+Perhaps this was just as well, as far as England was
+concerned. The project of a European Conference
+at Constantinople, which had been already mooted,
+did not appear in any way to be conducive to British
+interests. Austria and Russia were not in agreement
+as to the policy to be pursued. The former
+had every reason to fear a Slav development on
+the frontier. On the other hand, the Emperor of
+Russia could not, even if he wished it, afford to
+disregard the feeling of the Russians in favour of
+their fellows in race and in religion. Both Andrassy
+and Gortschakoff foreseeing that neither could obtain
+a solution entirely acceptable to opinion in his own
+country, desired apparently to throw a part of the
+responsibility on a European Conference. But in
+such a Conference Russia would be supreme. France
+and Germany would bid against each other for her
+favour. Austria would be afraid to set herself
+against her, and if England had any different views,
+she would always be outvoted.</p>
+
+<p>Attention was shortly, however, diverted to
+another quarter. On November 17, Lord Derby
+learnt that it was absolutely necessary for the
+Khedive to procure between three and four millions
+sterling before the end of the month, and that he
+was preparing to sell his Suez Canal Shares.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Derby to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">10, Downing Street, Whitehall, Nov. 17, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am not quite easy in my mind about a story I hear, to
+the effect that the Khedive is negotiating with a French
+Company for the sale of his interest in the Suez Canal. If
+the telegram has not been sent to you officially, I will
+enclose it. Now his bias has always hitherto been against
+the pretensions of Lesseps, and he has been of use to us
+in keeping that rather irrepressible gentleman in order.
+If he withdraws from the concern, and a French Company
+takes his place in it, our position will be very unfavourably
+altered. Have you heard anything of the negotiations in
+question? I really think the matter very serious, and it
+is one of which the English public will fully understand the
+importance.</p>
+
+<p>I think I am not violating any confidence in enclosing
+to you for your personal use only an extract from Odo
+Russell's letter to me received on Monday which seems to
+throw light on the situation. I can add to it nothing in
+the way of comment.</p>
+
+<p>Your information as to the position of the French
+Government is satisfactory. It looks as if the worst of
+their troubles were over.</p>
+
+<p class="p5">P.S.&mdash;Since I began this note I have received further
+details, which I send you, and, I may add in strict confidence
+that we are prepared ourselves to take over the
+Viceroy's interest, if it cannot be kept out of French hands
+by other means.</p>
+
+<p>I find Lord Odo's letter is with the Prime Minister, so
+the extract I promised must wait till next messenger.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The result of Lord Lyons's inquiries, which had
+to be made very discreetly, so as not to create
+suspicion, was the discovery that the Khedive was
+actively negotiating with a French Company, but
+it was believed that he wanted to mortgage, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+not to sell the shares. Lord Derby's next letter
+to Lord Lyons shows how reluctantly he took action.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Nov. 19, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>From General Stanton's<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> telegrams it appears that the
+Khedive has no intention of selling his interest in the Suez
+Canal, though he may be obliged to mortgage it for a time.
+He has promised to give us notice, if, from any cause, he
+should change his mind, and to give us the option of
+purchase.</p>
+
+<p>I sincerely hope we may not be driven to that expedient.
+The acquisition would be a bad one financially, and the
+affair might involve us in disagreeable correspondence both
+with France and the Porte. But there is a strong feeling
+here about not letting the Canal go still more exclusively into
+French hands, and as we contribute nearly four-fifths of the
+traffic, it cannot be said that this jealousy is unreasonable.
+There are intrigues of all sorts going on at Cairo, but I
+think we may reckon on the Khedive being true to us, if
+not tempted too strongly. I rely on you to tell me all you
+hear on the subject.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The memorandum of Lord Odo Russell referred
+to by Lord Derby is a lucid exposition of the European
+situation at the time and of Bismarck's attitude
+with regard to the other Powers, more especially
+Russia.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, Nov. 12, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Bülow is loquacious and straightforward on most
+subjects; but his reticence on Oriental affairs is remarkable.
+I have repeatedly tried the experiment of talking over
+what the newspapers say, to draw him out, but he becomes
+silent and embarrassed, and seeks to change the subject,
+and when questioned, replies that he has not lately received
+any information from Constantinople.</p>
+
+<p>I have in consequence tried to find out through confidential
+sources what it all means, and putting two and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+two together, I make out that Bismarck feels uncertain
+of Russia, and does not wish to be committed too soon.
+Since Gortschakoff assumed the post of peacemaker
+between France and Germany, Bismarck has failed to
+re-establish confidential relations with Russia. In regard
+to Oriental affairs, Gortschakoff, instead of being satisfied
+to act with his German and Austrian allies exclusively, has
+sought to keep up an equally balanced understanding with
+England, France and Italy: from which Bismarck suspects
+that Gortschakoff does not mean to let him have his own
+way and wishes to control Germany through the united
+action and agreement of the other European Powers. This
+does not suit his book, and above all, he fears that Russia
+wishes to keep on good terms with England and France;
+which would, in his opinion, neutralize the exclusive action
+of the three Northern Powers, over which he hoped to
+establish his own influence to the exclusion of all other
+Governments. By lending his assistance to Russia in the
+East, he calculated on Russian neutrality in regard to his
+own plans, as was the case during the late war with France.</p>
+
+<p>The joint action of Russia and England last May, in the
+interest of peace, took him by surprise, destroyed his
+fondest calculations, and left him isolated and disappointed
+to reflect on the possibility of a peace coalition against
+Germany, which he could not break up without the certainty
+of Russian neutrality or assistance. He feels that
+Gortschakoff has abandoned him for the time being, that
+he has lost the confidence of the Emperor Alexander,
+and that while they live, there is but little hope of a
+change of policy in Russia, favourable to his plans&mdash;viz.
+the breaking up of Austria and the neutralization of
+the minor German sovereignties.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck reckoned much on his friend Schouvaloff, but
+Schouvaloff turned traitor last May, and is less German in
+England than he was in Russia, which Bismarck cynically
+attributed to the influence of wine and women.</p>
+
+<p>Now Bismarck, I am told, affects honest indignation at
+the manner in which Russia is deceiving and misleading
+Austria in regard to Turkey; but in what that consists,
+I do not yet clearly understand.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>When he returns to Berlin he may possibly speak to
+me on these subjects, and I should be glad to know whether
+there is anything in particular which you may wish me
+to say, or not to say.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole the present situation of affairs seems to
+me favourable to the maintenance of peace.</p>
+
+<p>Of course we must be prepared for an occupation of
+some portions of European Turkey by Austria and Russia,
+but that need not necessarily lead to war.</p>
+
+<p>I have also endeavoured to find out what the views of
+the National Party in regard to the East really are, and I
+find that the breaking up of European Turkey would be
+received with satisfaction, for the Turk has no friends in
+Germany. The German provinces of Austria are looked
+upon as the natural and inevitable inheritance, sooner or
+later, of the German Empire, for which Austria might be
+compensated in Turkey, with or without Constantinople.
+Some people talk wildly of giving Constantinople to Greece,
+as less likely to be objected to by the Western Powers.
+But even Russia might take possession of Constantinople
+without objection on the part of Germany. Anything
+calculated to break the influence of France in the East,
+which is still thought to be too great, would be popular in
+Germany, and more especially if the interests of the Latin
+Church could be injured by it.</p>
+
+<p>England may have Egypt if she likes. Germany will
+graciously not object.</p>
+
+<p>Since May it has become manifest that Russia has the
+power to hamper the movements of Germany and arrest
+her progress effectually, and that Germany can undertake
+nothing new without the passive consent of Russia. This
+power must be so intolerable to Bismarck that he is sure
+to exercise all his skill in drawing Russia out of the combined
+arms of the Great Powers, back into his own exclusive
+embrace. This, a difference between Russia and
+Austria about Turkey, might enable him to achieve.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck's endeavours last winter to make us suspicious
+of Russia, and <em>vice versâ</em>, are now fully explained.
+His failure must add to the general irritation he suffers
+from.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The situation will become clearer when he returns to
+Berlin in the course of the winter.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Odo Russell's view of the situation tallied
+with what Gortschakoff had said to Décazes, Thiers,
+and other people at Vevey, earlier in the year. The
+preservation of peace seemed, therefore, to rest
+largely on Russia, and it was unfortunate that the
+Eastern Question presented itself in a form which
+certainly favoured Bismarck's efforts to create
+differences between Russia and Austria, and between
+Russia and England.</p>
+
+<p>Further inquiries in Paris with regard to the
+Khedive's action seemed to confirm the view that
+he was seeking to mortgage the shares, but to whom
+they were to be mortgaged was unknown. On
+November 27, there arrived through Lord Tenterden,
+Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office, the
+intelligence that Her Majesty's Government had
+bought the shares.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Tenterden to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, Nov. 25, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Derby is ill and at home. I am not sure therefore
+whether he is writing to you to-night to tell you about
+the Suez Canal. General Stanton telegraphed that Lesseps
+(supposed to be backed by French Government) was
+offering four millions sterling (fr. 100,000,000) for the
+Khedive's shares, but that the Khedive would sell them to
+England for the same sum. Thereupon he was instructed
+to offer this amount, and the Khedive accepted this morning.
+The contract was signed to-day, as we have just heard by
+telegram. Messrs. Rothschild advance the money on the
+security of the shares, £1,000,000 in December, and the
+rest by instalments, the Khedive to pay 5 per cent. on
+the shares while they remain without bearing interest (the
+interest being hypothecated for the next twenty years).</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+<p>Her Majesty's Government are to apply to Parliament
+to take the bargain off the Rothschilds' hands.</p>
+
+<p>Practically, therefore, subject to Parliament's assent,
+Her Majesty's Government have bought the shares.</p>
+
+<p>I am writing in the greatest hurry but the above is a
+correct outline of the case.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose the French will make an ugly face.</p>
+
+<p class="p5">P.S. It has all been kept very secret so far, so pray be
+supposed to be ignorant till Lord Derby tells you.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The action of Her Majesty's Government was
+taken none too soon, for as Lord Lyons reported,
+the shares very nearly fell into the hands of the
+French. On November 26 the purchase of the
+shares was publicly announced, and on the following
+day Lord Derby had an interview with the French
+Ambassador on the subject.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Derby to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, Nov. 27, 1875.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have seen d'Harcourt. He came to hear what I
+could tell him about the Suez affair, and I told him the
+whole story exactly as it is.</p>
+
+<p>He says that there will be some soreness in France, and
+I am afraid he is right. You know the facts, and I need
+not therefore repeat them. The points which I dwelt on
+were these:</p>
+
+<p>We did not wish that the Khedive would sell, nor was
+there on our part the slightest desire to alter the <em>status quo</em>.
+But we could not help his selling, and as he had decided
+on doing so, we took the only effectual steps to prevent the
+possibility of the shares falling into hands whose possession
+of them might not be favourable to our interests. The
+suddenness of the whole affair was not our doing. If we
+had delayed, other purchasers would have come forward.
+We had to take the opportunity as it offered itself or lose
+it altogether.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>It is not in the power of the British Government to
+act as Continental Governments can, through third parties&mdash;banks,
+financial companies, and the like. What we do,
+we must do openly, and in our own names, so that Parliament
+may judge of the whole transaction. This I said in
+answer to a remark made by d'Harcourt, that the act
+would have had less political significance if done through
+some company, or otherwise, and not directly in the name
+of the State.</p>
+
+<p>We hold even now a minority of the canal shares. The
+question for us is not one of establishing an exclusive
+interest, but of preventing an exclusive interest from being
+established as against us.</p>
+
+<p>I have always expressed my opinion that the best
+arrangement for all the world would be the placing of the
+Canal under an International Commission, like that of the
+Danube; and I think so still. I knew, I said, that the
+French Government were not prepared to entertain any
+such idea, and I therefore did not put it forward; but if
+France and other Governments altered their way of thinking,
+I did not think any difficulties would be made by England.</p>
+
+<p>M. d'Harcourt expressed some fear, or at least thought
+that some would be felt, lest the Khedive should be unable
+to pay his promised £200,000 a year, and we in consequence
+should use some means to coerce him, which would practically
+establish England in authority in Egypt. I assured
+him that nothing was further from our thoughts. We
+wanted the passage through Egypt as free for ourselves as
+for the rest of the world, and we wanted nothing more.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The purchase of the Suez Canal shares has always
+been surrounded with much glamour and mystery,
+but in reality it seems to have been a perfectly
+straightforward and business-like proceeding, to
+which no reasonable objection could be taken. So
+far from being a profound political <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup</i> long calculated
+in advance, the action of Her Majesty's
+Government was totally unpremeditated, and as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+far as Lord Derby was concerned, it was undertaken
+with reluctance, and under the conviction that
+England was making a bad bargain. So little confidence
+did Lord Derby feel, and so averse was he
+from incurring any further responsibility in Egypt,
+that he unhesitatingly declined a new proposal of
+the Khedive that he should sell to the British
+Government his contingent interest in the profits
+of the Suez Canal above five per cent., and informed
+the French of the fact. The British public, which
+warmly approved the transaction, seems to have
+been a better judge of the Foreign Secretary's
+action than he was himself. The four millions'
+worth of shares acquired by the British Government
+represented nine-twentieths of the entire amount,
+and it is interesting to compare these figures with
+the estimate put upon the value of the Canal by
+Lesseps. On July 11, 1874, the latter called upon
+Lord Lyons and said that two persons from England
+had sounded him about the sale of the Canal; one
+a member of the English branch of the Rothschild
+family, and the other a Baron Emile d'Erlanger, a
+well-known banker living in Paris.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Rothschild was no doubt Nathaniel,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> M.P. for
+Aylesbury, who was here in the beginning of June. Lesseps
+said that on being pressed by him to state a sum, for which
+the Canal might be purchased, he had said a milliard
+(£40,000,000) and he declared that although this sum had
+startled even a Rothschild, it was only a fair one. His
+object with me seemed to be to give the impression that
+the shareholders would not sell the Canal for any sum.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Although the French could hardly be expected
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>to approve of the action of the British Government,
+which, if it had occurred some years earlier, would
+have caused a storm of indignation, they were,
+under existing circumstances, forced to accept it with
+tolerable equanimity, as it was of no use to add a
+coolness with England to their other difficulties;
+and, in addition, they gained a great deal by the
+rise which took place in Canal shares and Egyptian
+securities. Lesseps professed himself to be delighted
+and Bismarck sent a message to say that the policy
+adopted by Her Majesty's Government had met
+with the support of the German Government.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">THE EASTERN QUESTION</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>(1876-1878)</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>In January, 1876, the gradual spread of the insurrection
+in Turkey led to the concoction by the three
+Imperial Powers of the so-called 'Andrassy Note,'
+and the great question was whether England would
+consent to take part in its presentation, in view of
+her traditional attitude towards Turkey. Lord
+Derby, in a letter to Lord Lyons, stated that Bismarck
+was very anxious that we should do so, and
+explained that although 'one can trust none of these
+Governments, it is as well to give them credit for acting
+honestly until the reverse is proved,' and he was
+therefore in favour of such a course himself. In a
+letter<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> addressed to Mr. Disraeli, asking for his views
+on the subject, Lord Derby remarked that: "It is too
+late to stand on the dignity and independence of the
+Sultan; a Sovereign who can neither keep the peace
+at home, nor pay his debts, must expect to submit
+to some disagreeable consequences." Lord Lyons, on
+being consulted, concurred with Lord Derby's views.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 14, 1876.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I hardly see how England is to avoid supporting the
+Andrassy Note. If we stand aloof we shall stand alone.
+If our secession produces no effect and the Turks still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+accept, we shall be in the same foolish position France was
+in 1840; with this serious inconvenience, that if the
+Andrassy plan fails in pacifying the Herzegovina, we shall
+be blamed for the failure, as having caused it by breaking
+up the unanimity of Europe. If the Turks do not accept,
+they will be ready enough to throw the responsibility upon
+us, and to call upon us to get them out of the scrape into
+which they will get with the other Powers. I think that
+by consenting we should leave the Powers least excuse for
+attacking Turkey, or at all events, least excuse for pushing
+on without consulting us. I should not be for qualifying
+our support too much, for, if we do, the failure of the plan,
+which is in my opinion more than probable, will still be
+attributed to us, and a support, given as it were against
+our will, and restricted to the least possible amount, will be
+treated very much as opposition. I say all this because
+you ask me to tell you what I think: but there are two
+important elements for forming an opinion which I lack.
+I mean a knowledge of public opinion in England, and a
+knowledge of the real feelings of the three Empires towards
+each other.</p>
+
+<p>The despatch from Odo Russell looks as if Bismarck
+was preparing for the possibility of a quarrel with Russia.
+Ever since 1870 he has been very naturally trying to
+turn every opportunity of dividing England from France
+to account. But since you joined Russia in insisting upon
+peace last year, and still more since the purchase of the
+Suez Canal shares, he has no doubt formed a higher opinion
+of England, and conceived the idea that she still has the
+will and the means to play a foremost part in European
+politics. Like everybody else, he feels sure that if there
+is a quarrel between Russia and Germany, France will side
+with Russia. In order to prevent his enemy being all
+powerful at sea, he must have the English fleet not merely
+neutral, but on his side. The only advantage he can offer
+to England is support on the Eastern Question, and it is
+on this question that he would have the best chance of
+embroiling her with Russia. What part he means Austria
+to play, I find it more difficult to guess. That he intends
+some day, and by some means, to annex German Austria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+to the German Empire I make no doubt, but I suppose
+he is in no hurry to add so large a Roman Catholic and
+Southern population to the electors of the Diet of the
+Empire.</p>
+
+<p>The worst service we could render France at present
+would be to set up a separate understanding with her in
+opposition to Germany.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The French Government was desperately anxious
+that England should not separate herself from the
+other Powers, partly from fear that such action
+would cause European complications, and partly
+because it was particularly desirous of getting credit
+with Russia for having brought English opinion
+round to Russian views. Her Majesty's Government
+finally decided to join in the Andrassy Note, although
+it would appear from Lord Derby's language, that
+the Cabinet were not unanimous on the question.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile French internal politics remained in
+the same confused and unsatisfactory state which
+had prevailed for so long. The divisions amongst
+the Conservatives had made Monarchical Government
+in any form impossible, and yet they refused
+to acquiesce, even temporarily, in the moderate
+form of Republic which had been established, and
+seemed bent upon doing all they could to exchange
+their King Log for a King Stork in the shape of a
+Red Republic. The elections which took place in
+the beginning of the year 1876 resulted in large
+Republican majorities both in the Senate and in the
+Chamber, and in the case of the former, this result
+was singularly unfortunate for Marshal MacMahon,
+as it deprived him of the power of forcing a dissolution.
+A letter from Lord Lyons to the Prince of
+Wales, who was on his way back from India, summarizes
+the French internal situation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 7, 1876.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I cannot give your Royal Highness a very satisfactory
+account of French politics, although I do not take so
+gloomy a view of them as many Frenchmen do. The large
+number of advanced Republicans in the new Chamber of
+Deputies, the not inconsiderable number of Ultra-Radicals,
+and the complete defeat of the Moderate Conservatives in
+the Elections not unnaturally frighten the upper classes
+of Frenchmen. But in fact so many of the members are
+quite new men, that one cannot foresee how parties will
+group themselves. The Chambers meet to-morrow, and
+in about a month's time it will be possible to form an
+opinion as to how things are likely to go. So long as
+Marshal MacMahon is at the head of the State and of the
+army, there can be no fear of any serious disturbance of
+material order; and if he is at the same time firm and conciliatory
+with the new Chamber, and willing to take a
+Ministry from the more moderate members of the majority,
+he will very probably be rewarded by finding how tame
+demagogues can become in office. I understand the
+Marshal insists upon having Ministers of War and Foreign
+Affairs whom he knows and in whom he has confidence,
+but that he is willing to let the other Departments be filled
+by men taken in the ordinary way from the majority.</p>
+
+<p>So far we have not this year been disturbed, as we were
+last spring, by rumours of war, and agriculture and commerce
+are flourishing in France, and the revenue goes on increasing.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Egyptian Financial Question Your Royal
+Highness will learn all particulars on the spot. Neither
+that, nor the Herzegovina question are settled at this
+moment, but we must hope that they are on the eve of
+being settled.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>One of the new features in the French political
+situation was the recovery by Gambetta of his
+former influence, and as he was now a person of
+considerable influence, Sheffield was utilized for
+the purpose of eliciting his views. The late Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+George Sheffield, who acted as Lord Lyons's private
+secretary for over twenty years, was a well-known
+figure in the political and social world of Paris, and
+included in his acquaintance most people both there
+and in London who were worth knowing. Not only
+did he enjoy much personal popularity, but as he
+was known to be completely in Lord Lyons's confidence,
+he was the recipient of much confidential
+information, and generally believed to be a model
+of discretion. One of his peculiarities was that, in
+spite of much practice, he spoke very imperfect
+French with an atrocious accent, but this circumstance
+never appeared to prejudice him in any way,
+and it may incidentally be noted that the possession
+of what is called a good French accent is a much
+overrated accomplishment in France itself. Frenchmen
+rarely wish to listen; they desire to talk themselves
+and to be listened to; to them, as a rule,
+a foreigner is a foreigner and nothing more, and
+whether he speaks French well or ill, they seldom
+notice and rarely care.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta, having secured a listener in the
+person of Sheffield, was no doubt delighted to expound
+his views on the situation. First of all,
+speaking on the subject of Bonapartist successes at
+the elections, he said that Bonapartism would die
+out as soon as it was realized that a moderate
+Republic was firmly established. He expressed
+great delight at the fall of Thiers (Thiers had once
+described him as a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">fou furieux</i>), and said that under
+him no real self-acting Republic could ever have
+been formed, that it would have fallen to pieces at
+his death, and indeed that the best thing Thiers
+could do for the Republic would be to die. For
+Marshal MacMahon's entourage he had a great dislike,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+but for the Marshal himself much respect, and he
+aspired to be Prime Minister under him&mdash;a post
+to which he considered that he was fully entitled,
+but which the Décazes, Broglie, the Marshal's secretaries
+and the Maréchale and her friends would do
+their best to prevent him obtaining. He professed
+confidence in being able to keep the extreme Radicals
+in order; said that the Red Flag was as obnoxious
+to him as the White Flag; that he was not inclined
+to grant a general amnesty to the Communists, and
+that he would not agree to the re-establishment of
+the National Guard. He also professed himself to
+be in favour of Free Trade, and asserted that the
+commercial Treaty concluded by Napoleon III.
+accounted for many of the Bonapartist successes.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta's aspiration of serving under the
+Marshal was never fulfilled, the above-mentioned
+entourage being presumably too strong for him; but
+the upper classes in France continued to look forward
+to the future with undiminished apprehension.
+French capital, reversing the present process, began
+to pour steadily into England, and it was stated
+that the rich Radicals were not the last in sending
+their money abroad.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'Marshal MacMahon's position,' wrote Lord Lyons at
+the end of March, 'does not improve. He has so little
+political knowledge or ability that, as events have shown,
+he exercises little or no personal influence in politics.
+There is also a jealousy springing up with regard to
+Emmanuel d'Harcourt and other people about him who
+are supposed to direct his political conduct. The officers
+now at the head of the army would follow the Marshal very
+far in any Conservative direction, but it may be questioned
+whether they would submit patiently to being placed under
+a Radical Minister of War&mdash;Gambetta for instance. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+the Marshal's political intelligence that is doubted. No
+one has a word to say against his disinterestedness, his
+honour, or his courage.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Marshal MacMahon, a simple and amiable soldier,
+who knew nothing about politics, was credited with
+an overwhelming admiration for the capacity of
+his private secretary, Emmanuel d'Harcourt. Upon
+one occasion, the question of applying for the extradition
+of a criminal who had fled to America
+was being discussed in his presence. 'Well,' said
+the Marshal, 'we must telegraph at once to San
+Francisco.' 'Pardon, M. le Maréchal,' interposed
+d'Harcourt, 'Washington, not San Francisco, is
+the capital of the United States.' The Marshal was
+so astounded at the profundity of his private secretary's
+knowledge that he was only able to ejaculate:
+'<em>Ce diable d'Harcourt! il sait tout!</em>'</p>
+
+<p>Many stories were told of his engaging simplicity
+of character, of which the following will serve as an
+instance. Upon one occasion he was inspecting a
+military academy, and was informed that there was
+present a young Arab chieftain of distinguished
+lineage to whom it would be desirable to address
+some words of encouragement. The young man was
+brought up, whereupon the following brief colloquy
+ensued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Marshal: '<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Ah! c'est vous qui êtes le nègre?</i>'</p>
+
+<p>Arab Chief: '<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Oui, M. le Maréchal.</i>'</p>
+
+<p>Marshal: '<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Eh bien, mon garçon, continuez!</i>'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>By a curious combination of circumstances,
+Marshal MacMahon, with his inadequate political and
+intellectual equipment, was still able for some time to
+fill the place of a constitutional sovereign, and virtually
+the French were living under a constitutional<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+Monarchy, with an Executive possessing large powers,
+rather than under a Republic. This state of things,
+however, could not last for long, and it seemed as
+if the choice lay between the youthful Prince Imperial
+and the establishment of a really Radical
+Republic.</p>
+
+<p>In one respect the French had every reason to
+congratulate themselves, namely, upon the re-organization
+of their army, and some of the political
+consequences which were likely to result from this
+increased and increasing military strength are pointed
+out in the following letter.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Sept. 26, 1876.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As soon as General Conolly finishes his visits to the
+Autumn Man&oelig;uvres and makes his reports, it may perhaps
+be desirable for me to send you some observations on the
+political consequences of the great progress the French
+Army is making. All the officers of Foreign Armies and
+the English officers especially who have been out with the
+French troops this autumn, seem to agree in regarding the
+improvement as being undoubted and very considerable.
+In short, it may not unreasonably be expected that in about
+three years from this time, the French Army will be in
+such a state, that France will count for as much or nearly
+as much, in the balance of power in Europe, as she did
+before 1870.</p>
+
+<p>The different phases of public opinion since the peace
+of 1871 may be described as follows. At first, rage and
+mortification produced a wild and unreasoning cry for
+revenge. This was followed by a depression almost
+amounting to despair. In this state of things the rumours
+of an intended attack by Germany in 1875 produced nearly
+a panic. Since that time hope and confidence have
+gradually returned. The general sentiment now is that
+France is safely 'biding her time.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Under the influence of this sentiment, the French
+acquiesce patiently in the present apparent eclipse of
+French power; they disapprove of any attempt on the
+part of the Government to put itself prominently forward
+in European politics; they desire to preserve peace and
+tranquillity in Europe at almost any price; they wish to
+disarm suspicion, and to be allowed three or four years
+more to recruit their strength. Their policy consequently
+is to adjourn as far as possible all questions.</p>
+
+<p>Their ultimate object in all they do, is to recover their
+lost Provinces; but however confident they may be of
+recovering in a few years their old position in the world,
+I do not believe that they contemplate, as the immediate
+result, an attack upon Germany. I do not think that they
+at all foresee a time at which they could run the risk of
+making such an attack singlehanded. What they do
+intend, is to put forward with vigour their own views with
+regard to the numerous questions they now leave more or
+less in abeyance, and to contract if possible foreign alliances
+on equal terms.</p>
+
+<p>One of the questions with regard to which they will be
+disposed to change their tone very considerably will be
+that of Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>Another may possibly be that of the Newfoundland
+Fisheries, if we do not succeed in effecting some sort of
+settlement of it in the meantime.</p>
+
+<p>A third may be the extension of their possessions in
+Cochin China, and of their protectorate of Annam.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to alliances, that which they will first seek
+will no doubt be the alliance of Russia, and in a case of
+great emergency, they would make great sacrifices of
+Western interests to obtain it.</p>
+
+<p>They will desire to keep on good terms with England,
+so far at all events as to avoid throwing her into the arms
+of Germany, but as they are not likely to conceive hopes
+of obtaining effectual assistance from England towards
+recovering Alsace and Lorraine, they will not be so eager
+for an English as a Russian alliance.</p>
+
+<p>Another contingency to be kept in view is that a new
+President or a new Dynasty, desirous of consolidating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+themselves by a little military glory, may be led to direct
+an attack upon whatever quarter it may be easiest to
+do so.</p>
+
+<p>I will not however go on with mere speculations of this
+kind. Of the truth of the conclusions to which I have
+come, I entertain very little doubt. In two or three years
+France will not be in the same accommodating frame of
+mind in which she is now, and will have very much more
+powerful means than she has now of enforcing attention
+to her wishes. All questions therefore in which the influence
+of France is hostile, should be settled as quickly as possible.
+The restoration of the strength of France may be found
+useful in redressing the balance of power, but, anyhow, it
+should be taken into account in all political calculations.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It was not long before these anticipations were
+justified, but for the present, relations between
+England and France remained on a friendly footing,
+no doubt much to Bismarck's displeasure, who, at
+this period, was continually urging us to take
+Egypt and not to do anything else. As a matter of
+fact, if we had seized Egypt in 1876, it would not
+have had the immediate effect of embroiling us
+with France. On the contrary, all those who had a
+pecuniary interest in Egypt thought that they would
+gain by our taking possession of the county, while
+the great majority of Frenchmen looked upon the
+thing as inevitable, and thought it better to put a
+good face upon the matter. Any contradiction of
+the supposed English designs upon Egypt, however
+sincere and positive, met with no credence at all.</p>
+
+<p>There is an instructive extract on the subject,
+contained in a letter of Lord Derby of December 6,
+1876.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>It is evidently useless to say that we don't want Egypt
+and don't intend to take it: we must leave our friends to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+be convinced by the event. I have no doubt that everybody
+out of France would be glad that we should seize the
+country. Russia would like it, as making us an accomplice
+in her plans. Germany would like it still more, as ensuring
+our being on uncomfortable terms with France for some
+years to come. Italy would see in it a precedent and a
+justification for seizing Tunis; Spain, the same, in regard
+to Morocco. But you may be assured that we have no
+such designs and are not going to run into adventures of
+this kind.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There can be no possible doubt as to Lord Derby's
+sincerity; indeed, he was so constitutionally averse
+from an adventurous foreign policy, that a year or
+two later, Lord Salisbury said of his ex-colleague
+that he could never have brought himself to annex
+the Isle of Man. It is interesting to note that, in
+the above forecast of international brigandage, Tunis
+and not Tripoli was allotted to Italy, the designs
+of France in the former direction not apparently
+being suspected.</p>
+
+<p>Before the end of 1876 the experiment of trying
+to work the institutions of a Constitutional Monarchy
+in France under an elective chief magistrate had very
+nearly come to a deadlock. The Left were determined
+to get real power into their hands and not to
+allow themselves to be thwarted by the conservative
+tendencies of the Marshal and his personal
+friends. On the one hand, the Marshal stoutly
+maintained that he would have Ministers of his own
+choice in the Departments of War and Foreign
+Affairs, whereas the Left, so long as they had a
+majority in the Chamber of Deputies, were, under
+Constitutional Government, clearly entitled to decide
+the matter. But the question was complicated,
+because the Marshal, as well as the Ministers, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+in a position to resort to resignation of office, and a
+severe Ministerial crisis ensued. Ultimately, the
+Marshal succeeded in keeping his Minister of War and
+his Minister for Foreign Affairs, but he was forced
+to accept, as Prime Minister, M. Jules Simon. The
+latter, although an able and conciliatory man, had
+been a member of the Revolutionary Government
+of National Defence, and having been forced to
+yield so far to his opponents, it seemed not improbable
+that the Marshal before long would be
+obliged to have recourse to Gambetta himself.
+Gambetta, as has been shown, had lately become
+much more moderate in his views, but in the opinion
+of many people he still represented the Red Spectre,
+and it was believed that his assumption of office
+would mean Communism, Socialism, equal division
+of property, judges appointed by election for short
+periods, the prohibition of marriage, and the suppression
+of religion. The desire of the Bonapartists was
+that the Government should fall into the hands of
+the extreme Left, in the hope that the people, from
+fear of the above contingencies, would clamour for
+the Empire; but what was more remarkable was,
+that many Orleanists as well as moderate and timid
+Conservatives wished to drive the Marshal to a dissolution
+in the hope of a reaction. There could have
+been no better proof of their short-sightedness and
+incapacity, for the mass of the electors were not
+in the least likely to make fine distinctions, and if
+really afraid of the Republic would certainly vote
+for nothing short of the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>The Conference which had assembled at Constantinople
+in the autumn in the hope of settling
+the Eastern Question, with Lord Salisbury as one of
+the British representatives, broke up in January,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+1877, and it became clear that war between Russia
+and Turkey was unavoidable. Lord Derby, who
+was the reverse of sanguine by temperament, had
+never entertained any hopes of its success, and was
+quite determined that, whatever happened, there
+should be no British intervention. 'I am amused,'
+he wrote to Lord Odo Russell,<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> 'by your description
+of the Russo-German suspicions entertained against
+us; these fellows make us act as they would act in
+our place. They can neither deal straightforwardly
+themselves, nor give anybody else credit for doing so.</p>
+
+<p>'If you are asked what steps England is going
+to take next, your true answer should be "none."
+We shall wait, say little, and pledge ourselves to
+nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>The break up of the Conference filled the French
+with alarm.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 5, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>It is believed here that Bismarck is determined to
+produce at least such a scare as he did two years ago, if not
+to do more. The idea provokes some anger, but more fear.
+Nevertheless, the danger is greater now than it was last
+time; for although France is very far from being ready
+for even a defensive war, she does feel so much stronger
+than she did in 1875, as not to be willing to bear quite as
+much from Germany as she would have borne then.</p>
+
+<p>The impressions prevalent here are:</p>
+
+<p>That Bismarck is very much disappointed by the result
+of the Constantinople Conference, which he had hoped
+would have ended by setting all Europe by the ears.</p>
+
+<p>That he is very much irritated by the cordiality which
+existed between the English, French, and Russian Plenipotentiaries,
+and by the considerable part taken by
+Chaudordy in the proceedings.</p></blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>That he is very much annoyed by the number of
+Socialist votes given in the recent German elections, and
+is eager to destroy Paris as the hotbed of socialism.</p>
+
+<p>That he wants a cry to make the Germans pay their
+taxes willingly.</p>
+
+<p>That he looks with an evil eye upon the material prosperity
+of France.</p>
+
+<p>That he considers the Exhibition of 1878 as a sort of
+defiance of Germany, and is ready to go great lengths to
+prevent its taking place.</p>
+
+<p>These are French views, not mine; but I do agree with
+the conclusion which the greater and the wiser part of the
+French nation draw from them: namely that it behoves
+France to be more than ever prudent and cautious, and
+more than ever careful not to give Germany any pretext
+for a quarrel.</p>
+
+<p>France is certainly not at all likely to oppose Russia
+in anything that country may undertake in the East; but
+she is still less likely to give her any military assistance
+there. She might not be able to resist the bait, if Russia
+held it out, of an offensive and defensive alliance against
+Germany, but in that case she would more than ever want
+her own forces on this side of Germany. This contingency,
+however, is too improbable to be worth considering.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite true that France has a large force on her
+Eastern Frontier, and that she is hard at work there, but
+considering the difficulty of guarding that frontier, such
+as it has been left by the Treaty of 1871, her objects may
+well be supposed to be purely defensive.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Salisbury is to arrive this evening and to go on to
+London without stopping.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is interesting to note that Lord Salisbury,
+while at Constantinople, formed a very poor opinion
+of the capacity of Sultan Abdul Hamid&mdash;an opinion
+which he must have had occasion to revise later on.
+'Salisbury reports ill of the new Sultan; calls him
+a poor weak creature, from whom no help is to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+expected. But his judgment is the result of a single
+interview.' So wrote Lord Derby to Lord Odo
+Russell.</p>
+
+<p>The French representative, Chaudordy, had been
+very active; his zeal had alarmed his own countrymen,
+and was supposed to have aroused the indignation
+of Bismarck, but one of the singular
+features of the Constantinople Conference seems
+to have been the action of the representatives of
+the small Powers such as Spain, Belgium, and
+Holland, who did their utmost, and not entirely
+without effect, to spirit the Turks up to resistance.
+In March there was much coming and going at
+Paris on the part of Ignatieff and Schouvaloff, who
+were thought to be endeavouring to secure what
+Russia wanted without war, and the former proceeded
+on a special mission to London, but the
+negotiations with the Turks broke down, and war
+was declared before the end of April. Letters from
+Lord Derby describing the state of feeling in England
+dwell upon the action of Gladstone, who, according
+to Schouvaloff, 'was much more Russian than the
+Russian Government,' and whose language was,
+'only suited to a Panslavonic Society.'</p>
+
+<p>The outbreak of the war between Russia and
+Turkey was extremely distasteful to the French
+for various reasons. They were convinced that it
+had been instigated by Bismarck, and that it would
+result in the overwhelming preponderance of Germany
+on the continent, and were equally convinced
+that it would lead to a great extension of English
+influence in the Mediterranean including an occupation
+of Egypt; consequently, Décazes, who was
+anything but a straightforward politician, and
+anxious beyond everything to hunt with the Russian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+hounds, and run with the English hare, was constantly
+expressing fears that if an English force
+was sent to the East, the opportunity would at once
+be seized by Bismarck for falling upon France. A
+congenial opportunity for this intriguer arose over
+the question whether Egypt should be called upon
+to render pecuniary and military assistance to
+Turkey, and an unsuccessful attempt was made to
+persuade the Khedive that if he refused to comply,
+he would be protected. By these means Décazes
+would have secured the treble advantage of making
+himself agreeable to Russia, of pleasing the French
+bondholders, and, to a certain degree, of thwarting
+England in Egypt. Unluckily for him, the scheme
+miscarried; but in spite of ardent professions of
+neutrality, he contrived to render services to Russia
+which were of some considerable service.</p>
+
+<p>He used his influence to obtain a loan for her in
+Paris; his agents in Egypt supported the Russian
+threats to blockade the Suez Canal, and the effect
+of the Franco-Russian understanding was to force
+Germany to make greater sacrifices in order to
+retain the friendship of Russia by furthering Russian
+policy in the East. One of the methods by which
+the Germans sought to ingratiate themselves with
+Russia took the remarkable form of insisting (as the
+British Ambassador at Constantinople pointed out)
+that Russian subjects who remained in Turkey
+during the war, should not only be entitled to remain
+there undisturbed, but permitted to enjoy all the
+privileges of the capitulations, this being apparently
+the German conception of neutrality.</p>
+
+<p>The double game which Décazes was playing
+was not, however, popular in France. It was felt
+that his intrigues with Russia tended to throw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+England into the arms of Germany, and his enemies
+asserted that he was too fond of speculation to
+be a thoroughly satisfactory Minister. However,
+an internal political crisis of an exceptionally important
+nature in May diverted French attention from
+all foreign questions for the time being.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 16, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Marshal has been getting more and more uncomfortable
+about M. Jules Simon's giving way in the Chamber of
+Deputies to the more advanced Left, and now, as you will
+have learnt from my telegrams, he has turned him out.
+It is believed that if matters came to extremities, the
+Marshal will bring out a thoroughly reactionary Ministry
+which he has <em>in petto</em>. The Duc de Broglie, Prime Minister,
+General Ducrot, Minister of War, and so on. This would
+necessitate a dissolution, for which the consent of the
+Senate would be necessary. But it is very doubtful
+whether the country is ripe for anything of the kind, and
+whether the result might not be the return of a still more
+radical Chamber than the present; and then either the
+Marshal must retire and hand the Government over to
+Gambetta or some one still more advanced in opinion, or
+make a real <em>coup d'état</em> by means of the army.</p>
+
+<p>However he will no doubt try to form a Ministry rather
+more Conservative than the last and still able to get on
+somehow with the present Chamber of Deputies; but this
+will be difficult.</p>
+
+<p>One of the Marshal's grounds of dissatisfaction with
+M. Jules Simon was that he would not, or could not, get
+from the Chamber powers which would enable the Government
+to restrain the press from attacking Germany in the
+dangerous manner in which it has written against that
+country lately.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The action of the Marshal in turning out Jules
+Simon, who was supported by a majority in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+recently elected Chamber, and replacing him by the
+Duc de Broglie, who was extremely unpopular,
+might well be described as a very strong measure.
+Décazes, who was supposed to be in the plot,
+remained in office, and there was therefore not much
+probability of a change in foreign policy; but it
+was evident that there were now only two real
+parties in France&mdash;the Republicans and the Bonapartists.
+The possible restoration of the Empire
+filled with dismay Lord Derby, who considered that
+the last six years had witnessed a great purification
+both of public and private life in France, and that
+if the French were going back to a 'Government
+of adventurers, adventuresses, and priests,' it would
+be a grave misfortune for Europe; and he was most
+anxious to let it be known that there was no sympathy
+in England for Bonapartist intrigues.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 18, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>There are of course among the Right, many who, wisely
+or unwisely, rejoice that Marshal MacMahon has broken
+with the Left, but there is hardly any one who does not
+think the moment ill chosen, the reasons assigned insufficient,
+and the mode adopted unskilful. Décazes is
+represented, or misrepresented, as having been at the
+bottom of the whole thing.</p>
+
+<p>He came up to me last night, and asked if I had not
+something to say to him about the sentiments he had
+expressed to me with regard to the dangers to English
+interests in Western Europe. He also expressed anxiety
+to know how the question of the wine duties was getting
+on in England. He is, I suppose, anxious to have something
+to show that he is successful in cultivating intimate
+relations with England.</p>
+
+<p>While he seems so desirous of frightening us about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+Holland, he shows no inclination to admit that we have
+any interests at all in the East. In fact his plan seems to
+be to involve us in a quarrel with Germany, while he keeps
+safely aloof: to curry favour with Russia by taking to
+himself the credit of keeping our forces out of the East; to
+prevent any increase of our power in the Mediterranean,
+and to be well with us, but, if possible, better still with
+Russia. Still, on the whole, I am glad he remains in. I
+should not have been sorry to have Broglie himself as
+Minister for Foreign Affairs, but we might have a much
+more embarrassing Minister than Décazes, and he is easy
+going and conciliatory in most matters. Only we must not
+be surprised if he repeats to Russia, and Russia repeats to
+Germany, anything likely to impair our relations with
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The other Ministers would almost seem to have been
+chosen for the express purpose of defying the majority of
+the Chamber. Broglie, of whom I have a high opinion,
+is especially unpopular. I suppose the notion has been
+to put as far as possible representatives of all shades of the
+Right into the Cabinet, in order to be able to form a
+coalition strong enough to obtain a vote in the Senate for
+dissolution. It is not certain that such a vote could be
+carried, the Conservative majority in the Senate being
+only 2 or 3 on ordinary occasions.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Décazes took advantage of the occasion actually
+to suggest a secret alliance with England for the
+protection of Holland and Belgium, and stated that
+if it were ever signed, he should communicate
+to no single person except the Marshal himself.
+It is hardly credible that he could have been in
+earnest in making this suggestion, for not only
+are Foreign Secretaries not in the habit of making
+secret treaties unknown to their chiefs and colleagues,
+but Lord Derby was the last person who
+would be likely to enter into an enterprise of this
+description. In the meanwhile Bismarck, as an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+impartial friend, was warning Lord Odo Russell
+that Décazes was only waiting for an opportunity
+to throw England over, in order to prove his devotion
+to Russia, and there was little doubt as to which
+alliance he would prefer if he could have his choice.</p>
+
+<p>Exercising his right, Marshal MacMahon prorogued
+the Chambers, and it being foreseen that
+there would be a general election in the autumn,
+his Government set to work at once in preparing
+for the fight by getting rid of as many Republican
+functionaries as possible, in accordance with well-established
+custom.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 25, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Neither the private history of the dismissal of Jules
+Simon, nor the attitude of the successful party, is calculated
+to give one good hope for the future.</p>
+
+<p>The Marshal is supposed to have been mainly influenced
+by M. de St. Paul, a Bonapartist and intimate friend of
+his, of whom he sees a great deal; by Monsignor Dupanloup,
+Bishop of Orleans; by the aides-de-camp and people about
+him, and (it is whispered) by Madame la Maréchale.
+Fourtou may have been in the plot, but I believe Broglie
+was taken by surprise. Décazes wanted to get rid of Jules
+Simon and Martel, but to put temporarily in their places
+some members of the Left, who would have got on for a
+time with the Chamber. Jules Simon had proved a complete
+failure as Prime Minister; he had neither the confidence
+of the Marshal nor even that of the Cabinet, and he
+had lost all influence in the Chamber. He would very soon
+have fallen of himself if he had been left alone.</p>
+
+<p>The language of the Right tends to accredit the supposition
+which will be most fatal to them in the country. They
+speak and act as if the question was one between the
+aristocracy and the canaille. In fact they wound the
+sentiment of equality which is the strongest political and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+social sentiment in France, and consequently the present
+crisis is beginning to be looked upon as the last struggle
+of the old society against the new.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the great question as to what is to be done
+when the Marshal finds himself finally defeated by the
+Chamber, the party now triumphant talk of the use of
+military force. The Marshal has often declared to his
+friends that nothing shall induce him to resort to an extralegal
+use of force, but the wilder spirits of the party say
+that if the Marshal will not use the army, a general will be
+found with less scruple, and they hint at Ducrot. But
+this would be falling into the most fatal of all systems, that
+of military <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">pronunciamentos</i>. The Marshal himself might
+do a great deal with the army, and would probably keep it
+together, but it does not by any means follow that any one
+general seizing power in Paris would be submitted to by the
+rest. It is believed that even now, General Berthaut, the
+Minister of War, was with difficulty induced to remain in
+office, and yielded only to the Marshal's special request,
+on condition that he should be relieved in the autumn.</p>
+
+<p>It is however to be hoped that all this talk about
+military <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coups d'état</i> is simply talk; and that we shall get
+out of this difficulty quietly at last. In the meantime the
+upper ten thousand in Paris are indulging themselves in
+all sorts of illusions, and the Paris shopkeepers are dreaming
+of the restoration of a Court and of a great expenditure on
+luxuries.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Chambers met again in June, and although
+the country was perfectly quiet, the scenes which
+took place in the Chamber of Deputies were a sufficient
+indication of the fury with which the politicians
+regarded each other. The violent and disorderly
+conduct was chiefly on the side of the Right, there
+being a certain number of Bonapartists who provoked
+disturbances with the object of discrediting
+Parliamentary Government as much as possible.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand even the moderate men on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Left began to talk of revolutionary measures to be
+adopted when they got back into power again,
+such as the suspension of the irremovability of
+judges, the impeachment of Ministers, and the dissolution
+of religious congregations. On June 22,
+the dissolution was voted by the Senate by a
+majority of twenty. It was decided that the elections
+should be held in three months' time, and both
+parties made their preparations for an uncompromising
+fight, Marshal MacMahon beginning the
+campaign with an order of the day to the army
+which smacked disagreeably of a <em>coup d'état</em>, not
+to say a <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">pronunciamento</i>. Subsequently, having
+been assured of the support of the Comte de Chambord&mdash;a
+somewhat questionable advantage&mdash;he proceeded
+on an electoral tour in the South.</p>
+
+<p>The general election took place in October, and
+resulted in the crushing defeat of the Marshal and
+his Ministers in spite of the labours of prefects,
+magistrates, mayors, policemen, and priests, who had
+all been temporarily converted into electioneering
+agents. The exasperation of parties reached an
+almost unprecedented point, and Décazes admitted
+that the country was in a state of moral civil war.
+The partisans of the Government talked of a second
+dissolution, of proclaiming a state of siege during
+the new elections and conducting them with even
+more administrative vigour than the last. The
+Republicans announced their determination to annul
+the elections of all the official candidates and to
+impeach the Ministers and even the Marshal himself,
+if he did not retire or name a Ministry having
+their confidence. As for the Marshal himself, he
+found little support at this crisis from the monarchical
+parties, except on the part of the Orleanists, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+saw that he must be kept in at all hazards; but the
+Orleanists had recognized that France, for the
+moment at least, was Republican, and their press
+owned openly that to persist in Personal Government
+instead of reverting to Constitutional Government
+was to march to certain disaster. The Marshal,
+in fact, found himself confronted with two alternatives:
+either he must accept Gambetta's demand
+to submit or resign; or he must run the risk of
+getting rid of his difficulties by means of a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup
+d'état</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 26, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The prospect does not grow clearer, though I see, or at
+all events like to fancy I see, a cooling down of the fury
+which prevailed a week ago.</p>
+
+<p>The Marshal is supposed to be a man of one idea, and
+his one idea at the present moment is said to be that he is
+bound to remain at his post.</p>
+
+<p>This idea might lead him to name a Ministry from the
+majority, but then he would have to dismiss all the Fourtou
+prefects, whom he solemnly promised to stand by.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the idea might carry him on to a
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup d'état</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The plan devised by his opponents, and indeed by some
+of his friends, for getting him out of the scrape, is that the
+Senate should refuse to support him in extreme measures,
+and that he should then declare (which would indeed be
+true) that he had never promised to stay in opposition
+to both branches of the Legislature.</p>
+
+<p>Communications which have been going on between
+the Elysée and the Duc d'Audiffret Pasquier, the President
+of the Senate, are said to have shown that the Senate
+cannot be depended upon either to vote a second dissolution,
+or to carry on the Government in conjunction with
+the Marshal, and without the Chamber of Deputies.</p>
+
+<p>I register as rumours, strongly requiring confirmation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+that the Marshal has summoned the Chasseurs d'Afrique
+to reinforce the garrison of Paris; that in consequence of
+disagreements between Grévy and Gambetta, the Republicans
+offer the Presidency of the Republic to General
+Chanzy, the Governor-General of Algeria; that the more
+moderate Liberals have hopes of bringing in the Duc
+d'Aumale as President, if MacMahon should actually retire.</p>
+
+<p>As the population is disarmed and there is no National
+Guard, there can be no need to increase the numbers of
+the garrison of Paris. If any fresh troops were really
+brought up, it would be from mistrust of the spirit of those
+already here.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta must have departed very far from his usual
+political tact, if he has set up claims in opposition to Grévy.
+Grévy would be quite alarming enough, and to establish
+the doctrine that the President must be a general would
+bring France to the level of a South American Republic.</p>
+
+<p>It would be a curious result of an election, in which the
+Orleans or Right Centre Party has met with a signal defeat,
+that an Orleans Prince should be placed at the head of the
+State.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The proper course for the Marshal to have adopted
+was to have accepted the position of a Constitutional
+President; to have appointed a Ministry which would
+have obtained a majority in the Chamber; and to
+have restrained it from excesses by the exercise
+of his legitimate authority, and by means of the
+power of the Senate. Instead of this, however, he
+first attempted to form a Ministry of the same
+colour as the old one; then tried to meet the Chamber
+with his old Ministers, and finally fell back upon
+perfectly unknown people who carried no weight
+at all, and who professed to represent no party.
+To this Ministry the Chamber refused to pay any
+attention, and after many threats in the Elysée
+organs to violate all laws; to collect and spend<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+money without the sanction of Parliament, to
+suppress newspapers, and to proclaim a state of
+siege, the Marshal surrendered ignominiously in
+December, and accepted a Ministry in which M.
+Dufaure was President of the Council, and M.
+Waddington, Minister for Foreign Affairs. Thus,
+what should have been a natural and proper consequence
+of the elections was converted into an
+humiliating defeat, and there had been such a series
+of solemn declarations, none of them adhered to,
+that all confidence in the Marshal had disappeared.
+Of the more important members of the new Government,
+M. Dufaure was a lawyer with Conservative
+leanings. M. Waddington, who had been educated
+at Rugby and Cambridge, was intimate with Lord
+Lyons and the Embassy generally, but it was
+doubtful whether his connection with England would
+prove an advantage, as he might find it necessary
+to demonstrate that he was not too English. M.
+Léon Say, the Minister of Finance, was supposed to
+be a Free Trader; and M. de Freycinet, who was
+destined to take part in many subsequent administrations,
+had been Gambetta's Under-Secretary of
+State for War, and was looked upon as Gambetta's
+representative in the Cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>On December 17, MacMahon gave Lord Lyons
+his version of the history of the crisis.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Dec. 18, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I went to the weekly evening party at the Elysée last
+Saturday. The Marshal took me aside, saying: 'I want
+to tell you why I did it.' He proceeded to tell me that
+he had been led to remain in office and make a Parliamentary
+Ministry, by a warning he had received from abroad that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+if he retired, or if he established a clerical Ministry, war
+would be the inevitable consequence.</p>
+
+<p>So far the Marshal: what follows may be mere gossip.</p>
+
+<p>On the afternoon of December 12, the Marshal had
+quite determined <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">d'aller jusqu'au bout</i>; either to obtain
+from the Senate a dissolution of the Chamber of Deputies,
+or to give in his resignation. He was in consultation with
+General Rochebouet, who was at the time Prime Minister,
+about drawing up a message in this sense, when a letter
+was brought in, the bearer of which sent in a message
+begging that the Marshal would receive him at once. The
+letter was either written by the German Emperor, or at
+all events it convinced the Marshal that the bearer was sent
+to give him a message direct from His Imperial Majesty.
+The Marshal accordingly received him alone, and he said
+he was a Prussian officer who had been sent by the Emperor
+to entreat the Marshal to remain at the head of the Republic,
+at all risks, and on any conditions; and not to establish a
+Government which could be represented as being clerical.
+The message is said to have represented that the Emperor
+himself was most anxious for peace, but that he should not
+be able to restrain 'other people,' if a clerical or a radical
+Government were allowed to be established in France.</p>
+
+<p>This sounds so like gossip that I should hardly have
+thought it worth while to repeat it, if it had not tallied
+rather curiously with the statement the Marshal himself
+volunteered to make to me about his motives.</p>
+
+<p>The 'other people' are supposed to be neither more nor
+less than one other person&mdash;Prince Bismarck&mdash;and the
+message is represented as having been sent by the Emperor
+William without the knowledge of the Chancellor, or of the
+German Ambassador here.</p>
+
+<p>Prince Bismarck's enemies, and they are of course
+numerous enough here, like to argue from appearances that
+he has quite lost the confidence of the Emperor, and some
+of them, who profess to have peculiar means of obtaining
+information, say that he made three conditions with the
+Emperor, as those on which alone he could continue to
+serve him. 1st, that he should have <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">carte blanche</i> in the
+Government; 2nd, that the Empress should reside at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+Coblentz or Baden rather than at Berlin; and 3rd, that
+certain people, of whom he gave a list, should be removed
+from Court. As a natural consequence, Bismarck's illness
+is attributed to his not having obtained the consent of his
+Imperial Master to his conditions; and it is said that he
+will not recover until his terms are complied with. This
+story of the conditions appears to me to be a very outrageous
+one, and I am quite unable to say whether there is any
+admixture of truth in it. Those who recount it, love to
+draw from it prognostications of the fall of the Great
+Chancellor.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Whether the story of the Marshal's mysterious
+visitor was true or not, his defeat marked a decisive
+epoch in French internal politics; the Republic
+was now firmly established and cannot be said to
+have been in any dangers since, unless the vagaries
+of the impostor Boulanger be excepted.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since the beginning of the war between
+Russia and Turkey, Lord Derby had continually
+asserted that it was practically no concern of ours,
+and that he was quite determined not to be drawn
+into any intervention whatsoever. But as the
+Turkish resistance collapsed, and as it became more
+and more evident that there was nothing to prevent
+the Russians from exacting any terms they chose,
+unless some form of intervention took place, Her
+Majesty's Government decided to call Parliament
+together. Lord Derby was anxious to explain that
+this action had no sinister significance.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Derby to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Dec. 21, 1877.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You are not unlikely to be asked the meaning of Parliament
+being called together earlier than usual. The
+explanation is simple. We see a growing excitement on
+the question of the war; we are menaced by an agitation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+friendly but troublesome, having for object to drive us
+into war, and with a counter movement on the other side.
+We think that much useless talk will be stopped; the real
+opinion of the country be tested, and the Ministry relieved
+from the annoyance of perpetual criticism which it cannot
+reply to, if every peer and M.P. can say what he has got
+to say at Westminster, rather than at a county dinner or
+borough meeting.</p>
+
+<p>Those who have confidence in us will not be sorry to
+hear our views explained by ourselves; those who have
+not, will have no further opportunity of talking mysteriously
+about the country being committed to this, that, or the
+other, without Parliament having a voice in the matter.
+For it is clear that if we meant to act on our own responsibility,
+and leave Parliament no choice except to ratify or
+to condemn what we had done, we should not shorten by
+one-half the interval that remains during which only such
+action is possible.</p>
+
+<p>It is possible that there may be in France some renewal
+of suspicions as to English designs on Egypt. If so, you
+may dispel them by the most decided language you can
+use. We want nothing and will take nothing from Egypt
+except what we have already, and what other Powers share
+equally with us. We shall continue to work in harmony
+with the French, and hope and expect the same from them.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Derby was the most cautious and unenterprising
+of men, and he already perhaps felt some
+suspicions as to the soundness of his colleagues in
+the Cabinet; but the assurance to be given to the
+French Government with regard to Egypt seems,
+on the face of it, somewhat gratuitous, if not rash.
+The situation in Turkey might have resulted in our
+being forced to go to Egypt at short notice, and
+only five years later he, Lord Derby, found himself
+a member of a Liberal Government which had been
+forced to adopt that very course.</p>
+
+<p>When the British Parliament met in January,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+the war was already practically ended, and the
+commissioners were treating for an armistice and
+for the preliminaries of peace. The Queen's Speech
+announced that although neither the Russians nor
+the Turks had infringed the conditions on which
+the neutrality of England depended, it might be
+necessary to ask for money and to take precautions,
+and on January 23, the Mediterranean fleet was
+ordered to pass the Dardanelles and to proceed to
+Constantinople. This action brought about the
+resignation of both Lord Derby and Lord Carnarvon,
+but upon the countermanding of the order to the
+fleet, Lord Derby resumed office. On January 28,
+the basis of the peace negotiations having been
+communicated, the Government asked for a vote
+of six millions, and in consequence of alarming
+intelligence, received from Mr. Layard the British
+Ambassador at Constantinople, the fleet was again
+ordered definitely to proceed to that city. Political
+excitement reached its climax, and light-hearted
+Jingoes, quite incapable of realizing the inadequacy
+of British military resources, proclaimed their readiness
+to fight any possible adversary.</p>
+
+<p>If it eventually became necessary for England
+to take active steps to secure her interests in the
+East, it was quite clear that no assistance whatever
+could be expected from France. M. Waddington
+took an early opportunity to assure Lord Lyons
+most emphatically that France wanted nothing for
+herself, and that she desired no acquisition of territory
+either in the Mediterranean or elsewhere; but
+whilst he disclaimed any desire of this nature, he
+showed in a most unmistakeable manner that an
+occupation of Egypt by England would create a
+bitter feeling in France which would long impair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+the friendly relations between the two countries.
+Speaking most confidentially, M. Waddington said
+that it was all important to France that England
+and Russia should not be involved in hostilities, and
+that France should not be left <em>tête-à-tête</em> with Prince
+Bismarck, whether the latter played the part of
+an enemy or a tempter. In fact, the French Government,
+like its predecessor, was disquieted by a
+notion that Bismarck intended to propose to France
+some arrangement respecting Belgium and Holland,
+which would dismember those States, assigning of
+course to Germany the lion's share of the spoils,
+and it seemed to be apprehended that France would
+be called upon to choose between acquiescing in
+such an arrangement or incurring the active enmity
+of Germany. The fear of the French that they
+might become involved was so strong that Waddington
+was alarmed even at the idea of committing his
+Government to the British declaration as to the
+invalidity of treaties concluded without the participation
+of the Powers; but, in spite of this timorous
+spirit, and although the Treaty of San Stefano was
+not signed until March 3, Lord Derby informed Lord
+Lyons on February 2, that, the support of Austria
+having been obtained, Her Majesty's Government
+were determined to secure a Conference, and it was
+hoped that Italy and France would also exercise at
+least a benevolent neutrality. The uncertainty of
+the position was shown in Lord Derby's language
+with regard to Constantinople. 'I hardly know
+what will happen if the Russians insist on showing
+themselves at Constantinople. It is not a case we
+could make a <em>casus belli</em> of, but I think it would in
+that case be desirable that the Neutral Powers
+should be present too&mdash;that is their fleets&mdash;both as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+a demonstration, and to keep order if necessary.
+The war being over, such a proceeding could not be
+misconstrued, as it certainly would have been before.
+All this, however, is uncertain.'</p>
+
+<p>Judging by subsequent experiences, Lord Derby
+would have spent a long time in securing the presence
+of the International fleets at Constantinople, and
+would have experienced still more trouble in persuading
+them to take any action. The Russians
+fortunately stopped short of Constantinople, and a
+Conference being now a practical certainty, Lord
+Lyons was invited to act as the British representative.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Derby to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">February 6, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Conference will probably come off, and it may come
+off soon, though there is a chance of delay from differences
+as to the place of meeting.</p>
+
+<p>I find the feeling of the Cabinet unanimous, and I fully
+share it, that you are the fittest person to attend the Conference
+on our behalf. Indeed, I know of no one in whom
+I should have equal confidence for a duty of that kind.
+Nothing has been said to the Queen, but I have no doubt
+of Her Majesty's consent.</p>
+
+<p>May I ask you if, considering the importance and difficulty
+of the work, you will be prepared to sacrifice your
+personal convenience so far as to accept the office if offered?
+I fear the sacrifice will be considerable, but let up hope that
+the result will repay your trouble.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>To most people, an invitation of this character,
+conveyed in so flattering a manner, would have
+had an irresistible attraction; but Lord Lyons was
+one of those persons to whom notoriety was indifferent,
+if not obnoxious, and who much preferred
+to confine himself to doing his own business in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+practical and unostentatious spirit. He, however,
+felt it his duty to accept, hoping vainly all the time
+that the Conference would never take place at all.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 8, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I wish to offer you my best thanks for your letter of the
+day before yesterday. Your proposal to appoint me to
+represent England at the Conference is very flattering in
+itself, and nothing could be more gratifying than the terms
+in which it is made.</p>
+
+<p>You were so kind as to speak of the sacrifice of my
+personal convenience, but that consideration I will set
+entirely aside. There are feelings of much greater weight
+which make me shrink from the task, and it appears to me
+to be a task peculiarly difficult, and one of which the result
+is, to say the least, extremely doubtful. I may say, too,
+without any affectation of modesty, that I do not think
+myself well qualified for it.</p>
+
+<p>Still these are after all personal considerations which I
+ought not to allow to interfere with any public duty which
+I may be called upon to discharge. If therefore the Queen
+and the Government should determine upon entrusting
+this mission to me, I should undertake it heartily and
+zealously, and do my best to justify their confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Of course nothing can be settled until we know the rank
+and number of the Plenipotentiaries of other Powers, the
+place of meeting, and other particulars, which may have a
+material influence in the selection of the Representative
+or Representatives of Her Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>If however the progress of events should ultimately
+lead to my being chosen, I should be very grateful if you
+would allow me the opportunity of conferring with you
+upon various matters, before any definite arrangements
+are made. There is one to which I attach so much importance
+that I will mention it at once. I trust that you
+will allow me to choose myself the staff to accompany me
+on the occasion. My efficiency and comfort would depend
+mainly on this.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Apart from a disinclination to leave his own work,
+Lord Lyons probably considered that the outlook
+for England at a Conference was by no means reassuring.
+The issue of the Conference really depended
+upon the military position in which England
+and Austria would apparently stand, should the
+Conference itself break up <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">rê infectâ</i>, and at the end
+of February the English position looked to be none
+too favourable, for it depended upon the fleet having
+access to the Black Sea. If we were able to stop
+the Russian communications by sea, the Russians
+would be at the mercy of Austria by land, supposing
+Andrassy's boasts to be well founded; but we had
+no absolute security against the Russians occupying
+Gallipoli at any moment, and no semblance of a
+security of their not occupying the Black Sea exit
+of the Bosphorus, for the Turks were at their mercy,
+and, as pointed out by Mr. Layard, they were quite
+capable of making any arrangement with Russia,
+since they considered that they had been betrayed
+and abandoned by England. Neither, it might be
+added, was there any security that Austria would
+stand firm, for there was always the chance of her
+being bought off with Bosnia and the Herzegovina.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Derby.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 26, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As to the Conference itself all seems more than ever in
+doubt. Unless the Austrians are determined to go to war
+and are visibly ready, and unless we are equally determined
+and equally ready on our side, and unless the Russians are
+convinced of this, there can be no chance of their making
+any concessions. Then, what will the Austrians want?
+To bolster up the Turks, to waste energy in trying to place
+under them again this or that district delivered by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+Russians, would be a very losing game. There must, I
+suppose, be some new Principality or Principalities. If
+anything like a national feeling and a national Government
+can be established in them, their danger will be from
+Russia, and Russia will become their natural enemy, unless
+they are thrown into her arms by a hostility on the part of
+Austria, which will make them feel that Russia alone is
+their defence against Turkey. Then there are the Straits,
+and the difficulty of placing the Turks, or whoever is to
+hold them, in a position to guard them against a Russian
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup de main</i> at least. Ignatieff seems to be already
+working the connection between Egypt and the Porte, with
+a view to getting money out of Egypt for Russia. I am
+inclined to think that the more radically Egypt is severed
+from the Porte, and the less our free action with regard
+to it is hampered by collective guarantees or collective
+Protectorates the safer we shall be.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The correctness of these views has since been
+amply demonstrated by the history of the Balkan
+States. The opinion about Egypt, however, was
+probably not at all to the taste of Lord Derby, who
+appeared to rejoice in divided responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons himself was summoned to London
+early in March in order to confer with the Government
+respecting his procedure at Berlin, and judging
+from his letters to various correspondents, the
+course which Her Majesty's Government proposed
+to adopt was in a state of considerable uncertainty.
+It was, however, a source of much satisfaction to
+him that he would have the co-operation of Lord
+Odo Russell, who was an intimate friend, and in
+whose judgment he felt complete confidence. He
+also got his way about his staff, which was to include
+amongst others, Malet, Sheffield, and Mr. (now Sir
+William) Barrington.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Odo Russell.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">London, March 13, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>My only comfort about this awful Congress or Conference
+is that you will be my partner in it. I hope, if it
+does come off after all, that we may get over it without
+doing harm to our country or to ourselves. I wanted
+them to set me aside and take advantage of the transfer
+to Berlin to put it into your hands; and I still think this
+would be the best plan; but they say that after their
+announcement of my appointment to Parliament, they
+cannot cancel it. Sir Robert Peel has moved a resolution
+that I am not a fit person to represent England at the
+Conference. I shall console myself if he carries it. He
+grounds his motion upon 'my well-known opinions.' I
+suppose he takes my opinions from a wholly unauthorized
+and incorrect account of them which appeared in a letter
+in the <cite>Daily Telegraph</cite> yesterday. Some people suppose
+he wrote the letter himself in order to have a peg to hang
+his motion on. I don't think your difficulties at the Conference
+will arise from strong preconceived opinions of
+mine. I shall try and get our instructions made as precise
+as possible. Could you give me some hints as to the
+particular points which should be decided before we begin?
+You will know how far certain solutions in our sense will
+be feasible or not. It is worse than useless that we should
+be told to aim at impossibilities, and have to yield: though
+there may be of course conditions, which if not admitted,
+will render it necessary for us to retire from the Conference
+altogether.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure you will be the greatest help and comfort to
+me, and I hope I may be a help to you. Please tell me
+anything you wish me to do or say here.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Odo Russell appears to have been equally
+in the dark as to the intended policy of Her Majesty's
+Government.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Odo Russell to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Berlin, March 16, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The feelings you express concerning the Conference are
+so entirely my own that I need say no more, and only hope
+that Lord Derby will give you a better qualified assistant
+than I can be with regard to Oriental Affairs, of which I
+do not really know enough to be of any use to you or to
+the country, beside such authorities as Ignatieff, Lobanoff,
+Calice, Radowitz, Busch, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>You ask if I could give you some hints as to the particular
+points which should be decided before you begin.</p>
+
+<p>I would do so with the greatest pleasure, if I only knew
+what the policy of Her Majesty's Government is likely to be
+in Congress. All I know about it at present is contained
+in Lord Derby's despatch of May 6, and as far as Constantinople
+and the Straits are concerned, I fancy Russia will
+be conciliatory.</p>
+
+<p>You ask further how far certain solutions in our sense
+will be feasible or not.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could answer your question, but can only beg
+of you to tell me first whether we accept the consequences
+of our neutrality, or whether we contest them: whether
+we are going to reject the Turko-Russian Treaty, as we
+rejected the Berlin Memorandum, or whether we are going
+to accept now what we refused then.</p>
+
+<p>Russia is now in possession of Turkey. Germany
+supports Russia.</p>
+
+<p>France and Italy have no wish to quarrel with Russia
+or Germany, and will not offer any serious opposition to
+the Turko-Russian Treaty.</p>
+
+<p>Austria may object to two things: the proposed limits
+of Bulgaria, and the prolonged occupation of Russian
+troops.</p>
+
+<p>If Russia is well disposed, she will consent to a smaller
+Bulgaria and to a shorter occupation.</p>
+
+<p>If she doesn't, Austria must choose between a diplomatic
+defeat, a compromise, or war to turn Russia out of Bulgaria.
+Bismarck will exert all his personal influence in favour of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+compromise to keep the three Emperors' Alliance together
+before Europe in Conference assembled.</p>
+
+<p>The annexation of Armenia and the war indemnity are
+questions which Russia will scarcely consent to submit to
+the Congress at all.</p>
+
+<p>What then is our attitude to be? Please let me know
+as soon as you can, and I will do my best to answer your
+questions.</p>
+
+<p>If we go in for Greek interests we shall have the cordial
+support of Germany and Austria, I think&mdash;but Greek
+interests are in direct opposition to Turkish interests, if I
+am not greatly mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>On hearing of your appointment I wrote to you to
+congratulate myself and to beg of you to grant us the
+happiness of taking up your quarters at the Embassy, and
+also to advise you to bring a numerous and efficient staff,
+as I have not hands enough at Berlin for an emergency.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The letters of Lord Odo Russell at this period
+show that he was completely in the dark as to the
+intentions of Her Majesty's Government, and that
+he was quite unable to get any answer as to what
+was to be their policy with regard to the Treaty
+of San Stefano. He himself was convinced that the
+three Empires had already settled what the result
+of the Congress was to be, and that they simply
+intended to communicate it to Greece, Roumania,
+and other Powers for whom they wished to manifest
+their contempt, such as France and England, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">à
+prendre ou à laisser</i>. Under these circumstances, it
+became doubtful whether it was worth while for
+England to go into a Conference at all and court
+unnecessary humiliation, serious as the responsibility
+would be if such a course were decided upon.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt that much of the prevailing
+uncertainty was due to Lord Derby, who
+with great difficulty had contrived to keep pace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+with his more enterprising colleagues, and whose
+over-cautious temperament had prevented the
+adoption of any really definite policy. But Lord
+Derby, unable to stand the shock of seeing a few
+thousand Indian troops sent to the Mediterranean,
+resigned office on March 28, and the advent of Lord
+Salisbury at the Foreign Office marked a new
+departure in British Foreign Policy.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Salisbury's circular of April 1, 1878, was
+intended to show that the Treaty of San Stefano
+threatened the interests of Europe, and that the
+whole, and not parts of it, as proposed by Russia,
+should be submitted to the Congress. It pointed
+out that the creation of a big Bulgaria, stretching
+over the greater part of the Balkan Peninsula, and
+with ports on the Black Sea and the Ægean, would
+give Russia a predominant influence; that the
+proposed annexations in Asia Minor would give
+Russia control over political and commercial conditions
+in that region, and that the exaction of an
+indemnity which it was impossible for Turkey to
+provide, would enable Russia either to exact further
+cessions of territory or to impose any other conditions
+which might be thought advisable. The
+logic was sound, and at all events Lord Salisbury
+succeeded in producing a definite British policy,
+which his predecessor had signally failed to do.</p>
+
+<p>When Lord Lyons returned to Paris at the
+beginning of April the question of whether there
+was to be a Congress or not was still in suspense.
+French opinion was rather more in favour of
+England on the Eastern Question than had been
+expected, but there was no sign of anything more
+than passive sympathy, and Waddington, who was
+particularly sensitive on the subject, intimated, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+obscurely, that the good will of France depended
+upon England not acting independently of her in
+Egypt. It looked, in fact, as if England would be
+left to bell the cat, although Lord Salisbury's circular,
+as was generally admitted, had immensely raised
+British prestige on the continent. The suspicion felt
+in France as to Russian intentions was shown by
+the failure of agents of the Russian Government to
+negotiate a loan at Paris for thirty millions sterling,
+and Lord Salisbury's letters in the early part of April
+show that, while there were symptoms of yielding in
+Europe, there appeared to be no prospect of those
+concessions with regard to Asia Minor to which Her
+Majesty's Government attached great importance.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, the French Government was
+apparently anxious to act as far as possible with
+England, without committing itself too much, since
+the idea of a Russian naval station in the Mediterranean
+was highly obnoxious; but Waddington was
+hampered, amongst other causes, by the proceedings
+of Gambetta, who was disporting himself in some of
+the European capitals with the object of forming, or
+appearing to form, relations with foreign statesmen,
+which would enable him to put forward a claim to
+become eventually Minister for Foreign Affairs. Waddington
+always in private repudiated responsibility for
+what Gambetta said or did, but the latter was now so
+important a personage that it was necessary to keep
+on good terms with him and to submit to a patronage
+which must have been irksome to French Ministers.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, April 24, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The negotiations for the simultaneous withdrawal of
+the fleet and army from Constantinople proceed very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+slowly. We are making no difficulties, but the Russians
+cannot make up their minds about details, and are probably
+trying to screw some concessions out of the luckless Turks.
+I shall be very glad to see the arrangement succeed, because
+our fleet is doing no possible good there at this moment.
+Whatever value it had, disappeared as soon as the peace
+was signed. But as the Russians seem to be afraid of it,
+we must make the most of it. Possibly, in their secret
+hearts, they entertain very much the same opinion as to
+the position of their armies.</p>
+
+<p>The general negotiations do not improve. Russia
+gives me the impression of a Government desperately
+anxious for peace, and driven on by some fate towards war.
+Andrassy undoubtedly means to have Bosnia; but whether
+he will be satisfied with that I am not so certain. It is a
+possible policy for him to throw the Danube over altogether;
+to secure an outlet for his produce by a railway to Salonika,
+and to accept a simultaneous extension southward in
+parallel lines of Austrian and Russian possession&mdash;whether
+in the form of actual territory, or of vassal states. In that
+case, he will throw us over, and his course will be easy
+enough if he can square the Hungarians. But that may be
+a difficulty. Do you gather any information about his
+objects?</p>
+
+<p>Is it your impression&mdash;as it is mine&mdash;that the French
+are supremely anxious to push us into war?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons's reply to these inquiries gives the
+reasons why the French views with regard to an
+Anglo-Russian conflict had undergone an alteration.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, April 26, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I owe you many thanks for your letter of the day before
+yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>You ask me whether it is my impression that the French
+are extremely anxious to push us into war.</p>
+
+<p>Confidence in their returning military strength, and the
+apparent success of their endeavours to conciliate Germany
+have calmed their fears of Bismarck. They are no longer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+nervously desirous that the forces of England should be
+kept in the west, as a necessary check upon the great
+Chancellor's supposed designs upon Holland, upon Belgium,
+or upon France herself. On the other hand, they have
+given up counting upon Russia as an ally against Germany,
+and have abandoned Décazes's policy of courting her and
+espousing her interests. The result of all this is that they
+are willing enough that the main force of England should
+be employed at a distance from home.</p>
+
+<p>They have been reassured about Egypt, and they
+think that if England is engaged in hostilities with Russia,
+she will be less disposed and less able to interfere with
+France or to separate from her in Egyptian affairs. They
+have lost their great fear, which was that England, instead
+of opposing Russia, would seek a compensation for herself
+in the annexation of Egypt. Thus another of the reasons
+which made them desire that England should abstain from
+all action has disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>There are, moreover, the patriots, who look far ahead,
+who do positively desire that England should go to war
+with Russia. Their calculation is that Austria and Italy
+would sooner or later be drawn into the war on the English
+side, and that then, Germany and Russia being isolated,
+France might join the rest of Europe against them, and
+recover Alsace and Lorraine. These are said to be the
+views of Gambetta and his friends.</p>
+
+<p>There is, however, one feeling which pervades the great
+mass of Frenchmen. They wish England to take the
+chestnuts out of the fire for them. They are quite determined
+not to go to war themselves for anything less than
+Alsace and Lorraine, but they do wish to exclude Russia
+from the Mediterranean, and they are very willing that the
+danger and the burthen of effecting this should be incurred
+by England.</p>
+
+<p>With these views their newspapers go on patting us on
+the back, and may continue to do so, as long as we seem to
+be ready to act alone; but they would change their note,
+if they saw any risk of France being drawn into the war
+with us, until <em>after</em> Austria and Italy had joined us.</p>
+
+<p>I know of nothing to confirm Odo Russell's information<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+that in return for the consent of Germany and Russia to
+exclude Egypt, etc., from the deliberations of the Congress,
+Waddington engaged to support Germany and Russia in
+everything else. What appeared on the surface was that
+this exclusion was made openly by France a <em>sine qua non</em>
+of her attending the Congress, that she communicated the
+condition simultaneously to all the Powers, and did not at
+all ask for the assent to it as a concession. If there is only
+Bismarckian authority for the bargain stated to have been
+made by Waddington with Germany and Russia, I think
+it <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mérite confirmation</i>. The one object of Bismarck
+seems always to be to sow dissensions between France and
+any other Power that she may seem to be approaching.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the Comte de St. Vallier's assertion
+to Odo Russell, Mr. Adams is quite certain that it was
+M. de St. Vallier himself who reported to Mr. Waddington
+that Odo had communicated to the Emperor William,
+Prince Bismarck, etc., a telegram from Mr. Adams on the
+subject of the sympathies of France with England. In
+fact Mr. Waddington who is an old schoolfellow and friend
+of Mr. Adams, read to him parts of the private letter from
+M. de St. Vallier in which the report was contained, and
+indeed one of the phrases he cited from the letter was
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">le telegramme Adams</i> as the source of the communication
+made by Odo Russell.</p>
+
+<p>The Prince of Wales arrived this morning and I have
+been all the afternoon at the Exhibition with him, which
+obliges me to write in such haste, that I cannot be brief.</p>
+
+<p>I have just seen Hobart Pasha, who goes on to England
+to-morrow morning and will try to see you.</p>
+
+<p>I doubt whether Waddington or the Austrian Ambassador
+here get any information about Andrassy's real views
+and objects.</p>
+
+<p>The Russians seem to be hard at work trying to make
+the execution of the Treaty of San Stefano a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">fait accompli</i>.
+<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Beati possidentes.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Salisbury's suspicions as to the pressure
+being put upon the unfortunate Turks by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+Russians were confirmed by an interesting letter
+from Mr. Layard to Lord Lyons, in which the much-denounced
+Abdul Hamid appears in quite a new
+light.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Constantinople, May 1, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am not surprised that Waddington should care nothing
+about Armenia. The question is a purely English one, but
+to us a vital one. The Treaty of San Stefano puts the
+whole of Asia Minor virtually at the mercy of Russia and
+insures her influence over Mesopotamia and perhaps
+ultimately over Syria, which would probably not be
+pleasant to the French. This immense addition to the
+power of Russia in Asia, and the command that she obtains,
+if the Treaty be carried out, of routes to India and Central
+Asia, is a matter of serious import to England. But
+probably there is no European Power which does not envy
+us the possession of India, and would not secretly rejoice
+at the prospect of our losing it. I believe this feeling to
+be particularly strong with Frenchmen. But if we intend
+to preserve our Empire as it now is, we must be prepared to
+deal with this question of Russian aggrandisement in Asia
+Minor and drive them back. Our only way of doing so, is
+by making use of the Mussulman population. The idea
+of an autonomous Christian Armenia to form a barrier to
+Russian advance is one of those absurdities which are
+cropping up daily amongst our sentimental politicians,
+who know nothing of the matters upon which they pretend
+to lay down the law.</p>
+
+<p>The Grand Duke Nicholas, before going, made an
+ultimate attempt to bully the Sultan into surrendering
+Shumla, Varna and Batoum; but His Majesty held firm
+and His Imperial Highness failed to get a promise out of
+him on the subject. It is curious that whilst our ignorant
+and unscrupulous newspaper correspondents are systematically
+writing down the Sultan and denouncing him as a poor
+weak creature incapable of having an opinion of his own,
+he has shown far more firmness than any of his Ministers.
+Had it not been for him, it is highly probable that the ironclads
+would have been given over to the Russians, and more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+than probable that the Grand Duke would have been allowed
+to occupy Buyuk Dere and the entrance to the Bosphorus.
+The Russians threaten to seize Varna, Shumla and Batoum
+by force, but I much doubt whether they will venture to
+do so, as right is not on their side. Shumla and Varna are
+not to be given up to Russia, but to the Bulgarian Principality
+when constituted: and the arrangements for the
+final settlement of the Russian frontier in Asia are to be
+made within six months of the conclusion of the 'definitive'
+not the 'preliminary' Treaty.</p>
+
+<p>I am anxiously waiting to hear whether the simultaneous
+withdrawal of our fleet and the Russian forces can be
+arranged. It is of the utmost importance to the Turks to
+get the Russians away from San Stefano, but I cannot
+understand how the Russians could consent to give up so
+advantageous a position, unless they found that if they
+remained there they would be exposed to considerable
+danger from a joint attack by the English fleet and the
+Turkish forces.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Layard, who was a fighting diplomatist, and
+possessed the rare quality of knowing what he
+wanted, had long chafed at the irresolute action
+of the British Government, and was all in favour of
+making a resolute stand against Russian aggression.
+Throughout the war, he had continually complained
+of the apathy and indecision of the British Cabinet,
+and attributed these deficiencies to divided counsels
+and to the advanced age of Lord Beaconsfield.
+Now, with Lord Salisbury installed at the Foreign
+Office, he plucked up hope again.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'Salisbury,' he wrote to Lord Lyons, 'seems to know
+what he wants&mdash;which is a great contrast to his predecessor.
+If he is firm, we shall, I think, triumph in the end, and remove
+a great danger from Europe and ourselves. Were it
+not for that double-dealing, untrustworthy fellow Andrassy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+we might perhaps accomplish all that we require without
+war. Andrassy's proceedings give rise to a strong suspicion
+that the secret understanding between the three Emperors
+still exists. The Sultan is persuaded of it, and I have
+found that his instinct in such matters is usually right.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On May 11, Lord Salisbury wrote to Lord Lyons
+saying that Count Münster (German Ambassador in
+London) had assured him that the object upon which
+the French were bent in the Mediterranean was
+Tunis. 'Do you hear anything of the sort?' he
+asked Lord Lyons, and added the highly important
+statement: 'It is of course an extension of French
+territory and influence of which we should not have
+the slightest jealousy or fear. But I am not
+assuming in any way that the Porte would wish to
+give it up. I should only like to have your opinion
+how far France would wish to have it.'</p>
+
+<p>To this Lord Lyons replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Ever since I can remember, the Italians have suspected
+the French, and the French have suspected the Italians of
+designs upon Tunis. Bismarck's mention of it at this
+moment is probably only one of his usual devices to sow
+distrust of France. I have never found that the acquisition
+of Tunis recommended itself to French imagination, and
+I don't believe it would be taken as anything like a set-off
+against English acquisitions in Egypt or Syria. I believe
+our principal interest in Tunis arises from its being a source
+of supply of provisions to Malta. When Décazes wished
+to set us against the supposed Italian designs upon it, he
+used to talk of its being dangerous to us to have Malta in
+a vice between Sicily and an Italian Tunis, but it never
+seemed to me that the peril was very clear.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p>England is very popular here at this moment, and the
+Prince of Wales's visit has been a principal cause of this,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+but the French have no intention to fight with us or for us.
+They back us up in asserting the sanctity of Treaties, and
+they certainly desire that the <em>status quo</em> may be maintained
+in the Mediterranean, until France is a little stronger.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It will be remembered that only a few years
+earlier the German Government had informed the
+French Government through Count Arnim that it
+would not tolerate the establishment of anything
+in the nature of a French Protectorate in Tunis;
+so that if the French were now really entertaining
+any designs of that nature, it was pretty obvious that
+it could only be the result of a hint from Berlin.
+The question of Tunis, however, was shortly overshadowed
+by greater issues. On May 16, Lord
+Salisbury transmitted to Paris a long document
+which formed the basis of the so-called Anglo-Turkish
+Convention. The proposals embodied subsequently
+in the convention were contained in a
+private letter to Mr. Layard, dated May 10, and
+the latter was directed not to proceed with the
+negotiations until further instructions were received,
+as the necessity for the convention depended upon
+the nature of the reply which Count Schouvaloff
+was to bring back from St. Petersburg. Whatever
+may have been said at the time in denunciation of
+the occupation of Cyprus and the Asia Minor Protectorate,
+it can hardly be denied that Lord Salisbury
+had a good case logically, as is shown by the
+following letter.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">May 22, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Until I see Schouvaloff to-morrow I shall know little
+of the probabilities of our acting on that private letter to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+Layard of last week, of which I sent you a copy. If,
+however, we do so, it seems to me that we have a very good
+logical case&mdash;Is logic any use in diplomacy?&mdash;against any
+objections the French may raise.</p>
+
+<p>By the Tripartite Treaty of April 25, 1856, we had a
+right to call on them to help us in restraining Russia from
+appropriating Turkish territory. They have loudly and
+constantly asserted that no military action is to be expected
+on their part. In Europe we can meet the consequences
+of that desertion by the help of Austria, Greece, the
+Rhodope mountaineers and others. But in Asia we are
+abandoned wholly to ourselves. The French have left us
+to face and guard against the consequences of that Russian
+encroachment which they undertook to join with us in
+resisting. Does it lie in their mouth, if we say that such
+encroachments, if persisted in, require special precautions?
+that we cannot turn the Russians out by ourselves, and
+that abandoned by our ally, who should have made the
+task easy to us, we have no choice except to mount guard
+over the endangered territory and take up the positions
+requisite for doing so with effect? I do not see what
+answer the French would have.</p>
+
+<p>But you will probably reply that my reasoning is idle
+trouble, because logic is of <em>no</em> use in diplomacy.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The French would have had no real cause for
+complaint if they had discovered the contents of
+the proposed Anglo-Turkish Convention, for as
+Lord Salisbury had already pointed out, he had
+been careful 'to turn the eyes of desire away from
+Syria,' the only portion of Asia Minor in which
+France was interested; but Waddington had been
+making declarations against any of the Powers
+helping themselves to Turkish territory, and although
+these declarations were meant only to apply to
+Bosnia and Herzegovina, he would probably have
+used much the same language if he had learnt that
+England was thinking of occupying any portion of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+the Turkish Empire. Logic may not be of much
+use in diplomacy, but it is of still less use in influencing
+public opinion, and an appeal to the
+Tripartite Treaty, after it had been set aside so
+long, would have come rather late in the day. As,
+however, the necessity for providing for British
+interests and British safety in Asia was indisputable,
+Lord Salisbury was justified in contending that
+those Powers who disliked the only methods which
+were within our reach, should give us such help as
+would enable us to dispense with them.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the return of Schouvaloff from St. Petersburg,
+it turned out, as Lord Salisbury had anticipated,
+that Russia was prepared to make concessions
+in Europe, but scarcely any in Asia. Layard was,
+therefore, directed to negotiate the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, May 29, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I send you two memoranda, or rather two separate
+versions of the same paper, which will explain fully the
+nature of the propositions which Schouvaloff brought back
+to me, and the extent to which we have been able to accept
+his proposals. The upshot of the matter has been that
+the Czar yields substantially all we want in Bulgaria and
+as to the Greek provinces, but sticks to his text as to
+Montenegro, Bessarabia, and the Armenian conquests,
+except Bayazid.</p>
+
+<p>I have informed Schouvaloff that against these Asiatic
+acquisitions it will be necessary for us to take precautions;
+and while taking from him a formal engagement that
+Russia will not extend her position in Turkey in Asia, we
+shall ourselves give to Turkey a guarantee to the same
+effect. We shall accept these terms as soon as he receives
+from St. Petersburg authority to take them in the redaction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+on which we have ultimately agreed. At the same time
+we have taken our measures to secure ourselves against the
+consequences of the Asiatic advance. Layard received on
+Saturday telegraphic directions in the sense of the private
+letter which I addressed to him a fortnight ago, and of
+which I sent you a copy, and with great vigour and skill
+he procured the signature of an agreement on Sunday last.
+We do not intend that this fact shall be made public until
+the Congress, as the agreement is made wholly conditional
+on the retention of Batoum and Kars. But whether we
+shall succeed in these good intentions remains to be seen.
+Our past performances in that line do not justify any very
+sanguine hope.</p>
+
+<p>As there seems no chance of the Porte ceding Bosnia,
+and as it is necessary to keep Austria with us in the Congress,
+we have offered to support her in any proposal she
+makes in Congress on the subject of Bosnia, if she will
+support us in questions concerning the limits of occupation
+and organization of Bulgaria. It is not necessary to tell
+Waddington this, but, as we have advanced a step since he
+last asked us the question, it is important to avoid language
+inconsistent with it.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>One cannot help suspecting Lord Salisbury's
+sense of humour as being responsible for the stipulation,
+that, if the Russians abandoned to the Turks
+their conquests from them in Asia Minor, the occupation
+of Cyprus should come to an end and the
+Anglo-Turkish Convention become null and void.
+On the following day (May 30), the so-called Anglo-Russian
+agreement was signed, and the enterprising
+Mr. Marvin, who had been temporarily
+employed at the Foreign Office on the cheap, handed
+it over to the <cite>Globe</cite> newspaper, thus creating a
+political sensation of the first order.</p>
+
+<p>The agreement with Russia being now completed,
+and an invitation to the Congress in suitable terms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+having been accepted, Lord Beaconsfield and Lord
+Salisbury decided to go to Berlin themselves, instead
+of sending Lord Lyons.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">June 5, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I feel that I owe you many apologies for my rudeness in
+not writing to you on Saturday night to announce to you
+the decision of the Cabinet&mdash;and to thank you for the very
+kind and cordial way you had placed yourself at our disposition
+in the spring to perform what was a very ugly
+duty. The Cabinet was rushed to the decision which it
+took, partly by the consideration to which you advert, that
+the threads of the last two months' negociations were more
+completely in our hands than by any process of communication
+they could be in yours&mdash;but also by the fact that we
+have dangerous questions looming at Paris&mdash;and we cannot
+afford to have you absent from your post.</p>
+
+<p>My excuse for my negligence is the prosaic one that I
+had not a moment of time. The agonies of a man who has
+to finish a difficult negociation, and at the same time to
+entertain four royalties in a country house can be better
+imagined than described.</p>
+
+<p>The Convention at Constantinople has been signed with
+expression of lively gratitude on the Sultan's part. I am
+sorry that your impressions of the mood in which the French
+are likely to receive the news when published, are still so
+gloomy. However, we must hope for the best. We have
+assembled a powerful fleet at Portsmouth and we shall have
+six or seven first-rate ironclads to do what may be necessary
+in the Mediterranean, besides smaller ships. And our
+relations with Bismarck are particularly good. So I hope
+our friends at Paris will confine themselves to epigram.</p>
+
+<p>If we can, we shall keep the matter secret till we get
+at Congress to the part of the Treaty of San Stefano
+(Art. XIX) which concerns the Asiatic annexations. I
+do not know whether d'Harcourt has any inkling, but ever
+since his return from Paris his manner has changed.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons hailed the decision of Lords Beaconsfield
+and Salisbury as a 'deliverance from a nightmare
+which had weighed upon him since March,'
+and found a sympathizer in Lord Odo Russell, who
+had never expected much good from the Congress
+if the Three Emperors' League was revived, and who
+doubted whether the British public would be contented
+with an amended San Stefano Treaty. The
+probable action of Waddington, who was to be
+the French representative at Berlin, is foreshadowed
+in the following letter.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 4, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am very glad that you and Lord Beaconsfield have
+determined to go yourselves to the Congress. The matters
+to be treated are too grave to be left to subordinates, and
+they could hardly be treated properly by any one who had
+not had a minute acquaintance day by day with the recent
+communications with Russia and Austria.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington will, I think, be a satisfactory colleague in
+some respects, but in others I am afraid you will have
+difficulties with him. His English blood and his English
+education tell both ways. On the one hand, he is more
+straightforward than most Frenchmen; he understands and
+shares many English feelings, and he sees the force of
+English arguments, or perhaps I should rather say, of
+arguments put forward in an English way. But, on the
+other hand, he feels strongly the necessity of guarding
+against the tendency in France to suspect him of an English
+bias. He will be disposed to join in resistance to exaggerated
+Russian pretensions with regard to Roumelia
+and the Danube. His personal sentiments are strongly
+in favour of Greece. He has a certain sympathy with
+Christian as against Mussulman, but he does not carry this
+to an immoderate or unpractical extent. There is, however,
+one point on which you may find him very stiff. He is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+most strongly opposed to any change in the relative position
+of the Great Powers in the Mediterranean, and he would,
+I am afraid, be quite as unwilling to see England extend
+her influence in that sea, as he would be to see Russia do
+so. It is in order to prevent any alteration in the <em>statu
+quo</em> in the Mediterranean, more than from any other
+reason, that he has made the participation of France in the
+Congress conditional on the exclusion of all questions not
+directly arising out of the war between Russia and Turkey,
+and has positively mentioned Syria and Egypt as countries
+to be excluded from the discussion. He would not perhaps
+be disinclined to let these questions come up, if he thought
+he should obtain the support of other Powers in resisting
+any change made outside of the Congress.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, public feeling in France would probably
+be too strong to allow him to acquiesce in any redistribution
+of territory or influence in favour of England. But I
+expressed my opinion on this point so fully to you and Lord
+Beaconsfield in the interview I had with you just before
+I left England, that I have nothing more to say about it.
+The horrible event<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> which took place at Berlin the day
+before yesterday has, however, thrown so strong a light upon
+one phase of French opinion, that I feel bound to direct
+your attention to it. It seems very shocking that while
+the Emperor William is suffering from the wounds so
+wickedly inflicted, people here should be speculating upon
+the consequences of their being fatal, but so it is. The
+French believe that the maintenance of the present military
+system in Germany depends upon the Emperor William,
+and that even if His Majesty's successor had the same
+determination as His Majesty himself to keep it up, public
+opinion in the country would make it impossible for him
+to do so. What foundation there may be for this supposition,
+I do not pretend to determine; but that it
+influences the French is certain. Anything which makes
+them believe the life of the Emperor to be precarious,
+diminishes the restraint which the fear of Germany imposes
+upon them, and renders them more stiff in asserting their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+own views and pretensions, and less averse from contemplating
+the possibility of supporting them by more than words.</p>
+
+<p>There are, in my opinion, strong arguments to be brought
+in favour of our taking measures to be in a position to
+resist Russia by our own means, if other Powers will give
+us no help in doing so; but as you said in a former letter,
+logic is perhaps not of much use in diplomacy, and seems to
+me to be of still less use in influencing public opinion. I
+doubt our logic doing much to reconcile the French to our
+exercising a separate protection over Turkey in Asia, or
+occupying a Turkish island in the Mediterranean. I am
+afraid you will think I have become more nervous than
+ever, and more prone to the common error among diplomatists
+of exaggerating the importance of the country in
+which they are themselves stationed, but anyhow I have
+not seen any reason to change my views as to the feelings
+prevalent in France.</p>
+
+<p>The Parliamentary session at Versailles is about to
+close. Thanks to the Exhibition, it has been a very
+tranquil one, but we must be on the look-out for squalls
+when the Chamber meets again in the autumn. Gambetta
+has hitherto restrained his followers from opposing the
+Ministry, and from proposing radical measures, but it is
+doubtful whether he will be able, even if willing, to restrain
+them after the end of the Exhibition. Some unexpected
+incident might even produce a crisis before. At any rate
+the elections of a portion of the Senate, which will take
+place early next year, may remove the check which the
+Conservative majority in that House has hitherto put upon
+the Chamber of Deputies. The Marshal does not talk of
+making any more attempts at resisting the will of the
+majority, but I understand that he does not talk very
+seriously of retiring as soon as the election is over.</p>
+
+<p>It may perhaps be worth while to mention that Waddington
+finds the influence of Gambetta over the Government
+very irksome, and is not fond of having it alluded to.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Congress met at Berlin in the middle of
+June, and the awkward question of whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+Waddington should be informed of the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention or not was debated. Lord
+Lyons knew perfectly well that the French would
+be furious when they heard of it, and that the
+greater the surprise, the greater would be their
+indignation. The lines laid down for Waddington's
+guidance at the Congress were that France desired:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>1. Peace.</p>
+
+<p>2. Neutrality.</p>
+
+<p>3. The necessity of the consent of all the Powers
+to any modifications of the Treaties.</p>
+
+<p>4. The exclusion of Egypt, Syria, the Holy Places,
+and other topics foreign to the Russo-Turkish War.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>These points were certainly not favourable to
+England receiving any support from France in
+defending her menaced interests in Asia Minor, as
+the absolute neutrality of France was the point
+most insisted upon. In fact France was so obviously
+anxious to stand aloof, that one suggestion was made
+that she should be asked to co-operate with us in
+Asia Minor on the assumption that such co-operation
+was sure to be refused. This, however, was considered
+to be too hazardous a course, and it was
+eventually decided to say nothing to Waddington
+for the time being, lest he should make the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention an excuse for not attending
+the Congress at all. The secret, unlike the Anglo-Russian
+agreement, seems to have been well kept, and
+cannot have been known to the Russians, or they
+would have utilized it for the purpose of sowing
+discord between the British and French representatives.
+Finally, on July 6, Lord Salisbury told
+the whole story to Waddington in a private letter.</p>
+
+<p>In this letter Lord Salisbury pointed out that, as
+far as the Russian annexations in Asia Minor were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+concerned, we were in a completely isolated condition,
+since Austria was only willing to take part
+in restoring the Porte to a certain independence
+in Europe, while France had clearly intimated that
+she had no intention of engaging in war for the
+purpose of maintaining the stipulations of the
+Treaty of 1856. The result was that England was
+compelled to act alone, as her interests were too
+great to allow the <em>status quo</em> in Asia Minor to be
+completely destroyed, and consequently the onerous
+obligation of a defensive alliance with Turkey had
+been undertaken in order to provide against future
+Russian annexations beyond the frontier assigned
+under the present negotiations at Berlin. As this
+engagement could not be carried out from such a
+distance as Malta, the Sultan had made over Cyprus
+to England during such period as the defensive
+alliance might last. The conditional nature of the
+Convention, and the restraint shown by Her Majesty's
+Government in rejecting more tempting and advantageous
+offers are dealt with in the following
+passages.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>We have entered into an agreement which is now
+embodied in a formal Convention at Constantinople, that
+whenever the Russians shall, for whatever reason, return
+to their Asiatic frontier as it existed before the last war, we
+will immediately evacuate the island; and that intermediately
+we will annually pay the Sultan whatever is
+ascertained to be the surplus of revenue over expenditure.</p>
+
+<p>I am telling Your Excellency no secret when I say that
+we have been very earnestly pressed, by advisers of no
+mean authority, to occupy Egypt&mdash;or at least to take the
+borders of the Suez Canal. Such an operation might have
+been very suitable for our interests and would have presented
+no material difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>No policy of this kind however was entertained by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+Her Majesty's Government. We had received an intimation
+from the French Government that any such proceeding
+would be very unwelcome to the French people, and we
+could not but feel the reasonableness of their objection
+under existing circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>We have therefore turned a deaf ear to all suggestions
+of that kind.</p>
+
+<p>We have been likewise recommended to occupy some
+port on the coast of Syria, such as Alexandretta, but we
+felt that, however carefully guarded, such a proceeding
+might, in the present condition of opinion with respect to
+the Ottoman Empire, be construed as indicating an intention
+to acquire territory on the mainland of Western
+Asia; and we did not desire to be suspected of designs
+which will be wholly absent from our thoughts. We have
+therefore preferred to accept from the Sultan the provisional
+occupation of a position less advantageous indeed, but
+still sufficient for the purpose, and not exposed to the inconveniences
+I have mentioned. How long we shall stay
+there I cannot tell. But I think there is just ground of
+hope that the Russians will find in a short time that the
+territory they have acquired is costly and unproductive;
+that the chances of making it a stepping-stone to further
+conquests is cut off, and that they will abandon it as a
+useless acquisition. In that case our <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">raison d'être</i> at
+Cyprus will be gone and we shall retire.</p>
+
+<p>I have adopted this form of conveying the matter to
+you, as the Convention being entirely within the Treaty
+competence of the two Powers, requires no official communication.
+But it would have been inconsistent with
+the feelings of friendship existing between our two countries,
+and with my gratitude for your courteous procedure
+towards me personally, to have allowed you to hear it first
+from any other source.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There can be little doubt as to the identity of
+the 'advisers of no mean authority,' for Bismarck
+had been urging upon England for some time
+the occupation of Egypt, obviously with the main<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+intention of creating discord with France, and Her
+Majesty's Government deserved all the credit claimed
+by Lord Salisbury for resisting these overtures. It
+is, however, somewhat difficult to follow Lord Salisbury's
+reasonings for preferring Cyprus to Alexandretta.
+It was plain that the occupation of either
+of these places would cause irritation, and as subsequent
+events have shown, Cyprus has never been
+of much use to us, and besides being crushed under
+the burden of the tribute annually paid to the
+Turkish Government, is inhabited chiefly by Greeks
+who do not appear to thoroughly appreciate British
+rule. Alexandretta, on the other hand, might, under
+our control, have developed into a highly important
+seaport and become the starting-place for the Bagdad
+railway; whereas, as a matter of fact, it has now
+practically passed into the hands of the Germans.</p>
+
+<p>M. Waddington did not remain long in sole possession
+of his exclusive information, for on July 8, the
+Anglo-Turkish Convention was made known to the
+world, and the general impression produced was that
+Lords Beaconsfield and Salisbury had effected a
+brilliant <em>coup</em>. In France, however, the news caused
+quite unjustifiable indignation, and the prudent Lord
+Lyons telegraphed to Lord Salisbury on July 10,
+advising him to get the final acts of the Congress
+signed as quickly as possible, lest Waddington
+should be directed to come away without putting
+his name to anything.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 12, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Your telegram of last night was a great relief to me,
+but I shall not feel quite happy till I hear that all is actually
+signed. I am happy to find that Gambetta and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+Ministerial Parties, who are violent on the subject of the
+Convention, are not having things all their own way in
+the press. No newspaper can be said to defend England
+altogether, but the more sensible papers are against any
+active opposition on the part of France. Gambetta and
+Waddington are not friends, and Gambetta will no doubt
+attack Waddington and try to upset him. This may lead
+to serious difficulties in France.</p>
+
+<p>It is no use to shut one's eyes to the fact that at this
+moment, there is a great and general irritation in France
+against England. It is too soon to foresee what turn
+public opinion will take eventually, but at the present
+moment, we must not forget to take this irritation into
+account in our dealings with this country.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The general feeling was so unsatisfactory, that
+he felt compelled to write to Mr. Knollys<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> urging
+that the Prince of Wales, who was acting as President
+of the British Section of the International
+Exhibition, should postpone a contemplated visit
+to Paris, and enclosing articles in the press of an
+abominable character directed against His Royal
+Highness. Irritation over the Anglo-Turkish Convention
+was not confined to one party, but existed
+in every class from the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">haute société</i> downwards.
+The Conservatives and their press utilized it as a
+means of attacking the Republic, complained of the
+effacement of France, and asserted that she had been
+duped by her former ally, while the Republican opposition,
+headed by Gambetta, charged Waddington
+with having made a shameful surrender to England.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 16, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The first explosion of French wrath, on the appearance
+of the Convention of the 4th of June, was even more violent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+than I anticipated. It was well that you had the Minister
+for Foreign Affairs under <em>your</em> influence, and at a distance
+from that of the excited spirits here. Now the first force
+of the eruption is spent and the lava cooled down. I am
+afraid only on the surface, but any way, it must be the
+surface which cools first. At all events the strong language
+is in great measure abandoned. In the first place, as no
+one now recommends any immediate action on the part of
+France, the French are beginning to see that they cut a
+sorry figure by barking without biting. In the second
+place, they conceive that the alliance of the Three Empires
+is as close as ever, and they think that if they quarrel with
+England, they will be giving a triumph to Bismarck and
+find themselves face to face with him without any friend
+on their side. Lastly, I would fain hope that some of them
+are beginning to take a really reasonable view of things,
+and to see that we had absolutely nothing left for it, but
+to act for ourselves, as they would not or could not help us.</p>
+
+<p>Still we shall have some trouble with them, and shall
+probably find them for some time suspicious, jealous, and
+hard to deal with.</p>
+
+<p>Egypt may be our first difficulty. With or without a
+hint from home, French agents there will be seeking to
+trip us up. It seems to me that our task there will be a
+delicate one. On the one hand, it will no doubt be desirable
+to soothe French vanity as far as possible; but, on the other
+hand, anything like a defeat or a retreat in Egypt, might
+very much impair the prestige which the position which
+we have taken with regard to Asia has given us. I wish
+Rivers Wilson had already been installed as Minister of
+Finance when the Convention of the 4th June was made
+public.</p>
+
+<p>Another ticklish question is that of the Newfoundland
+Fisheries. I am very anxious to know what, if anything,
+passed between you and Waddington on the subject at
+Berlin. The present moment does not seem a very happy
+one for resuming negotiations, and at all events it might
+be well to keep the matter, if possible, in the calm atmosphere
+of London, and at a distance from the heat of the
+political weather here.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have been indirectly in communication with Gambetta,
+and have reason to hope he is being brought, or is coming
+of himself, round about the Convention. What I am
+immediately afraid of is his nevertheless trying to upset
+Waddington. I should regret Waddington's fall on all
+grounds, and it would be extremely awkward to have a
+successor in the office brought in on the pretext that
+Waddington had not been stiff enough with regard to
+England. The candidates for his place are said to be
+Freycinet, the present Minister of Public Works, who was
+Gambetta's Sub-Minister for War in 1870 and 1871;
+M. Duclerc, one of the Vice-Presidents of the Senate, who
+passes for a moderate man, but who has no knowledge of
+foreign affairs, and Gambetta himself. I suppose, however,
+Gambetta would be an impossibility with the Marshal, and
+that he himself would feel that he was compromising his
+prospect of greater things hereafter, by taking a subordinate
+office now.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Waddington, upon his return from Berlin,
+realizing doubtless that his position had been shaken,
+though from no fault of his own, intimated his intention
+of writing a despatch in which Her Majesty's
+Government would be called upon to give to the
+French certain assurances with regard to Egypt and
+Tunis. As it was desirable that this request should
+not be made in too peremptory a manner, he was
+exhorted to make his communication in such a way
+as would make it easy for Her Majesty's Government
+to return a cordial answer. The difficulty about
+giving the assurances was pointed out by Lord
+Salisbury.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Foreign Office, July 20, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>What M. Waddington said to you is very much what
+he said to me at Berlin, though the lurid touches about
+war have been filled in afterwards.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The precise answer to be given to his promised despatch
+must of course depend very much on the terms in which it
+is framed. But he may be certain that we shall answer it
+not only with the desire of cultivating to the utmost
+possible extent our good relations with France, but also
+with the aim of making his own personal task more
+easy, as far as it is in our power to contribute to that
+result.</p>
+
+<p>The matter to which he has called your attention, as
+he did ours at Berlin, was difficult to make the subject of
+binding assurances, because the contingencies under which
+those assurances would receive a practical application are
+difficult to foresee.</p>
+
+<p>If France occupied Tunis to-morrow, we should not
+even remonstrate. But to promise that publicly would be
+a little difficult, because we must avoid giving away other
+people's property without their consent, and also because
+it is no business of ours to pronounce beforehand on the
+considerations which Italy would probably advance upon
+that subject. In the same way, with respect to Egypt, we
+have stated distinctly more than once that we do not
+entertain any intention of occupying it; and that statement
+we are perfectly willing to renew. But, having done
+that, and having expressed our anxiety to work with France
+in Egypt, we have said as much as would be seemly or
+possible. We can hardly pledge the Khedive as to what
+he means to do, without in reality assuming a voice in his
+concerns which we do not, according to any international
+right, possess.</p>
+
+<p>These considerations make me rather anxious that M.
+Waddington in his proposed despatch should avoid putting
+categorical questions which we might not be able to answer
+precisely as he wishes, and yet which we could not avoid
+answering without seeming to exhibit precisely that coolness
+which he very properly and justly deprecates, and any
+appearance of which we are as anxious as he is to avoid. I
+think that his despatch&mdash;if I might suggest it&mdash;would more
+properly take the form of a statement, in general terms, of
+the territorial points on the African coast in which France
+takes an interest, leaving us to make such assurances as we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+think we can properly give, and which we will certainly
+make as cordial as we can.</p>
+
+<p>To French influence in Egypt we do not offer any
+objection; and we have never taken any step calculated
+to oust it. But any detailed engagements as to questions
+of administration could not be taken without imprudence;
+for each step must be taken as the necessity for it arises.
+The two great points are to keep the Khedive on the throne,
+and to get the financial obligations satisfied. For these
+objects, the two countries will, I hope, co-operate heartily.</p>
+
+<p>I am a little anxious as to the form he gives his despatch,
+for if he makes it too peremptory, he may produce that
+very appearance of estrangement which it is our common
+object to avoid.</p>
+
+<p>I will write to you more fully about the Newfoundland
+Fisheries when I have had time to study the papers. My
+conversations with him have put me fully in possession
+of the French case. I am not so certain that I know all
+the points of the English case.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>An opportunity fortunately occurred of conciliating
+one personage who might have given a great
+deal of trouble, and afforded an instance of the
+influence which can occasionally be brought to bear
+upon advanced democrats when judiciously applied.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 21, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Prince of Wales leaves Paris for London to-night.
+As his arrival at Paris to attend the English concerts at
+the Exhibition had been publicly announced, I did not
+think that it would be advisable that it should be postponed,
+but I have been a little nervous about it. So far
+however there has been no contretemps, and the visit
+has been politically useful.</p>
+
+<p>The Prince invited Gambetta to breakfast with him
+yesterday. It was His Royal Highness's own idea, but I
+thought it judicious. I have not the least doubt that if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+the Prince of Wales had not been civil to Gambetta, the
+Russian Embassy would have asked any Grand Duke who
+came here to show him particular attention, in order to
+bring him over to Russia. The success of such a man&oelig;uvre
+has I think been effectually guarded against.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta appears to have spoken to the Prince strongly
+in favour of an alliance between France and England&mdash;to
+have declared himself more or less reconciled to the Convention
+of June 4th&mdash;and to have spoken in the most
+disparaging terms, not so much of the Foreign Policy of
+Russia, as of the institutions, the Government, and the
+administration of that country. I hear from other quarters
+that Gambetta was extremely pleased with the interview.
+I am assured also that the Prince of Wales acquitted himself
+with great skill. The Prince thought, and so did I,
+that it was better that I should not be at the breakfast.
+The Embassy was represented by Sheffield. The occasion
+of the invitation to Gambetta was his having been very
+obliging and useful in matters connected with the Exhibition.</p>
+
+<p>To-day Waddington met the Prince of Wales at luncheon
+at the Embassy.</p>
+
+<p>So far, then, things look well, but I am assured the calm
+does not extend far below the surface. Gambetta has the
+southern temperament, and his language is a good deal
+influenced by the impression of the moment. He has
+postponed, but he has not really given up, his attack on
+Waddington. He will still, if he continues in his present
+mood, try to turn him out in October, when the Chambers
+reassemble.</p>
+
+<p>The thing which would have most effect in reconciling
+the French to our acquisition and protectorate, would be
+to make them practically advantageous to the holders of
+Turkish and Egyptian Bonds.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>When M. Waddington eventually presented his
+despatch, or rather despatches, for there were two,
+they were apparently found unobjectionable in
+tone; but on the ground that the one referring to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+Tunis was not 'couched in more diplomatic language,'
+it was suggested to him that he should
+rewrite it in language more suitable for publication
+subsequently; this he declined to do, but promised
+not to publish it at all. The chief object presumably
+of these communications was: in the first place to
+obtain assurances from England with regard to
+Egypt, and in the second place to make Lord Salisbury's
+statement about Tunis appear as an invitation
+to the French to appropriate that country. M.
+Waddington, quite naturally, did not wish it to be
+thought that he had come back empty handed from
+Berlin at a time when the Great Christian Powers were
+helping themselves liberally at the Turk's expense.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">July 24, 1878.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Waddington's two despatches were left with me
+yesterday. They are very friendly in tone and will not,
+I think, be difficult to answer. The answers however must
+be delayed some days, as the Cabinet does not meet till
+Saturday.</p>
+
+<p>Intermediately, I demur a little to the quotations that
+he makes from my conversation. The general tenor is
+quite accurate, but his vivacious French by no means
+renders the tone of my communication, and what is of more
+importance, to the rights and claims of other Powers,
+Turkey and Italy especially. What I told him was that if
+a state of things should arise in which there was no other
+obstacle to his occupying Tunis but our objection, that
+objection would not be made. I made the observation
+for the purpose of showing him that we had no Mediterranean
+aspirations&mdash;and did not desire to disturb the
+balance of power in that sea. Our eyes were bent wholly
+on the East. But he makes me talk of Tunis and Carthage
+as if they had been my own personal property and I was
+making him a liberal wedding present.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not know whether he will be inclined to put his
+quotations from my conversations into a more general
+form. I think it will save the possibility of misunderstanding
+later; and will also dispense with the necessity of
+a correction on my part, as he has reported the general
+drift and terms of my observations with perfect fidelity.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The reception of the Anglo-Turkish Convention
+in France may be said to have been the first of a
+series of difficulties which unfortunately impaired the
+relations between France and England during many
+years, but which have now happily almost entirely
+disappeared. The irritation aroused in France was
+completely unjustified, and almost incapable of explanation,
+unless the secrecy which surrounded the
+negotiation of the Convention may be considered
+an adequate cause. No French interests were prejudicially
+affected; and the maintenance of secrecy
+really relieved France from a considerable difficulty,
+for a premature disclosure might have prevented
+the participation of France in the Congress; but
+oddly enough, the Anglo-Turkish Convention
+appeared to be the only matter relating to the
+Congress in which the French took any interest,
+and so much indignation did some patriots show
+that it was even seriously suggested that by way of
+inflicting a surprise upon England, France should
+seize Chios, or Rhodes, or Crete. In fact, at one
+time, Crete appeared to possess considerably greater
+attractions than Tunis, in spite of the latter's
+proximity to Algeria.</p>
+
+<p>Probably the real explanation of this display of
+temper was that the French felt their strength to be
+returning, and were in no mood to put up with
+what they erroneously considered to be a slight,
+whether intentional or unintentional.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One frantic jeremiad from Constantinople over
+the Treaty of Berlin may be quoted before the
+subject is dismissed. Layard, who had been already
+greatly scandalized by the publication of the Anglo-Russian
+agreement, wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>What do you think of the Treaty of Berlin? It
+appears to me that if ever an apple of discord was thrown
+amongst nations, this is the one. I see in it the elements
+of future wars and disorders without number, and an
+upsetting of all the principles of justice and right which
+have hitherto governed the relations and intercourse of
+states. Force and fraud have triumphed, and when
+Turkey has been completely destroyed and cut up under
+the new system, it will probably be applied with similar
+successful results to other countries. Russia has gained,
+with the assistance of Germany, all and more than she
+wanted, and the interests of England and of other Powers
+were sacrificed in order to enable Bismarck to recruit his
+beery stomach by drinking some mineral waters. It is all
+very well to sit round a green table and to cut up an Empire
+on a map. It is a very different thing to put what has been
+so easily settled into execution. I anticipate no end of
+trouble and bloodshed for years to come in this unhappy
+country. We have not yet recovered here from the effect
+of the publication of the unfortunate memorandum which
+so completely destroyed the great and commanding position
+that we had acquired.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There is not much here about Peace with Honour.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">M. GRÉVY'S PRESIDENCY</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">(1878-1879)</p>
+
+
+<p>The event in 1878 which aroused more interest in
+France than the Berlin Congress or anything else,
+was the holding of the great Exhibition in Paris,
+which not only demonstrated to the world the
+recovery of France from the disasters of 1870-71,
+but had the beneficial effect of improving Anglo-French
+relations. It was universally acknowledged
+that nothing had contributed more to the success
+of the Exhibition than the hearty co-operation
+given from first to last by England, and in this
+connection the services rendered by the Prince of
+Wales were of conspicuous value. His Royal Highness
+had come to Paris early in the year to press
+forward the preparations of the British section; he
+was present at each important phase of the Exhibition;
+he attended unremittingly at the office of the
+British Royal Commission, and was assiduous in
+transacting business there with the French Exhibition
+authorities as well as with the British and
+Colonial Commissioners and exhibitors. These
+visible proofs of the Prince's interest in their great
+undertaking were by no means lost upon the French,
+and the judgment and tact which he displayed,
+whenever opportunities arose for impressing upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+the French people the cordial feeling entertained by
+himself and by his country towards France, produced
+an excellent political effect.</p>
+
+<p>The Exhibition naturally threw upon the Embassy
+an immense amount of extra labour, consisting
+largely of social work, and one of the most brilliant
+social functions of the year was a ball at the British
+Embassy attended by the Prince and Princess of
+Wales, at which the various hostile sections of
+the French political world met, on that occasion
+only, in temporary harmony.</p>
+
+<p>The general success of the Exhibition and the
+prominence of English participation inspired Queen
+Victoria with the desire to pay a very private visit
+to Paris, accompanied by Princess Beatrice and a
+small suite, towards the beginning of August. So
+anxious was she to maintain secrecy that the only
+person in England to whom her intention was
+confided, was Lord Beaconsfield, and Lord Lyons
+was enjoined not to say a word about it to any one,
+but to inform her confidentially whether she could
+visit the Exhibition without being mobbed; whether
+the heat was likely to be intense; and whether
+there was any danger to be apprehended from
+Socialists&mdash;the term Socialist doubtless including,
+in the Royal vocabulary, Anarchists, Terrorists,
+and Revolutionaries in general. Incidentally, too,
+she expressed a wish to hear the Ambassador's
+opinion of the Treaty of Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons answered the first queries satisfactorily,
+but it was characteristic of him that, even
+to his sovereign, he declined to commit himself to
+an opinion on the policy of his official chief. 'Lord
+Lyons was always of opinion that Your Majesty's
+Representative at the Congress should be a Cabinet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+Minister, and he rejoiced very much when he heard
+that Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury had
+been appointed. He has no detailed or authentic
+information of the proceedings of the Congress,
+but so far as he can judge at present, he has every
+hope that the results will be satisfactory to Your
+Majesty.'</p>
+
+<p>A long series of letters followed, and after much
+hesitation, the Queen finally abandoned her intention,
+the prospect of hot weather apparently proving
+to be too great a deterrent. One singular incident
+in the correspondence, which was conducted with
+much secrecy, was that a letter from Lord Lyons
+went all the way to New York before reaching its
+destination at Balmoral&mdash;an error for which some
+one presumably suffered.</p>
+
+<p>During the autumn and winter of 1878, constant
+discussions took place between the English and
+French Governments on the subject of questions
+connected with Egypt and Tunis, and it was again
+thought at one time that a French <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup</i> was in
+contemplation as a reply to the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention. The New Year was signalized by
+the denunciation of the Commercial Treaty. In
+announcing this intelligence, Lord Lyons said that
+his only surprise was that the existing Treaty had
+lasted so long, and that he did not consider it
+advisable to make any attempt to conceal annoyance
+about it. The treaty of 1860 had been made
+from political motives, and our best chance of
+being decently treated commercially lay in the
+dislike of the French to placing themselves on bad
+terms with us. 'This is the policy Gambetta avows.
+As for any Free Trade feeling in France, that is
+absolutely a broken reed for us to lean upon.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In January, 1879, senatorial elections took place
+which resulted in large Republican gains, and it
+seemed probable that the existing Moderate Ministry
+might not last much longer. It was generally expected
+that when the Chambers met, there would
+be a great struggle on the part of the advanced Left
+for all the lucrative and important posts, and there
+were the usual fears of mob rule which prevailed
+whenever a partial or entire change of Ministry was
+imminent. The prospect of losing Waddington as
+Foreign Minister drew from Lord Salisbury a
+characteristic expression of regret: 'I suppose
+M. Waddington is likely to be a transitory phenomenon,
+if the papers are to be believed. I am sorry
+for it; for he suits us much better than some converted
+Legitimist with an historic name, whose
+policy I suppose will be a compound of Louis XIV.
+and 1791.'</p>
+
+<p>Waddington was not to go yet, however, and
+Lord Lyons complained that he made his life a
+burden to him in connection with the proceedings
+of the British Consul General at Tunis&mdash;an aged
+official who did not view the spirited French policy
+there with any friendly eye, and whose removal
+the French Government ardently desired. As a
+general massacre of aged official innocents was
+contemplated shortly by the British Foreign Office,
+a somewhat ignominious compromise was offered
+in the shape of an early retirement of this particular
+official under an age limit. The French intentions
+with regard to Tunis had by this time become quite
+evident, and the unfortunate Bey found it extremely
+difficult to prevent excuses being found for active
+intervention in the shape of naval demonstrations
+and so forth; it being well known that Marshal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+MacMahon and other military men were extremely
+eager to annex the country at the first opportunity.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 14, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I should be very sorry to do anything disagreeable to the
+French with regard to Tunis. It is the place about which
+they are most susceptible at this moment, and the irritation
+they would feel at any interference with them there, would
+overpower, at all events for the time, all considerations of
+the general advantages of being well with England.</p>
+
+<p>When I said that I saw no reason for hiding any displeasure
+we might feel at the denunciation of the Commercial
+Treaties and at the manner in which it was done,
+I meant that we should not abstain from direct expressions
+of dissatisfaction at the thing itself.</p>
+
+<p>My notion is that if we take it too quietly, the Protectionists
+will be able to make the Chambers believe that they
+can do what they like about the Tariff, and need not fear
+any resentment from England. I think that if it can be
+managed, it will be advisable to put it out of the power of
+the ministers to say that the denunciation has been well
+received by the English Government, and has produced no
+bad impression upon it. In order to effect this, I should
+be glad that something unmistakable on the point should
+be said in a written communication. If, as I suppose,
+Montebello's<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> answer to your note declares that the intention
+is to denounce the Treaties one and all, then the rejoinder
+which you must make in order to <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">prendre acte</i> of the
+denunciation would afford a natural opportunity of expressing
+annoyance and apprehension. This is what was in my
+mind when I wrote.</p>
+
+<p>There are many members in the Chamber who would
+deprecate anything likely to produce coolness between
+France and England, and it is not desirable to leave the
+Protectionists the means of asserting that there is no
+danger that a restrictive tariff would do this. But the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+feeling is a vague one, and it would be weakened by
+endeavours to define it sharply, or to appeal to it too
+pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta holds that the true policy of France is to
+cultivate the friendship of England and not to loosen the
+tie of France upon her by instructions injurious to her
+commerce. He is in particular very much afraid of the
+feeling in favour of the Empire which would be revived
+in the wine-growing districts, if under the Republic the
+English wine duties became less favourable to French
+wines.</p>
+
+<p>The game of the Protectionists is to put the duties in
+the general tariff as high as they dare, without provoking
+retaliation; and the general tariff once passed, to declare
+that it is the latest expression of the will of the country,
+and that the Government has no right to relax it by treaty,
+unless by way of barter, in return for great concessions
+made to France.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time matters may possibly in some measure
+be modified, as regards commercial policy by changes in
+the Government, but the modification in this respect would
+scarcely be very great.</p>
+
+<p>The 'groups,' as they are called, of the Left have been
+endeavouring to get the ministers to negotiate with them
+before the Chambers met. They want, now the Chambers
+have met, to reduce the Ministers to absolute dependence
+on Parliamentary Committees. The Ministers are acting
+properly and constitutionally. They decline to be dictated
+to by groups and committees, and they intend to announce
+their programme from the Tribune, and to call for a vote
+of confidence or want of confidence, from both Chambers.
+Waddington, when I saw him yesterday, was very confident
+of success. They have found it necessary to sacrifice the
+Minister of War, who, among other defects was entirely
+inefficient in the Tribune, but Waddington did not anticipate
+any other changes in the Cabinet. He said that
+Gambetta had promised the Government his full and
+cordial support.</p>
+
+<p>To pass from Paris, or rather from Versailles to Constantinople,
+I will give you for what it may be worth, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+story which has been brought to the Embassy by a person
+who has sometimes shown himself to be well informed with
+regard to what is passing at the Porte. He affirms that a
+compact has been made between Khaireddin and Osman
+Pashas to dethrone Sultan Abdul Hamid and set aside
+the Othman family altogether as effete and half insane.
+This being done, a member of a family established at
+Konia is, according to my informant, to be declared
+Sultan.</p>
+
+<p>I have often heard of the Konia family as having a sort
+of pretention to the throne, as descending from Seljuk
+Sultans or some other dynasty overthrown by Othman or
+his successors.</p>
+
+<p>Abdul Hamid does not generally leave his Grand Viziers
+in office long enough for them to be able to mature a
+'conspiracy against him.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In January a prolonged struggle took place
+between the Ministry and the Left, chiefly over the
+burning question of Government officials, and the
+alleged unwillingness to introduce really Republican
+measures; and before the end of the month Marshal
+MacMahon and his Prime Minister, M. Dufaure
+tendered their resignations. It was well known
+that the Marshal was anxious to take this course,
+and he followed the advice of his friends in choosing,
+as his reason for resigning, his inability to concur
+in a measure which deprived some officers of high
+rank of their military commands. When, therefore,
+he was confronted with the alternative of
+signing the decree removing his old companions in
+arms, or of resigning himself, he replied that Ministers
+would have to look out for another President, and
+M. Grévy, a comparatively moderate Liberal, was
+elected in his place by a large majority. The
+'transitory phenomenon,' M. Waddington, however,
+remained in office and indeed became head of a new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+Administration, but it was felt that this arrangement
+was merely temporary. Power had really
+passed into the hands of Gambetta, and although
+he contented himself, for the time being, with the
+Presidency of the Chamber of Deputies, there was
+nothing to prevent him from establishing himself
+in office, whenever he should think that the opportune
+moment had arrived; since, unlike the Speakership
+in England, the Presidency of the Chamber is
+looked upon in France as the road to the highest
+Ministerial rank.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence of the election of a new President
+of the Republic in the person of M. Grévy, the
+question arose as to whether the Foreign Representatives
+should receive fresh credentials, and the
+action of Prince Bismarck in this connection caused
+fresh discord amongst leading French politicians.
+When M. Waddington was at Berlin, he had made
+a very favourable impression upon the Chancellor,
+and as he himself subsequently informed me, Bismarck
+had taken great pains to be civil to him, and
+to manifest that especial confidence which takes the
+form of abusing other people&mdash;notably Prince Gortschakoff.
+He now took the opportunity to inform
+M. Waddington that he entertained such remarkable
+esteem for him, that he had advised the Emperor
+to dispense with any new letter of credence, a proceeding
+which infuriated Gambetta and disposed
+him to upset Waddington at an early date. 'Altogether
+there seems an impression,' wrote Lord
+Lyons, 'that the new Ministry will not last long.
+Gambetta does not like either Grévy or Waddington.
+Waddington has yet to show that he has the staff
+of a Prime Minister in him. He has not hitherto
+been a very ready or a very effective speaker. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+is even said to have a slight English accent in
+speaking French. I don't believe any one ever
+perceived this who did not know beforehand that
+he had had an English education. But this English
+education certainly has had the effect of preventing
+him having exactly French modes of thought and
+French ways, and thus he is not always completely
+in tune with the feelings of his hearers in Parliament.'</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/i_168.png" width="350" height="500" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><p><em>J Russell &amp; Sons, Phot.</em></p>
+
+<p><em>William Henry Waddington</em></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">london: edward arnold</span></p></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was a common charge made against the late
+M. Waddington by his opponents that he spoke
+French with an English, and English with a French
+accent. As a matter of fact, he was a perfect
+specimen of a bilinguist, and would have passed
+as a native of either nation.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 11, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Fournier's<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> vagaries are becoming very dangerous, but
+we are in a state of anarchy here. The Ministry is composed
+in general of men of respectable character and respectable
+abilities; but there is no one of them who has hitherto
+obtained any great hold on the Chambers or on the country.
+Their proper game would be to try and form a Liberal-Conservative
+party of the Centre Gauche, the Centre Droit,
+and the Gauche Républicaine, with whose support and that
+of the country at large, they might keep the Ultra Reds in
+check. Hitherto they have not shown that there is stuff
+enough in them for this, but then they have hardly had a
+chance. They have made a weak compromise on the
+Amnesty Question, but if they get a good majority on that
+question, they might start afresh and show what is in them.
+So far they are looked upon by most people as warming pans
+for Gambetta and his followers: and I have been assured
+that some of the French Representatives abroad do not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+hesitate to communicate with Gambetta behind Waddington's
+back.</p>
+
+<p>I must confess that, contrary to my wont, I am rather
+gloomy about the state of things here. The relaxation of
+the efficiency of the police is undeniable. This was one
+of the symptoms of the decay of the Empire. The Gendarmerie
+is being tampered with. Recent measures seem
+to increase the opportunities for disturbances, and diminish
+the means of dealing with them. I do not see where, in
+the present Government, resistance to disorder is to come
+from in an emergency. But I will not croak. Waddington
+and his colleagues may steady themselves in office and
+restore authority yet, but they have not much time to lose.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington would be the safest Minister we could have
+in Eastern Affairs, if he made his subordinates abroad obey
+him. Gambetta might be more friendly in commercial
+matters and more ready to be an active ally in the East,
+but he would expect a recompense in the West, and might
+be a dangerous friend who would require careful 'watching.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Poor M. Waddington's prospects were not improved
+by a trivial but untoward incident in the
+Chamber. In the course of one of his first speeches
+as Prime Minister 'a great deal of laughter is said
+to have been produced by his dropping some of the
+sheets of his written speech over the edge of the
+Tribune, and having to wait till they were picked
+up'&mdash;an incident which serves to show the more
+generous spirit of the British politician, since a
+recent Prime Minister was in the habit of delivering
+soul-stirring orations by the same method, without
+evoking any disrespectful criticism on the part of
+his opponents.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of February a crisis in Egypt
+rendered it necessary for the British and French
+Governments to have recourse to joint action for
+the purpose of protecting their interests.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As the result of a Commission of Inquiry in 1878,
+the Khedive Ismail, who had long boasted that
+Egypt was practically a European state, accepted
+the position of a Constitutional Ruler, with Nubar
+Pasha as his Prime Minister, Mr. Rivers Wilson<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>
+as Minister of Finance, and a Frenchman, M. de
+Blignières, as Minister of Public Works. It was
+in the highest degree improbable that a man of his
+intriguing and ambitious character would submit
+permanently to any such restraint, and before long
+he succeeded in working upon the disaffection of
+those persons whose privileges were threatened or
+affected by European control, to such an extent
+that, by organizing a military riot, he was able to
+force Nubar Pasha to resign on February 20, 1879.
+At the same time he demanded much greater powers
+for himself, including the right to preside over the
+Cabinet, and to have all measures submitted to his
+approval&mdash;demands which were strongly resisted by
+his European Ministers, who invoked the support
+of their Governments.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 21, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have just received your telegram announcing your
+concurrence in Waddington's draft instructions to Cairo,
+and I shall communicate it to him forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington seemed quite firm on the point of not
+allowing the Khedive to resume his personal power, and
+would no doubt be ready to join in any practical steps for
+that purpose; but in the meantime it may be feared that
+His Highness is consolidating his resumption of power.
+Waddington looks upon the whole affair as a simple
+man&oelig;vre of the Khedive to upset the new system of
+government. It does not in fact seem likely that so arrant
+a coward would have risked his own precious person, if he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+had not had a pretty good understanding with the rioters.
+Public opinion in France would, I think, support Waddington
+in taking strong measures. There does not seem
+to be any one but Nubar of position enough to be a Prime
+Minister of any independence; Waddington seemed fully
+aware that if the Khedive is present at the council of
+Ministers, no Egyptian Minister will open his lips.</p>
+
+<p>Godeaux telegraphed last night that order having been
+restored, the presence of a ship of war at Alexandria might
+not be necessary, but Waddington thought on the contrary
+that it would be 'essential in order to produce a salutary
+impression on the Khedive, and keep him in some check.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Nubar Pasha was regarded as English and anti-French,
+and his fall was, therefore, received at Paris
+with some degree of complacency; but the feeling
+was not sufficiently strong to make the Government
+hold out against his restoration to office, should
+that be considered necessary for the purpose of
+checking the Khedive, and the tendency was to
+make no suggestions and to wait for the lead of
+England, it being understood that both Governments
+were resolved not to consent to any change
+of the political system in Egypt.</p>
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 1, 1879.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As to Egypt, I gather from your telegram to-day that
+Waddington looks on our message to Vivian<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> as in the
+nature of an ultimatum, and he is puzzled what we are to
+do next if it should be rejected. We do not in the least
+look on it as an ultimatum, and it is not so phrased. We
+may well receive either from the Khedive or the Agents
+some alternative proposal which may be discussed, and
+perhaps hammered into an acceptable arrangement at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+least for a time. But in any case our position cannot be
+worse here than if we had acquiesced at once in the results
+of the conspiracy against Nubar; while the chances are
+that it will enable us to arrive at some plan for partially
+curbing the Khedive, which at all events shall partially
+disguise the check we have undoubtedly received. The
+causes are obscure. It is evident there has been imprudence.
+I wish I could be quite satisfied there has been perfect
+loyalty.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Writing a day or two later, Lord Salisbury explained
+that he was in some difficulty, as Mr. Vivian
+and Mr. Rivers Wilson held different opinions.
+The former wanted to conciliate the Khedive by
+not forcing upon him the restoration of Nubar,
+while Mr. Rivers Wilson strongly insisted upon his
+return. Lord Salisbury himself was inclined to the
+latter course because 'otherwise the Khedive will
+be like a horse who has succeeded in beating his
+rider, and will never be safe for that rider to mount
+again,' but eventually decided against it. From
+the following letter it looks as if the retirement of
+the hapless British Representative at Tunis was
+intended as a peace offering to the cause of Anglo-French
+joint action in Egypt.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 6, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>It is better always to get the credit of one's good
+actions, which are naturally few. Will you kindly tell
+M. Waddington in the most unofficial way in the world
+that&mdash;&mdash;having returned himself as 67 years of age (he
+entered the service 55 years ago, and therefore must have
+begun his public labours at a precocious age) we have suppressed
+the Consulate General of Tunis, and that there
+will henceforth be a man on reduced salary, a consul or
+agent, after the close of this month.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I think the French will find difficulties enough with
+Italy if they ever try to increase their influence in Tunis;
+but that is no affair of ours. We have hot water enough
+elsewhere without desiring to boil any in Tunis.</p>
+
+<p>One good turn deserves another, and I hope Waddington
+will feel himself bound to keep his agents from Anglophobia
+in Turkey.</p>
+
+<p>The Egyptian compromise will do very well for the
+time. It seems doubtful whether Nubar is worth anything
+now. An Oriental does not easily pluck up a spirit when
+he has once been beaten, and Nubar is reported to have
+told friends in England that he knew that whenever the
+Khedive had done with him there was a cup of coffee
+waiting for him.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The compromise referred to took the form of a
+new Egyptian Ministry containing the two English
+and French representatives, and nominally presided
+over by the Khedive's eldest son, Prince
+Tewfik. The experiment, however, of trying to
+keep a Ministry in office in spite of the opposition
+of the chief of the State did not last long, for in
+April the irrepressible Khedive dismissed his
+Ministers and installed Cherif Pasha as Prime
+Minister. This spirited action caused M. Waddington
+much perplexity, as he did not believe that French
+public opinion would allow him to take a slap in
+the face quietly from the Khedive. The French
+bondholders were too influential to think of throwing
+them over, and then there was the Crédit Foncier,
+a more or less Government establishment, which no
+French Government could allow to come to grief.
+There was a keen desire to maintain the concert
+between England and France on Egyptian affairs,
+but if the bondholders suspected that England was
+likely to be lukewarm on their behalf, there was a
+strong probability that the French Government<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+might be forced to act alone in the enforcement of
+French claims. Lord Salisbury on his side was
+naturally reluctant to be identified with the bondholders'
+cause.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">April 10, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I see by your telegrams which have arrived to-day that
+M. Waddington suggests as a means of coercion against
+the Khedive that MM. Rothschild should refuse to pay him
+the balance of the loan. Mr. Rivers Wilson had made the
+same suggestion to the Baron. But the latter, in a message
+sent yesterday through his son, repudiated any idea of
+such a proceeding as dishonourable, and attributed the
+suggestion to momentary excitement.</p>
+
+<p>With respect to the second idea, the only question is
+whether the Sultan will ever summon up courage to take
+such a step, and if he does, whether he can enforce it. If
+it can be done quite smoothly, <em>perhaps</em> it would be the best
+course; but I speak with some doubt.</p>
+
+<p>It may be quite tolerable and even agreeable to the
+French Government to go into partnership with the bondholders;
+or rather to act as sheriffs' officer for them.
+But to us it is a new and very embarrassing sensation.
+Egypt never can prosper so long as some 25 per cent. of
+her revenue goes in paying interest on her debt. We have
+no wish to part company with France: still less do we mean
+that France should acquire in Egypt any special ascendency;
+but subject to these two considerations I should be glad
+to be free of the companionship of the bondholders.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Waddington's 'second idea' evidently referred
+to the deposing of the Khedive by means of the
+Sultan; but his difficulty lay in the old French
+jealousy of the Porte exercising influence over the
+internal affairs of Egypt, and during the reign of
+Sultan Abdul Aziz the consequence of that influence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+had certainly been a constant drain of money from
+Cairo to Constantinople. One suggestion was that
+the Sultan should summon the Khedive to come to
+Constantinople to do homage, a ceremony which he
+had never yet performed, and a refusal to obey
+would have made him a rebel in the Sultan's eyes;
+but the objection to this course was that the Khedive
+might, if he went, take large sums of money with
+him and so propitiate his suzerain.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">April 16, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Waddington's policy is not very intelligible. I suppose
+it is a compromise between a sense of the danger of doing
+anything strong, and of the necessity of satisfying the
+Crédit Foncier. In the despatch which you will receive we
+have done our best to accommodate ourselves to Waddington's
+view, without taking up a wholly untenable position.</p>
+
+<p>There is one thing which it is necessary not to forget,
+though I could not mention it in the despatch. We have
+very different audiences to please; and though we may
+agree upon the actual intimation to be given to the Khedive
+and the Sultan respectively, the argument leading up to
+those communications cannot in both cases be precisely
+the same. We must lay stress on separate points, and the
+argument derived from the Khedive's application for a
+European Minister must be treated differently by the two
+Powers, as the circumstances were not similar. We should
+therefore avoid identic notes, though we may make a
+concerted representation.</p>
+
+<p>The communication to the Porte had better be indiscreetly
+communicated to the Khedive's agent there, who
+is an intelligent man. It may only result in producing a
+very heavy payment to the Porte. But that, under
+existing circumstances, will itself be of advantage.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose that Waddington means to upset the Ottoman
+Bank project as a retort for the failure of Tocqueville's.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What does he think of Martino's share in the recent
+Egyptian crisis? Italy is likely to be a plague to all
+of us.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In France there was a violent party, more or
+less supported by Gambetta, which desired to
+send some energetic Agent to Egypt who would
+bully the Khedive successfully. Unfortunately,
+such energetic agents were extremely likely to
+quarrel with their British colleagues, whereas M.
+Waddington, who was peaceably disposed, wished to
+appoint quiet and unobtrusive representatives who
+would work harmoniously, and implicitly follow their
+instructions. There was, however, some excuse for
+the men of action, as a very well-founded suspicion
+prevailed in Paris that the Russians, and even the
+Germans, were busy at Rome inciting the Italians
+to make trouble for England and France at Cairo.
+Moreover, Gambetta and his friends believed, probably
+with reason, that the Khedive would never
+have gone so far in defying England and France if
+he had not felt that he was backed up by other
+Powers, as well as by Italy.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Vivian, the British agent in Cairo, who had
+been summoned to London, returned to his post
+at the end of April bearing a note, the gist of which
+was, that the two Governments, in view of the
+iniquities of the Khedive, 'reserved to themselves
+an entire liberty of appreciation and action in defending
+their interests in Egypt, and in seeking
+the arrangements best calculated to secure the good
+government and prosperity of the country.' In
+other words, the Khedive was warned that he had
+better be careful; but there was, so far, no hint
+of deposition.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In Lord Salisbury's letter to Lord Lyons, enclosing
+a copy of the above note, there is an interesting
+personal opinion on the question of governing
+Orientals by Europeans. 'With all these Oriental
+populations I suspect that the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">rôle</i> of Europeans
+should in the main be confined to positions of criticism
+and control. They can only govern after absolute
+conquest, and then expensively. The difficulty
+of governing without conquest is, of course, enormously
+increased when two nationalities have to be
+provided for, and two Governments to be consulted.'</p>
+
+<p>The period following the return of Mr. Vivian
+to his post was marked by a violent and entirely
+unreasonable campaign against England in the
+French press, it being thought, for some unknown
+reason, that France had been abandoned, and M.
+Waddington took the somewhat unusual course of
+sending a message to Lord Salisbury through Mr.
+Rivers Wilson, instead of communicating in the
+ordinary manner.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">May 21, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>On Monday Rivers Wilson sent me word that he had a
+message to deliver to me from Waddington. Accordingly
+I asked him to come and see me yesterday to deliver it.
+It was to the effect that Waddington was willing and anxious
+to move the Porte to dethrone the Khedive, if England
+would join in this step. I represented that there were
+three difficulties. The Sultan might not assent: if he did,
+the Khedive might not yield. If the latter did yield, the
+successor might be either feeble or bad, and we should be
+called upon to support him in one case, and replace him
+in the other. To the first objection Wilson replied that
+Waddington had no apprehensions as to the Sultan's
+consent; to the second he (Wilson) and every person who
+knew Egypt well, did not doubt that the moment a Firman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+was issued, the Khedive would fall; as to the third, he
+could only say that Prince Tewfik was a compendium of
+the cardinal virtues.</p>
+
+<p>If Waddington did not communicate his proposal to
+you, I am obliged to consider what possible motive he
+could have had for taking this circuitous route, unless he
+meant to disavow the offer later on. If he says nothing
+to you about it, it may be worth while to sound him.</p>
+
+<p>If there were no France in the way, I should be disposed
+to give no reply to the Khedive's note we received by the
+last mail, or at least only to say that since the dismissal of
+the English Minister, the Khedive's finance had become so
+hopelessly tangled, partly owing to his extravagance,
+partly to the conflict with other Powers into which the
+decree of April 22nd has brought him, that we must reserve
+our judgment with respect to all questions of financial
+control till the position of affairs had become more intelligible.
+I think that on some such plea as that we might
+stand by and look on for a few months till the Khedive
+has knocked himself to pieces, which he inevitably will do.
+The fiscal condition is now so hopeless that I am rather
+grateful to the Khedive for refusing to put it into the hands
+of an English Minister. I doubt whether any European
+can now undertake it without discredit, until the country
+has gone into liquidation. The disproportion between the
+debt and the revenue&mdash;joined to the difficulties which have
+now been raised by the action of the courts and the attitude
+of the other Powers, makes effective or even humane
+government hopeless till there has been a bankruptcy.
+But then that would not suit a purely Bourse policy like
+that of France. We must take notice of this difference of
+the French view, and we may have to modify our policy
+accordingly; for we cannot allow France to go on alone,
+and we will not part company with her if we can possibly
+help it. But in this state of our relative views and wishes,
+it is already for us to wait, and for her to propose. If left
+alone, our disposition would be to find an excuse for waiting,
+and if we move it will be because France is urging us. We
+should therefore naturally wait till France made a proposal
+to us, and should be inclined to cross-examine her as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+what will be her next move after that, in the various
+contingencies which may result from the course they
+propose. I think, however, you might open communications
+by mentioning, quite unofficially, how much pain the
+articles in the <em>République Française</em> and the <em>Débuts</em> have
+given us. To ordinary papers we should of course have paid
+no attention; but one of them is, or was till very recently,
+edited by a gentleman in the French Foreign Office; the
+other is in part the property of a Minister. We are utterly
+unable to understand on what foundation the reproaches
+rest that we have shown reserves and hesitations in the
+pursuit of the joint Egyptian policy. On the contrary, if
+we had occupied towards France the position which Servia
+occupies towards Russia, our compliance could hardly have
+been more exact. But this outbreak of causeless wrath
+justifies us in asking what France wants, and what she
+complains of.</p>
+
+<p>You will of course say as much of this, or as much more
+as you may think wise. But it may be as well to show that
+we are not insensible to this attempt to work Parliament
+against us by revelations or communications on matters
+which the French Government themselves have charged
+us to treat as confidential.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The attacks on England in the French press
+were not inspired, as Lord Salisbury supposed, by
+the French Foreign Office, but by Gambetta, who
+desired a strong policy in Egypt and seized the
+opportunity to fall upon Waddington. The latter,
+however, by this time had made up his mind as to
+what should be done.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 22, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As you will have seen by my telegram, what Waddington
+said to me yesterday was, that there appeared to him to
+be only two alternatives with regard to the Egyptian
+question&mdash;to depose the Khedive or to establish a Control.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+He talked a good deal more about the Control than the
+deposition; but when I asked him if this meant that the
+Control was the alternative he preferred, he declined to
+express any preference for the one or the other. If we are
+to wait until he has devised measures (and this is what he
+told me he was about) for establishing an efficacious control
+we need not fear being called upon to act in a hurry. I
+quite agree with you that we cannot let France go on alone
+in Egypt; for if we do, she may go lengths which will
+produce something a great deal more dangerous than a
+mere coolness between us. French power and French
+feeling are very different from what they were some years
+ago, when the French would have let us do almost anything
+we chose in Egypt, if we would have taken care of the
+interests of the French bondholders.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Nothing can be plainer than Lord Salisbury's
+desire to act in concert with France, and to have
+regard to French interests in Egypt, but the constant
+attacks made upon British policy and the
+persistent hostility of French agents, not only in
+Egypt, but elsewhere, rendered the task anything
+but easy. Gambetta's hostility was partly due to
+the fact that he was an enthusiastic Phil-Hellene,
+and considered that not enough was being done for
+Greece in the way of procuring for her accessions of
+territory at the expense of Turkey. It is as well
+to point out that, whereas the Turks had been compelled
+to cede territory to States with which they
+had been at war, they were at this time being
+pressed to cede territory to Greece because that
+Power had remained at peace.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">June 6, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The recent course of the French newspapers which have
+the credit of being inspired by Gambetta and Léon Say is
+certainly a puzzle. Looking over the course of negotiations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+between us and Waddington on Egypt, I should find it
+very difficult to say which of the two Governments had
+pulled the other on, and which had dragged the other back.
+As far as any important negotiations go, I should say that
+we had been a shade more in favour of active measures
+than the other side. The two newspapers in question are
+evidently well informed; and therefore their assumption
+that we have prevented the French from acting must be
+put on for a purpose; what purpose it is difficult to say.
+The most obvious solution&mdash;bearing in mind the English
+friendships of the two statesmen concerned&mdash;is that the
+whole movement is meant to operate on English internal
+politics, and not on European politics at all: and this view
+is supported by the use which has actually been made of
+the controversy here. The incident is common enough in
+diplomatic history: but it has always been bitterly resented
+by the Government which is the subject of that species of
+attack. But in this case there is some doubt as to how far
+Waddington is implicated. Nothing is more difficult to
+deal with than a 'Marionette Government,' because the
+marionettes are not responsible, and you cannot get at the
+man who pulls the strings. There is one spot in the diplomatic
+battlefield&mdash;almost the only one&mdash;where we have
+been exposed to risk, and have consequently been anxious&mdash;the
+Balkan Peninsula: and on this we have been systematically
+opposed by France. Ring, Coutouly and Fournier
+have played us every kind of trick. But all the time,
+nothing could have been more unexceptionable than
+Waddington's language and instructions. So it is with
+this newspaper warfare. The secondary agents, who are
+popularly supposed to act from inspiration are undisguisedly
+hostile. Waddington's demeanour all the time is imperturbably
+friendly. Is it helplessness, or bad faith? The
+question is one of considerable practical importance: for
+if we are to measure the co-operation of France by the action
+of Fournier and Gambetta, we shall do wisely to retire,
+gently but effectually, from a perilous partnership. And
+it is impossible to ignore this aspect of the case in considering
+the precise line to be pursued in the two pending questions
+of Greece and Egypt.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Our object in Egypt, ever since we promised some four
+years ago not to take it, is to see that our own interests are
+not injured and that French interests receive adequate,
+but not excessive consideration. If, however, Gambetta
+means mischief, it may be wise for us to seek the protection
+of English interests only, and leave the French to take care
+of themselves. This would be done by pushing forward
+the other Powers. Their interference would be fatal to
+Egyptian solvency, and consequently to French bondholders.
+But it would be as fatal a bar to French preponderance
+as the plan of duplicating all appointments,
+and as none of these great Powers are naval, we could look
+after the Canal just as easily if they were masters in Egypt,
+as under the present Anglo-French system. If the French
+are really friends, the Anglo-French system may be maintained
+in spite of many inconveniences in order to cement
+that friendship. But if Gambetta and Fournier are to be
+taken as the directing force in French politics, the Anglo-French
+system is merely a make-believe, and will only
+draw us into a succession of crises in which we shall probably
+be outwitted. This dilemma merits very careful consideration.
+Greece is a less important and more transitory affair.
+In order to avoid division in the Congress we went rather
+further than we thought quite wise; and we have no wish
+to go further still. Of course, abstractedly, it would be
+much better that all the Hellenic populations should be
+under a Hellenic ruler. But Turkey is still a fact of which
+account must be taken; and the danger of Turkey
+resisting is very serious. The fact that Greece has not won
+this territory as prize of war, nor earned it as the consideration
+of any service done, but is to gain it merely by her
+skill in singing diplomatic dithyrambics, appears to irritate
+the Turks intensely. It is not our present policy to adopt
+a course which shall induce the Sultan to listen to the
+Russian proposals which are so freely placed before him.
+We would not therefore, in any case, take a leading part
+in pressing the cession on him. But we doubt extremely
+the wisdom of exciting anew the Moslem fanaticism, by
+demanding a town to which the Albanians attach so much
+importance as Janina. However, in this question we should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+have been a good deal influenced by the wishes of France,
+if we could have thought that by exalting the influence of
+Fournier we were strengthening a friend. But can we
+do so?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There was, in reality, no foundation for Lord
+Salisbury's suspicions that Gambetta and his allies
+were seeking to interfere in British internal politics.
+The objectionable articles were written under an
+erroneous impression that France had been outwitted,
+and that Mr. Vivian, in pursuance of secret
+instructions from his Government, was working for
+the failure of the joint Anglo-French administration
+in Egypt and for the establishment of exclusive
+British influence. But as the attacks in the French
+press mainly took the form of abusing England for
+not agreeing to energetic proposals made by the
+French Government, it was a legitimate grievance
+against M. Waddington that he never took any
+steps whatever to contradict this perfectly baseless
+accusation. As for the conduct of French agents
+who were continually intriguing against their
+English colleagues, it is probable that M. Waddington
+was able to exercise little or no control over them,
+and it has already been mentioned that some of
+them were in the habit of corresponding directly
+with Gambetta behind the back of their official
+chief. Lord Lyons, who naturally was anxious to
+make things as easy for the French as possible,
+recommended that the vanity and susceptibility of
+French diplomatists abroad and of the public at
+home, should be studied as much as possible, since
+there was a universal feeling that France was now
+too strong to play a secondary part anywhere, and
+that sacrifices on our part were preferable to allowing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+her to throw herself into the arms of Russia.
+Lord Salisbury therefore persevered in the difficult
+task of endeavouring to co-operate cordially with
+the French Government, and M. Waddington applied
+himself to elaborating the scheme of Dual Control
+which was eventually adopted. Meanwhile it had
+become apparent that, in order to obtain anything
+like a successful result, the Khedive Ismail must
+be got rid of somehow, a course which was urged
+not only by Gambetta, but by the French Agent at
+Cairo. Joint efforts were made by the French and
+British Agents to induce him to abdicate in favour
+of Prince Tewfik, which were seconded by the representations
+of Germany and Austria; but these were
+of no avail, and the Gordian knot was not cut until
+the Sultan suddenly intervened on June 26. On
+that day a telegram arrived from Constantinople,
+deposing Ismail by Imperial Iradé, and conferring
+the Government of Egypt upon his eldest son Prince
+Tewfik, who was at once proclaimed Khedive
+without any disturbance of tranquillity.</p>
+
+<p>The action of the Sultan was not only sudden
+but unexpected, and Lord Salisbury at once took
+steps to assure the French Government that it was
+not due to the instigation of Her Majesty's Government.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">June 26, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Pray assure M. Waddington that the Turkish move
+reported to-day does not proceed in any way from our
+suggestion. We have only urged in the very strongest
+terms that the Sultan should not interfere with what we
+were doing in Cairo. But the Sultan seems to have been
+perfectly resolved to have a finger in the pie; and as he
+was not allowed to interfere to save the Khedive, he
+indemnified himself by interfering to upset him.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am not specially in love with the Firman of 1873,
+which I see the Sultan has revoked. But I am afraid it
+will annoy Waddington, and therefore I am anxious he
+should be well convinced we had no hand in it.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is done, the wisest course we can take is to
+accept it, and devote our energies to procuring any new
+Firman that may be necessary to the present state of
+Egyptian finances. I don't think it will be any great evil
+if their power of raising armaments is limited. But on all
+this I should like to have Waddington's opinion.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Waddington was a sensible man, and therefore
+there was no difficulty in convincing him that
+England was not responsible for the Sultan's action;
+but French opinion generally was incredulous, and
+it was believed that the deposition of Ismail was the
+result of the rivalry at Constantinople between the
+French and British Ambassadors. The latter was
+unjustly suspected of a desire to reduce Egypt to
+the condition of a Turkish Pashalic, and it was
+obvious that the revocation of the Firman indicated
+the intention of the Sultan to reassert his influence
+over Egypt in a manner which French policy had
+consistently opposed. Although, therefore, the
+Sultan's action had delivered both England and
+France from a highly embarrassing situation, and
+had been taken at a most opportune moment, it
+was considered advisable, instead of expressing
+gratitude, to criticise adversely the form of the
+Imperial Iradé, and to insist upon the issue of
+another.</p>
+
+<p>What was, however, of really more essential
+importance than the somewhat remote fear of
+Turkish interference was the question of how the
+Dual Control was to be effectively established.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">July 7, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Our perplexity as to the effect of the Firman has received
+a rather comical solution. No such Firman exists. An
+'Iradé' is merely the Sultan's signature; and that was
+only given to the telegraphic message deposing Ismail.
+So that the revocation of the Firman of 1873 has not taken
+place, and the discussion as to the exact meaning of such
+a revocation seems to be premature. All that we now have
+to do is to prevent, if we can, any Firman at all being issued
+to Tewfik, and then every one will be happy.</p>
+
+<p>Tewfik is resolved to begin the Liquidation at once;
+and if it be true that interest is rolling up at the rate of
+£80,000 a month, there is good cause for his desire to hurry
+it. But the Controllers will hardly be enough. We want
+to have some hold over the government of Egypt, though
+we do not want to assume any overt responsibility. The
+great object seems to me to be to have representatives inside
+the offices who shall be able to report what the Government
+are doing to the Agents, and shall be able to give advice
+to the Government in accordance with the instructions of
+the Agents. If you have a European Minister, the Agent
+must be suppressed. I despair of making two talented
+Englishmen work side by side, without subordinating one
+to the other; and if we must choose between Agent and
+Minister as a vehicle of English influence, the former seems
+to me the easier to work with. He is not quasi-independent,
+and therefore will obey orders. He occupies a recognized
+and traditional position and therefore excites no jealousy
+either among Moslems or other Christian Powers; and he
+cannot be dismissed; and if his advice is not taken, or
+applied badly, the country he serves is not in the eyes of
+the world primarily responsible. The case on the other
+side is that the European Minister has more power. But
+has he? What power did Wilson enjoy? The only power
+Europeans can enjoy at Cairo rests on the fear which their
+Governments may happen to inspire, and this fear will
+operate as strongly through an Agent as through a Minister.
+We do not put European Ministers even into the Governments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+of dependent Indian Provinces: and there we have,
+what we cannot have in Egypt for a long time, 'bayonets
+to sit upon.'</p>
+
+<p>We have made the mistake in Egypt and elsewhere, of
+underrating the vitality of the Moslem feeling. I am afraid
+M. Waddington is doing so with respect to Greece.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Another letter deals further with the question
+of Control, and contains some interesting reflections
+on moral influence.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">July 15, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am very much of the opinion that the Control should
+take the form of inspection. It is the only form of Control
+likely to be effective. Actual authority we cannot exercise.
+We tried to do it through the European Ministers, but when
+the stress came, the disbanded officers proved to us that
+two pairs of arms are not much use against two thousand.
+The only form of Control we have is that which is called
+moral influence&mdash;which in practice is a combination of
+menace, objurgation, and worry. In this we are still
+supreme and have many modes of applying it&mdash;diplomatic
+notes, consular interviews, newspapers, blue books. We
+must devote ourselves to the perfecting of this weapon.
+And, obviously, the first condition of its use is complete
+knowledge of what is going in.</p>
+
+<p>The exchange, therefore, of nominal authority for real
+inspectionship is a step in the right direction. It is facing
+facts. We must exert ourselves to open to these inspectors
+every avenue of information; and we must have a certain
+number of sub-inspectors paid by Egypt, who shall travel
+about, collecting information. It is essential, of course,
+that these last should know the language.</p>
+
+<p>The division of the jurisdiction of the two inspectors
+is a serious puzzle. Upper and Lower Egypt certainly will
+not do, unless we have Lower Egypt. I had thought of a
+North and South division&mdash;the Nile&mdash;starting at Damietta.
+But I know Vivian does not like this; moreover I see
+difficulties about handing over Alexandria to the French.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Waddington's proposal for a rotatory jurisdiction sounds
+odd. What would he think of it as applied to any other
+department of life&mdash;Ambassadors, Bishops, or Ministers?
+I suppose the frequency of what they call a 'Prefectoral
+Movement' in France has put it into his head.</p>
+
+<p>Would it be possible to fuse them into a board, giving
+them a native colleague to be chosen by themselves, and
+then decide by majority? I have spoken to Baring<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> about
+the Commission of Liquidation. I doubt his accepting the
+Control, though I think he would the Liquidation.</p>
+
+<p>As to the Firman, we are agreed as to the limitation of
+armaments. I should be glad to see loans forbidden
+altogether. To an Oriental ruler they are like firewater
+to the Red Indians. I should be glad to see a declaration
+that the Powers would not recognize or encourage the
+payment of any loan contracted by the Egyptian Government
+after this date. They are not wanted to meet any
+present stress; but the fellaheen are already loaded with
+quite as heavy a weight as they can bear.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The question of appointing the Controllers and
+deciding what their functions were to be, gave rise
+to more difficulties, caused by the obvious desire
+of many Frenchmen to get the Egyptian finances
+entirely into French hands. Ultimately Major
+Baring and M. de Blignières were appointed, but
+their powers were not formally defined until
+November. By the decree of November 15, 1879, it
+was laid down that the Controllers should have full
+rights of inquiring into all branches of the administration;
+the rank of Ministers and seats in the
+Cabinet, although restricted to making suggestions;
+the power of appointing and dismissing subordinate
+officials; and it was further enacted that they were
+irremovable without the consent of their respective
+Governments. By this action the British and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+French Governments practically assumed the responsibility
+of Government, and for some time to
+come Egypt ceased to give trouble.</p>
+
+<p>In the month of June, 1879, an event had
+occurred which was of profound importance to all
+political parties in France. The Prince Imperial
+had perished in Zululand, and with him had
+vanished the hopes of a resuscitated Empire. The
+tragedy of the Prince's death is heightened by the
+fact that it was only owing to an unfortunate misunderstanding
+that he was ever allowed to accompany
+the expedition. On March 1, Lord Salisbury
+writing to Lord Lyons stated that the departure
+of the Prince Imperial was: <i xml:lang="fr">'a mal entendu</i> which
+we are unable to understand even here. The
+Government had very distinctly negatived it, but
+in consequence of some misapprehensions, our orders
+were not attended to by the military men, and he
+received encouragement which could not afterwards
+be withdrawn. If you think Waddington is at all
+sore on the matter, you are authorized to explain
+this fully to him. But I rather expect to hear from
+you that no importance is attached by the French
+Government to what has taken place.'</p>
+
+<p>Two days later he again wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am very sorry to hear that so painful an impression
+was created in Paris. We have never been able to
+discover exactly how it was done, or why our already
+clearly expressed objection was disregarded. He was of
+course at liberty to go, and people who ought to have
+known better were at liberty to write private letters and
+go to railway stations. Of course nothing official has
+been done, but the border line between official and private
+has been very closely trenched upon. However, all we
+can do now is to express our sincere regret.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At Lord Lyons's next interview with M. Waddington,
+the latter asked (not in a complaining
+manner) how the Prince's expedition to Zululand
+had been brought about, and was told in reply that
+the Prince had settled it himself through personal
+friends and that Her Majesty's Government had by
+no means approved of it. President Grévy alluded
+to the matter in the course of a conversation with
+the Prince of Wales, who happened to be in Paris,
+and also expressed no disapproval; in fact, he went
+so far as to remark: <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">qu'il avait très bien fait</i>. Thus
+the principal personages in France evidently did
+not consider the matter of much importance; but,
+on the other hand, the Republican press showed
+considerable irritation, which, under the circumstances,
+was perhaps not entirely unnatural, as it
+did not seem credible that the Prince could have
+started without the approval of the British Government.
+When the news of his death arrived, it was
+felt that, for the time being at all events, Bonapartism
+had been practically crushed out of existence.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 20, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>In hearing of the sad end of the short life of the Prince
+Imperial, one's first thought is for the Empress, whose
+bitter cup of sorrows is now full.</p>
+
+<p>The immediate political result is the utter disorganization
+of the Imperial Party. It was far from strong, but
+still it was the most efficacious element of opposition to
+the Republicans, and they will now have things still more
+their own way. The Fleurys, Rouhers, and the old
+Imperial following can never hope to live to recover from
+the blow. I suppose Prince Napoleon will hardly put himself
+forward in the position of a pretender to the Imperial
+Crown, and he would have no party with him if he did.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+In the more remote future his eldest son may prove a more
+formidable candidate than poor Prince Louis could have
+been. He is said to be a remarkably clever, attractive
+youth, and a thorough Bonaparte in appearance. No
+hereditary responsibility for Sedan can be cast upon him;
+he is undoubtedly of the Bonaparte race, and he has been
+brought up in France. For the present, however, Prince
+Louis's melancholy death is a decided accession to Republican
+strength.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The death of the Prince excited the sympathies
+of all classes in France with the stricken Empress,
+but when in July, preparations were being made for
+the funeral in England, the bitterness of French
+party politics displayed itself in that hostility which,
+carried beyond the grave, it is the least possible
+to condone.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 10, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The susceptibility the French Government is showing
+about the funeral of the Prince Imperial is neither wise nor
+dignified. If ever there was an occasion on which political
+animosities might be left in abeyance, surely this is one.
+The death of the Prince Imperial has put an end to many
+hopes and aspirations, and has inclined numerous adherents
+of the family to acquiesce in the present state of things.
+It is certainly not politic to require of people in this frame
+of mind an overt manifestation of heartlessness and
+ingratitude to the dynasty which has had so mournful an
+end. The ceremony so manifestly relates to the past and
+not to the future that there can be no reasonable objection
+to allowing the old adherents of the family, whether
+Marshals and Generals, or merely civilians to go over to
+attend it. I fancy that Grévy himself and the Republicans
+<em>de la vieille</em> cannot get over, even on such an occasion
+as this, their old hostility to the Empire.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These almost incredibly vindictive feelings again
+manifested themselves when a proposal was made
+that a monument to the unfortunate Prince should
+be placed in Westminster Abbey. M. Waddington,
+who must have been heartily ashamed of the part
+he was forced to play, remonstrated privately against
+the project, and intimated to Lord Lyons that he
+thought of writing to Dean Stanley, whom he
+happened to know, and of urging him not to consent
+to it.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">July 22, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I think, on the whole, I had better not answer your
+despatch officially about the Prince Imperial's statue; but
+you can tell Waddington unofficially as much of the following
+as you may think useful. As soon as I got it, I communicated
+with the Prime Minister, who sent to the Dean
+of Westminster. The Dean, when the message reached
+him, had already forwarded to all the newspapers a letter
+which you have read in the issues of this morning. On
+reading it we came to the conclusion that the matter had
+gone too far to be recalled.</p>
+
+<p>On historical considerations the Dean proposes to put
+the monument into Henry the Seventh's chapel, and for
+that purpose, undoubtedly, the Queen's permission must
+be obtained. But as regards the Abbey in general he is
+absolutely supreme. He might put up a statue of Nana
+Sahib, if he chose. So we must decline to accept any
+responsibility for his proceedings. As he has publicly made
+the announcement that it is his intention, if not interfered
+with, to give the requisite permission, it is clearly impossible
+for us to 'apply pressure' to induce him to give way.
+The motive for doing so would have to be confessed and
+would cause much misapprehension.</p>
+
+<p>I have expressed a wish to see the inscription before it
+is put up, and I have no doubt I shall be allowed to do so.
+I think I can assure M. Waddington that there is not the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+slightest danger of anything about Napoleon IV. being
+contained in it.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p>The monument was never erected, the project
+meeting with much opposition in Parliament as
+calculated to offend the susceptibilities of the French
+Government.</p>
+
+<p>It must be admitted that the circumstances
+surrounding the death of this unfortunate Prince
+reflect discredit, though in an unequal degree, upon
+both the French and the British Governments.
+If the French Government showed a petty and
+vindictive spirit totally unworthy of a great and
+powerful nation, the misunderstanding which enabled
+the Prince to go to South Africa; his vague and
+indefinite status with respect to the expeditionary
+force; the equally vague conditions attaching to his
+relations with Captain Carey, which were partly
+responsible for his death; the unhappy suggestion
+of the Abbey monument; the helpless attitude of
+the Government in the face of an enterprising
+ecclesiastic; and the subsequent unseemly discussion
+in the House of Commons, are eloquent of slipshod
+and careless methods which are discreditable
+to British administration and constitute a somewhat
+humiliating page in the national history.</p>
+
+<p>The autumn of 1879 was marked by the conclusion
+of the Austro-German alliance, hailed at
+the time by Lord Salisbury as 'glad tidings of
+great joy,' and destined profoundly to influence
+European politics for many years to come. In
+spite of assurances given by Bismarck himself, by
+Andrassy, and by Haymerle, this new grouping
+of two first-class military Powers caused much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+perturbation at Paris, which was certainly not
+allayed by Lord Salisbury's benediction, and provided
+convenient material for an attack upon the
+tottering Waddington administration.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 14, 1879.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As to French internal politics, the most striking feature
+is the somewhat vague but almost universal feeling of
+uneasiness about the future which pervades France. It is
+impossible not to see that this feeling has increased even
+during the few weeks that have elapsed since I went away
+on leave in August. I suppose that the immediate fear is
+that the Waddington Ministry will be succeeded by one
+more Radical, and that thus, step by step, the Ultra-Reds
+will get the Government into their hands.</p>
+
+<p>When I first saw Waddington on my return, he was in
+good spirits, thinking that the threatened attacks upon
+him about the amnesty, the Government, and especially
+the diplomatic appointments, had blown over. Now,
+however, he is menaced with an interpellation on the
+Austro-German understanding. This understanding is, of
+course, extremely unpalatable to the French, and among
+them the general belief is that it binds Austria to assist
+Germany, in case of need, to defend Alsace and Lorraine
+against France. Waddington has the most positive
+assurances from Bismarck, Andrassy and Haymerle that
+there is nothing against France in it, but this is not enough
+to reassure the cavillers. The intention seems to be to
+reproach Waddington with this understanding generally, as
+indicating the failure of his Foreign Policy, and in particular
+to blame him for having an Ambassador at Vienna
+who neither prevented, nor found it out, and an Ambassador
+in London who did not make the French policy on the
+subject properly understood by the English Government.
+It seems that it is intended to argue that you would not
+have spoken of the understanding in the terms you used<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+at Manchester, if you had known the painful impression
+it had made in France.</p>
+
+<p>There are two opinions in France on the Foreign Policy
+to be now adopted. Perhaps the general, unreflecting
+public are inclined to throw themselves into the arms of
+Russia. The wise heads (and there is some reason to hope
+that Gambetta may be among them) look rather to England,
+and are willing to conciliate her by supporting her views in
+the East. It may be worth while to take this feeling into
+account, and perhaps with that view rather to put forward
+the reinstatement of Khaireddin and Midhat as the objects
+in view, than exclusively English appointments.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It seems to be a more or less established rule
+that when an English Foreign Secretary makes a
+speech, Ambassadors should write and expatiate
+upon the admirable effect which has been produced
+abroad, and Lord Lyons's comment upon Lord
+Salisbury's Manchester speech approaches more
+nearly to criticism than appears elsewhere in his
+correspondence. The charge of ignorance brought
+against the French Ambassador at Vienna was
+probably quite correct, but the British Embassy
+at Vienna must have been in the same case, for the
+existence of the Austro-German alliance was first
+discovered by that extremely able public servant,
+the late Sir Joseph Crowe, K.C.M.G.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> As for the
+alleged inaction of the French Ambassador at
+London, that official was a retired admiral, whom
+apparently Waddington seldom seems to have consulted,
+and over whose unconscious head business was
+habitually transacted by the French Foreign Office.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 21, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>We are within a week of the opening of the session, but
+the situation has not become more clear. Gambetta and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+Waddington have a personal dislike to each other, and no
+doubt Gambetta would be glad to oust Waddington, and
+to put in his place some new Minister for Foreign Affairs,
+such as the Marquis de Noailles, with some creature of his
+own, such as Spüller as adlatus or Under Secretary of State.
+But then Gambetta would find it difficult to do this without
+bringing about such a break up of the Ministry as would
+raise the question of his own taking office. But if those
+who ought to know him well judge aright, he does not wish
+to come into power until he sees his way to doing something
+very great&mdash;in fact to getting back Alsace and Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta professes to be strongly in favour of the
+English Alliance, and for that and for other reasons, to
+make a liberal treaty of commerce with us. I do not,
+however, imagine that his ideas of a liberal treaty go beyond
+maintaining, or nearly so, the tariffs as they stand in the
+existing Anglo-French Treaties.</p>
+
+<p>I imagine he has thought of going to England himself
+whenever he has a good opportunity, not with a view to
+putting himself into the hands of Sir Charles Dilke and
+taking part in any Ultra-Radical demonstration, but rather
+with a desire of conciliating the moderate public opinion
+in England, and showing that he has no desire to promote
+a Republican Propaganda abroad. He seems to have a
+decidedly friendly feeling towards the present English
+Ministry.</p>
+
+<p>I have heard that the Russian Grand Dukes had been
+led by General Chanzy to expect a much more warm and
+cordial reception at Paris than they actually met with, and
+that consequently they were by no means pleased.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington seems to be as little prepared to go into
+the Newfoundland question as he was two months ago.
+The impression he makes upon me is the same that he made
+upon you. The Navy Department keep him in awe of
+them and prevent his acting upon the reasonable views he
+expressed to you at Berlin.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The various difficulties in all parts of the world
+which were before long to trouble Anglo-French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+relations for many years, had now begun to manifest
+themselves in such places as Newfoundland, Tahiti,
+Réunion, the Gambia, and elsewhere. All these
+troublesome questions fell under the Marine Department,
+and their accumulation was productive
+of an irritation which hampered M. Waddington,
+whose position was also weakened by a rabid
+demand made upon the Ministry for Government
+appointments. In fact it was difficult to see how
+any French Ministry could last, if the American
+system of a fresh division of the spoils was to take
+place whenever a change occurred. In America
+the Executive is safe for four years, but in France,
+directly the places had been distributed, the disappointed
+combined to overthrow the unhappy
+Ministers responsible for the distribution.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile his most formidable opponent, the
+ex-Democrat, Gambetta, had assumed the <em>rôle</em> of
+a grand seigneur, and gave sumptuous Parliamentary
+banquets which were pronounced by the highest
+gastronomic authorities to be exquisite in every
+respect. He contemplated a visit to London, and
+it is somewhat surprising to learn that the Democrat
+showed a very obvious prepossession in favour of the
+English Conservative Party.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 12, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Gambetta has heard with very great satisfaction that
+you and Lord Beaconsfield would be very glad of the
+opportunity of seeing him, which will be afforded if he
+carries into effect his idea of going to England. He feels
+that it would be essential that he should not make himself
+the guest or place himself under the special guidance of
+any political person on one side or the other. He would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+probably go to an hotel. As to the time of his visit, he
+does not seem to have formed any definite plan. It seems
+to be connected in his mind with the Treaty of Commerce,
+and he seems inclined to secure himself a good reception
+by contributing first to making a favourable Treaty of
+Commerce. I suppose he and his countrymen would
+consider a Treaty simply renewing the arrangements of
+1860 as very favourable to us. He absolutely repudiates
+all notion of anything like Republican propagandism. He
+has a strong bias in favour of the Conservatives in England.
+His sympathies are with an active Foreign Policy, and he
+has a grudge against the Liberals because they did not come
+to the assistance of France in the Franco-German war.
+He seems to follow English home politics very carefully.
+He wishes England and France to act together in the
+East, but considers that things have got into a horrid
+mess at Constantinople, and expresses regret that the
+French and English Embassies there do not pull more
+together.</p>
+
+<p>I think one of his objects in going to England would be
+to show people in France that he is considered a person of
+sufficient importance to be admitted into the society of
+people of rank and station in aristocratic England.</p>
+
+<p>He has also no doubt the higher object of making France
+and himself popular in England, so as to avert all risk of
+England's joining the Austro-German Alliance to the
+detriment of France.</p>
+
+<p>The danger would be that he would form too great
+expectations of obtaining a positive alliance with England,
+and that if we did not come up to his expectations in this
+respect, he might in his disappointment, turn to Russia.
+But from this point of view, the most dangerous thing would
+be to <em>froisser</em> his susceptibility by showing any coldness
+beforehand about his visit.</p>
+
+<p>He undertakes to let us know whenever he comes to any
+resolution about going to England.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>From the above letter it will be seen how much
+importance was attached to Gambetta's views, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+how desirable it was considered to secure his
+goodwill; but apparently the visit to London
+from which so much was expected, never took
+place&mdash;perhaps because his English Conservative
+friends were shortly afterwards turned out of
+office.</p>
+
+<p>The threatened attack upon the Waddington
+administration took the form of a vote of want of
+confidence which was moved in the month of
+December, but successfully rejected. The Ministerial
+success, however, was of a somewhat fictitious
+nature, as the Left Groups when united, outnumbered
+the Right, and the Government was, therefore, liable
+to be turned out by a combination. M. Waddington
+himself professed satisfaction, and affirmed with
+pride that he had been congratulated upon his
+majority by the British Government; while from
+Berlin, Vienna, and even from St. Petersburg, where
+he was not in favour, assurances had been received
+of the satisfaction felt at the prospect of his continuing
+in office. The result, too, of the vote enabled
+him to carry out an intention he had long had in
+his mind, of abandoning the Presidency of the
+Council, and of retaining the office of Minister of
+Foreign Affairs. His own wish was to see M. Léon
+Say Prime Minister, but as that was out of the
+question, he favoured the appointment of M. de
+Freycinet, who, in addition to other qualifications,
+possessed the confidence of Gambetta, and would
+therefore render it difficult for the latter to attack the
+Government. The proposed transformation of the
+Ministry, however, was found difficult to effect,
+chiefly owing to the animosity of Gambetta against
+Waddington; the former being credited with the
+intention of upsetting any Ministry in which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+latter remained. Gambetta was in fact pursuing a
+systematic dog-in-the-manger policy which was little
+to his credit, for while continually attacking and
+threatening the Government he was unwilling to take
+office himself, with the Chamber then in existence,
+since he realized that the Ultra-Radicals were trying
+to force him into a position in which he would have
+either to accept responsibility or to abandon the
+leadership of the Republican Party. The object, in
+short, of Clémenceau and the extreme party was to
+use Gambetta up in order to make room eventually
+for themselves. Neither President Grévy or
+Freycinet showed any accommodating spirit with
+regard to Waddington's plans, and when Freycinet
+laid down conditions which were unacceptable, the
+President tried to persuade Waddington to remain
+on as Prime Minister; but Waddington's position
+had been further impaired by imprudent representation
+on the part of President Grévy and others,
+that he was highly acceptable to Bismarck as a
+Minister, and Waddington admitted openly himself
+that he was wanting in the qualifications of a
+French Parliamentary leader. Consequently the
+upshot of it all was that he resigned, and Freycinet
+was allowed to form a new administration on his
+own terms. 'I part with Waddington with great
+regret,' wrote Lord Lyons. 'He had the greatest
+of all recommendations, that you could believe him,
+and feel sure of him.' These regrets were shared
+by Lord Salisbury. 'I am very sorry for the loss
+of Waddington. It was a luxury to have a French
+Minister who worked on principles intelligible to
+the English mind.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 30, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>With the new Ministry I suppose Gambetta's reign is
+to begin. The Cabinet was almost ostensibly formed by
+him. He did not, and probably could not, put in any of
+the chief men of his own party. They are kept, or keep
+themselves, in reserve to come into power with Gambetta
+himself. The present Ministers are personally to a certain
+extent Moderate, and altogether, so far as they are known,
+mediocre. Freycinet is said to have some inclination to
+assert independence, but he has not hitherto rebelled
+against his old master Gambetta.</p>
+
+<p>The man who appears to have lost most reputation in
+the affair is President Grévy. He knows well enough that
+it is Gambetta's intention to supplant him, but he has
+allowed himself to be circumvented with his eyes open,
+from lack of resolution and lack of energy, and has apparently
+let his rival obtain complete control of the Government.</p>
+
+<p>I do not suppose that we shall see at present any
+marked change in the Foreign Policy of the French Government.
+Freycinet knows nothing whatever of Foreign
+Affairs. Gambetta has strong general notions, but seems
+more inclined to insist upon disposing of the patronage of
+the Foreign Office than to go into the details of the business.
+At home I suppose the first measure will be a wholesale
+redistribution of places. <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Aux situations nouvelles, il faut
+des hommes nouveaux</i>, was the principle proclaimed by
+Clémenceau. Beust<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> turns the phrase round and says:
+<em>Aux hommes nouveaux il faut des situations.</em></p>
+
+<p>At all events the centre Gauche is dead, and with it the
+Thiers' policy, which was to preserve as far as possible the
+institutions, the laws and the administrative system in
+France, with the simple change of having an elective
+President, instead of an hereditary sovereign at the head.
+The policy could not last long unless it was directed by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+really able energetic President. France is now about to
+try real democratic and republican government, and it will
+be a dangerous experiment in a country like this. It would
+be a still more dangerous experiment if the old warlike
+spirit had survived in the people. Happily for peace, they
+are more intent upon making and enjoying money than
+upon obtaining military glory, or even upon recovering
+their lost provinces. Gambetta will try for the recovery of
+the Provinces if he preserves his energies and fortune seems
+to give him a chance.</p>
+
+<p>I have just seen Pothuau<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> who seems very indignant at
+his place in London having been offered to Waddington,
+and declares that he has no intention of giving it up.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons was destined to witness many more
+changes of Government in France before his final
+departure; most of them accurately described by
+the hackneyed phrase: <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Plus cela change, plus c'est la
+même chose.</i></p>
+
+<p>A letter from Major Baring written at the close
+of the year is worth quoting as evidence of the
+improved and hopeful condition of Egypt, and also
+of the harmony prevailing at the time between the
+English and French Controllers.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Major Baring to Lord Lyons</em>.</h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Cairo, Dec. 29, 1879.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You may like to hear what I think of the state of things
+here, so I venture to write this line.</p>
+
+<p>There is a very decided improvement. Since I have
+been connected with Egyptian affairs I never remember
+matters going so smoothly. I like what I see of the
+Khedive, and I see a great deal of him, for he frequently
+presides at the Council, and besides this I often go to see
+him on business. Riaz's head is rather turned by the
+decorations he has received, but he is very well disposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+and will always follow our advice, if we insist. He is
+oppressed with the fear that Nubar will return to office;
+as, without doubt, he will sooner or later; but it is not at
+all to be desired that he should return just yet. What we
+want is <em>time</em>. If we can get along for six months, or better,
+a year, without any considerable change I really believe
+that the financial crisis which has now lasted so long may
+be brought to a close.</p>
+
+<p>Cherif and the Turks made overtures to Nubar the other
+day, but he was wise enough to decline so unnatural a
+coalition.</p>
+
+<p>Before long our financial scheme will be ready to launch,
+and if, as I hope, it is accepted, the Commission of Liquidation
+will no longer be necessary. This is perhaps the best
+solution of the matter.</p>
+
+<p>We shall reduce Unified to 4 per cent, and leave
+Preference alone.</p>
+
+<p>Blignières is behaving most loyally in everything which
+concerns English interests. The Khedive and his Ministers
+have, I think, got over the prejudice they entertained
+against him.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. de Freycinet took over the Foreign Office as
+well as the Presidency of the Council; as has already
+been stated, he was quite ignorant of all foreign
+questions, and was also looked upon as less reliable
+than M. Waddington. The first official interview
+with him, however, produced a favourable impression,
+all the more because he did not let out a flood
+of common-places about devotion to England, and
+so forth; but the important question was to know
+what line Gambetta was inclined to take in Foreign
+Policy, and Sheffield was deputed to find out.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 17, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Gambetta has expressed confidentially to Sheffield
+to-day his views as to the Foreign Policy of France; with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+the intention of course that they should be communicated
+to me only in the strictest privacy.</p>
+
+<p>He considered that the Austro-German Alliance had
+been made against France; that it entered into Prince
+Bismarck's calculations that it might throw France into the
+arms of Russia, but that His Highness thought that there
+would be more than a compensation for this if in consequence
+of it England were completely detached from France.
+Gambetta declared that France had not fallen into this
+trap and would not fall into it&mdash;that she would never make
+an alliance with Russia, but that if Russia were attacked
+by Germany, France would have to take care of her own
+safety. He had information which convinced him that
+there was no foundation for the assertions that Russian
+troops were being massed on the frontier of Germany, and
+he believed that these rumours were spread from Berlin
+to afford a pretext for an attack on Russia, to be made so
+suddenly as to be successful at once and to enable Germany
+to turn towards France without any fear of Russia in her
+rear.</p>
+
+<p>In order to disconcert this plan Gambetta thought it
+highly important that a good understanding should be
+established between England and Russia both with regard
+to Turkey and to India. He held that it was the interest
+of France to urge in every way the Russian Government
+to come to such an understanding with England. He looked
+upon the state of things at Constantinople as very bad,
+and attributed it to the disagreements between the French
+and English Ambassadors; while in order to promote the
+accord which he wished to see between England and Russia
+he desired that the best feeling should exist between the
+French and English Representatives at Constantinople.
+It was evident, however, from what he said that any complaint
+against Fournier by England would be met by
+counter-complaints on the part of France against Layard.
+If Fournier resigned, Tissot the French Minister at Athens
+would be Gambetta's candidate for the Embassy in Turkey.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta denied most positively that there was any
+truth whatever in the rumours that he had been in communication
+with Bismarck about the restoration of Lorraine to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+France or anything of the kind. As to the insinuation
+that it was proposed that while Lorraine should be restored,
+France should receive a slice of Belgium in compensation
+for Alsace, Gambetta said that it was plain that this could
+only have been put about to produce ill-will between
+England and France. After the Benedetti affair, no
+Frenchman in his senses would enter into secret arrangements
+with Bismarck about Belgium, and the French
+Republic had certainly no desire under any circumstances
+to despoil its neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta expressed a desire that a liberal Treaty of
+Commerce should be made with England and he was
+eloquent on the importance of a close and cordial union
+between the two countries.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta impressed upon Sheffield that he was speaking
+to him simply as a friend, and quite privately. I think it
+is interesting and important to know what sentiments he
+expresses in this way: but, of course, if he was quoted, or
+if what he said was allowed to transpire, he would feel
+bitterly towards us and at once put an end to all communications
+of the kind. His tone appears to have been quite
+that of a man who felt that he would have the power to
+carry into effect the policy he recommended in this country.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet has just been to see me, but I did not find
+him equally communicative on the general Foreign Policy
+of France.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>As Freycinet was occupied at that moment, <em>more
+Gallico</em>, in clearing the old officials out of the Foreign
+Office, and as he admittedly possessed little knowledge
+himself, his reticence under the circumstances
+was not surprising; but, so far as could be
+gathered, it was the intention of the new Ministry
+to follow the prudent course of their predecessors,
+a profession of faith evidently intended especially
+for Berlin. As regards the so-called Eastern Question,
+interest had temporarily shifted from Egypt to
+Greece, and the various Powers were endeavouring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+without much success to negotiate the cession of
+Turkish territory to that country. The usual spring
+war scare had taken a different shape, and, without
+any foundation whatever, Bismarck was credited
+with the extraordinary intention of suddenly falling
+upon Russia, while a coolness had sprung up
+between the French and Russian Governments
+owing to the refusal of the former to surrender the
+Nihilist Hartmann, who was implicated in an attempt
+to wreck a train in which the Russian Emperor
+was travelling.</p>
+
+<p>This refusal annoyed the Emperor so much that he
+withdrew his Ambassador, Prince Orloff, from Paris,
+the French consoling themselves with the thought
+that if they lost the favour of the Russian Emperor
+they would, on the other hand, ingratiate themselves
+with Bismarck.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the Greek Frontier question, which in
+consequence of an English proposal had been
+referred to an International Commission, there was,
+for some unknown reason, a disposition to blame
+the British Government.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Sir H. Layard.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 19, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The withdrawal of Orloff, on account of the refusal of
+the French Government to give up Hartmann, is of course
+the topic of the day here. The form adopted is that which
+was used when normal relations between Russia and the
+Pope were suspended some years ago. The Emperor
+Alexander is, I understand, very angry; but I do not know
+how long this <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mouvement d'humeur</i> will hold out against
+the obvious political interest which both Russia and France
+have in not being on bad terms with each other. There
+was a strong feeling on the Left of the Chamber against
+giving Hartmann up, and as to foreign relations, I suppose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+the French set pleasing Bismarck against displeasing the
+European Alexander.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet is decidedly against the admission of Turkey
+to the Greek Frontier Commission. It might have been
+politic to admit her, though I don't see how she could have
+been asked to engage to be bound by the votes of the
+majority.</p>
+
+<p>I think things in the East are indeed looking serious.
+How Turkey is to be kept going, in spite of herself, much
+longer, passes my comprehension. I should be sorry to
+make a fourth in an alliance between France, Russia and
+Turkey. If France and Russia did unite for any serious
+purpose, I should think the last thing they would wish
+would be to tie such a clog as Turkey to their wheels. If
+there is any truth in the proverb, <em>Quem deus vult perdere
+si</em>, etc., I am afraid that there can be very little doubt
+that the ruin of Abdul Hamid is in the hands of Allah.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">THE REVIVAL OF FRANCE</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">(1880-1881)</p>
+
+
+<p>The General Election in England which took place in
+March, 1880, resulted not only in the rout of the Conservative
+Party, but in the reversal of the Foreign
+Policy of Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury,
+and necessitated the withdrawal of Sir Henry
+Layard from Constantinople, while Lord Lytton,
+whose Afghan policy had been furiously denounced
+by the Liberal Party, sent in his resignation. It is
+worthy of note that Lord Lyons, whom no one could
+accuse of Jingo tendencies, and whose opinion was
+certainly a very much better one than that of most
+of Lord Lytton's critics, was emphatically in favour
+of the latter's Afghan policy. Writing to Lady
+Lytton on January 8, 1879, he had expressed himself
+as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have never had the least misgiving about Lytton's
+policy with regard to Afghanistan, and I was always sure
+it would be wisely carried into execution. I am only too
+thankful that we have a spirited Viceroy. You can hardly
+form an idea of the advantage our reputation has derived,
+all over Europe, from the Afghan campaign, and you have
+seen enough of diplomacy to know how much success in all
+questions of Foreign Policy depends upon the prestige of
+the country one represents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Sir Henry Layard had incurred even greater
+execration than Lord Lytton in the eyes of the
+Liberal Party, because he was considered to have
+been deeply committed to what was described as
+the Pro-Turkish policy of the Conservative Government,
+although his inexpiable offence seems to have
+consisted chiefly in strenuous and unavailing efforts
+to induce the Turks to put their house in order.
+During his stay at Constantinople he had been
+greatly hampered by the consistent opposition of
+his French colleague, M. Fournier, whose great
+object it appeared to be to thwart English action
+whenever opportunity occurred. The French
+Government, which professed great anxiety to act
+in harmony with England, upon ascertaining that
+Sir Henry Layard was to be replaced by Mr.
+Goschen,<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> withdrew Fournier and appointed M.
+Tissot in his place.</p>
+
+<p>A change in the French Embassy in London was
+also imminent, and the circumstances attending
+the appointment of a new Ambassador were not
+devoid of humour.</p>
+
+<p>Admiral Pothuau, the Ambassador under the
+Waddington régime, had been forced to retire,
+probably much against his inclination, and it was
+considered that M. Léon Say would make an excellent
+representative, more especially as he passed as
+that <em>rara avis</em>, a French Free Trader; but M. Say
+shortly after accepting the appointment was elected
+President of the Senate, and therefore forced to
+resign. To find a satisfactory successor was
+apparently not so simple a matter as might have
+been assumed. Nothing could have been more
+correct than M. de Freycinet's ideal of a French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+Ambassador in London: 'a man possessing the full
+confidence and sharing the sentiments of his Government;
+not so much of a politician as to be thinking
+more of establishing his own political position at
+home than of following his instructions: a man
+who would stay long at the post, and desire to stay
+there; who would form personal friendships with
+English Statesmen, and improve good relations and
+soften asperities by personal influence. A man
+calculated to take a part in a society like that of
+London, and who would not be out of place at a
+Court&mdash;a man who would have a wife with the same
+qualities&mdash;finally, a man not unaccustomed to diplomatic
+business and diligent and accurate in transacting
+it.' When, however, the question passed
+from the abstract to the concrete, M. de Freycinet's
+ideas ceased to flow so freely, and he seemed utterly
+at a loss to find the ideal being which his imagination
+had sketched, although he mentioned M. Challemel
+Lacour&mdash;as a man who would not do. In spite,
+however, of M. Challemel Lacour being in M. de
+Freycinet's opinion a man 'who would not do,' it
+was evident that he had a powerful backing, for
+an emissary from the French Foreign Office shortly
+made his appearance at the Embassy and intimated
+in so many words that the appointment of M.
+Challemel Lacour would be agreeable to Gambetta.
+That no doubt was a considerable advantage, but
+M. Challemel Lacour by no means corresponded
+to M. de Freycinet's ideal representative, being a
+man of unconciliatory character and particularly
+notorious on account of a speech which he had once
+made, in which, alluding to political opponents,
+he had used the words <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Fusillez moi ces gens là!</i> an
+expression which was continually being quoted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+against him. In the meanwhile, however, M. de
+Freycinet had had an inspiration, and sent for Lord
+Lyons to tell him that he had discovered just the
+right man for the place. Unfortunately, this personage
+was married to a lady whose antecedents
+were not considered to be satisfactory, and it
+became necessary to intimate that under the circumstances
+the appointment would not be favourably
+received in England.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'Freycinet was dreadfully put out,' wrote Lord Lyons,
+'when he found that the appointment was impossible.
+He complained chiefly of Léon Say for having brought him
+into the difficulty, by first accepting the London Embassy
+and then standing for the Presidency of the Senate.</p>
+
+<p>'Léon Say's picture of the lady is about as much like
+what she was when I last saw her a few years ago, as
+Challemel Lacour is like Freycinet's ideal of a French
+Ambassador in London.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The appointment of M. Challemel Lacour was
+persisted in, and gave rise to some very disagreeable
+discussions in the House of Commons. Doubtless
+much of the abuse of M. Challemel Lacour was undeserved,
+but whatever his political capacity, he
+was not remarkable for urbanity.</p>
+
+<p>On the occasion of a big official dinner at the
+Paris Embassy, when requested to take in the absolutely
+unexceptionable and agreeable wife of one
+of his principal ministerial colleagues, he replied
+with an emphatic '<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Jamais!</i>' which precluded any
+further discussion.</p>
+
+<p>The question of diplomatic appointments recalls
+the fact that it was about this time that my connection
+with Lord Lyons first began, through
+becoming a member of his staff, and that it may be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+appropriate to say something about his habits and
+personal characteristics.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons, who was then more than sixty
+years of age, was a big, heavily built man, whose
+appearance in no respect suggested the diplomatist
+of fiction, and who rather resembled the conventional
+British squire as depicted by Leech; and the chief
+characteristic of his somewhat homely features was
+a small piercing eye which nothing seemed to escape,
+from the most unimportant clerical error to a minute
+detail in a lady's dress. As compared with the
+ordinary English diplomatist, his knowledge of
+foreign languages, without being exceptional, was
+thoroughly adequate. He, of course, spoke French
+with perfect facility, and it is probable that he wrote
+it with greater correctness than many Frenchmen,
+having a complete mastery both of the grammar and
+of all the complicated expressions which are made
+use of in correspondence. He was also equally at
+home in Italian; had a knowledge of German, and
+was well acquainted with modern Greek. In addition,
+he was a fair classical scholar, and a peculiarly retentive
+memory enabled him, unlike most people, to
+remember much of what he had read. His manner,
+at first sight, seemed somewhat alarming, and he
+was altogether a person with whom no one would
+have felt disposed to take a liberty, but the alarming
+impression, which was solely due to shyness, wore
+off with closer acquaintance as the natural kindliness
+of his disposition revealed itself, and one of
+the excellent traits in his character was, that he never
+formed a favourable or unfavourable opinion of any
+one in a hurry, but invariably waited for the test
+of time. The result was, in almost every case, that
+the more he saw of people the more he liked them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+and the more reluctant he became to part with men
+who had been associated with him for any length
+of time. The position which he occupied in British
+diplomacy during the twenty years which he spent
+at Paris may, without exaggeration be described
+as unique. No other man stood on quite the same
+footing, though it would be idle to deny that there
+were some who were perhaps more brilliant. But
+the implicit confidence which successive Foreign
+Secretaries placed in Lord Lyons's judgment was
+based upon the knowledge that his opinions were
+sound, unprejudiced, disinterested, and only formed
+after the most conscientious investigations. 'I
+never volunteer advice,' he used to remark, and it
+was perhaps for that very reason that his opinion
+was so frequently sought by the Foreign Office.
+In fact so much importance was attached to his
+views that he was occasionally asked to give his
+opinion upon subjects of which he had no knowledge
+whatever, ranging from the defence of Canada
+to the minimum dress allowance required by the wife
+of a British Ambassador at Paris. As he had no
+intention of seeking a consort himself, and as he had
+no intention, either, of resigning his post, the latter
+inquiry (which was made in 1870) appears somewhat
+superfluous; but, it may be worth noting, that
+as the result of conscientious researches, he reported
+that £1000 a year was considered to be necessary.</p>
+
+<p>As to his merits as a chief, every one who
+had ever been associated with him was of
+the same opinion, and it was generally held at
+the Foreign Office that service under him at the
+Paris Embassy was a liberal education in itself. It
+may be doubted, however, whether his capacity
+and love of work were not to some extent a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+disadvantage to his subordinates, since his industry
+was so great that it left them comparatively little
+responsible work to do. At the Paris Embassy the
+ordinary routine work is probably greater than at
+any other Embassy with the exception of Constantinople,
+but there was scarcely anything, however
+trivial, which he did not attend to himself.
+It is believed in some quarters that an Ambassador
+leads a dignified, luxurious and comparatively unoccupied
+life, but that was emphatically not the
+case with Lord Lyons. He rose early and began
+the day by carefully studying the more serious
+French newspapers; the whole of the time up to
+luncheon was spent in writing or reading despatches,
+or attending to the various small questions which
+were continually occurring. In the afternoon he
+worked again until about 3 or 4 p.m., and then
+usually went to see the French Foreign Minister or
+paid official calls in connection with current business.
+Upon his return he worked again until dinner unless
+interrupted by visitors, who were often of a tedious
+and uninteresting type, and it not infrequently
+happened that telegrams would arrive at a comparatively
+late hour of the night which it was necessary
+to deal with immediately. All correspondence which
+arrived at the Embassy, no matter from how insignificant
+a source, was attended to by him personally,
+and elaborate directions given with regard to the
+replies, which were invariably sent with the least
+possible delay. His industry was only equalled by
+an almost preternatural caution, which showed
+itself in a variety of ways. The reluctance to give
+advice has already been noticed, but his excessive
+caution showed itself not only in writing, but in
+conversation, and even amongst intimates he rarely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+expressed opinions on men or things which it would
+have been unsafe to quote in public, although his
+conversation was marked by much dry and original
+humour of that elusive character which cannot be
+described on paper. It was practically impossible
+to catch him napping. 'The Juarez (Mexican
+Revolutionary) Minister having left his card upon
+me without any official designation, I have
+returned a card also without an official designation,'
+he wrote from Washington in 1859. His reticence
+during the prolonged <em>Trent</em> crisis has already been
+commented upon. 'I received by the last mail,'
+he wrote to Sir Henry Elliot in 1867, 'a letter
+from Hussein Khan, containing nothing but
+complimentary expressions. Not wishing to be
+outdone in civility, I have written a reply in
+the same strain. It has, however, occurred
+to me as just possible that Hussein Khan may
+desire to appear to be in correspondence with me
+for some particular object, and that there may be
+something which has occurred since I saw him,
+which might render it advisable that he should not
+be in correspondence with me. Accordingly I send
+my letter herewith open to you. If you see any
+reason, however slight, for not forwarding it, please
+destroy it, and take an opportunity of telling
+Hussein Khan that I asked you to thank him for
+his letter to me.' It will be remembered that even
+Queen Victoria was unable to draw him successfully
+on the subject of the Treaty of Berlin. Similar
+instances might be quoted indefinitely, and as an
+illustration of his caution in private life it may be
+mentioned that he never stirred a yard outside
+the house without a passport. A man of this
+temperament was not likely to make mistakes, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+it is a remarkable fact that throughout a correspondence
+extending over something like forty years,
+there is not to be found a single expression in
+any official communication addressed to him which
+could by any stretch of the imagination be
+described as a censure or even as a criticism of his
+proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>As for the pleasures of the world, they hardly
+seemed to exist for him, but the ordinary human
+weaknesses, which were chiefly non-existent in his
+case, he regarded with an indulgent and even benevolent
+eye. He used to repeat with much glee that
+the chief entry upon his <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">dossier</i> at the Paris Préfecture
+de Police consisted of the words: <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">On ne lui
+connait pas de vice</i>, and this concise statement may
+be said to have been literally true. He had never
+been in debt, never gambled, never quarrelled, never,
+as far as was known, ever been in love, although it
+was a mistake to suppose that the opposite sex
+possessed no attractions for him. Nor did he possess
+the resources available to the ordinary man, for he
+cared nothing for sport, had probably never played
+a game in his life, and detested exercise and outdoor
+life. The surprising thing was that he contrived to
+keep his health, as although a total abstainer, he
+was a large eater, and never took the slightest
+exercise. In fact, during the last five or six years
+of his life he probably never walked further than the
+English Church in the Rue d'Aguesseau, which was
+within a hundred yards of the Embassy. 'Abstinence
+and exercise,' he used to say, 'were the only
+two things that disagreed with him.'</p>
+
+<p>The natural shyness of his disposition prevented
+him from deriving much real enjoyment from what
+is generally described as society, but all the social<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+duties of an Ambassador were discharged in a
+manner which evoked universal approval. The
+entertainments at the Embassy consisted chiefly of
+dinners, which were remarkable for their excellence,
+and invitations to which were highly prized by all
+sections of French society. Nothing, in fact, could
+exceed the dignity or the faultless taste of the
+Embassy arrangements, and not only were Lord
+Lyons's entertainments renowned, but his horses and
+carriages were, even in Paris, noticeably amongst
+the very best, it being one of his strongest convictions
+that the British representative should
+always make an imposing appearance. But his
+hospitality was no matter of mere show; every night
+the unmarried secretaries were asked to dine with
+him unless otherwise engaged; and it was upon
+these occasions that he used to appear at his best;
+obviously finding more pleasure in their society than
+in that of any one else with the exception of his
+own relatives. Affection, indeed, for his relatives
+was one of his most marked characteristics, and it
+is highly probable that his devotion to his sister, the
+Duchess of Norfolk, and to her sons and daughters,
+was one of the causes of his not marrying; anyhow
+there was no further question of marrying after the
+failure of the determined attempt made upon him
+by an exalted personage, which has already been
+mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>His temper was singularly equable, and during
+his long stay in Paris it was said that upon two
+occasions only was he known to have broken out;
+once, when at a review at Longchamps, the Diplomatic
+Corps were allotted an inferior position, and
+once upon an occasion when his coachman appeared
+wearing trousers instead of top boots and breeches.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+These ebullitions were due to the fact that he
+attached enormous importance to all the outward
+signs of official representation, and strongly resented
+anything which bore in any degree the nature
+of a slight. In his capacity as a private individual
+he was the most modest and unostentatious of men,
+and it is recorded, as an instance of his shyness,
+that he once passed a week at Woburn without ever
+leaving the precincts of the garden, because he was
+so much embarrassed by the salutations of an
+adjacent lodge keeper.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been supposed that a man of this
+unimaginative and eminently judicial character
+would have failed to secure the regard of his subordinates,
+however highly he might be esteemed
+by Cabinets and Foreign Secretaries. As a matter
+of fact, probably no chief ever enjoyed greater
+popularity, which was due to a variety of causes.
+He was essentially a kind-hearted man, his correspondence
+abounds with instances of help given to
+persons who had been in his employment in any
+capacity, however humble; of opportune assistance
+rendered to other persons who had been unlucky in
+their public careers, and of recommendations of
+men whose services appeared to deserve recognition.
+And in spite of his apparently detached nature, he
+took the warmest interest in all those who were
+connected with him officially, and invariably showed
+the utmost consideration, not only for their feelings,
+but for their personal convenience. Thus, unlike
+some distinguished diplomatists, one of his great
+objects was to save his staff unnecessary work;
+he never put obstacles in the way of persons desiring
+leave, and every afternoon at the earliest possible
+moment, in order to release the Chancery, he used<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+to send across the welcome written message: 'I
+have nothing more for to-day,' although that by
+no means signified that his own labours were concluded.
+Hardworking himself, he expected his secretaries
+and attachés to do their share, and it was only
+when they conspicuously failed, that he showed any
+sign of severity. During his long career it fell to
+his lot to administer many reprimands, but these
+were invariably so just and unavoidable, that the
+culprits seldom, if ever, felt any sense of resentment,
+and he always made a point of obliterating as soon
+as possible, any disagreeable incident of this nature.
+The consequence was that he had no enemies, and
+no one who was ever associated with him, has, so
+far as is known, ever had anything but good to say
+of him. Another excellent feature in his character
+was that he always made the best of his subordinates
+instead of searching for their weak points;
+however unpromising the material, he generally
+succeeded in effecting a marked improvement, and
+whenever any one who had been with him left for
+another post, he never failed to draw special attention
+to such good qualities as he appeared to possess
+with the view of assisting him in his future career.
+Perhaps I may be pardoned for interposing a personal
+testimonial, upon the occasion of a temporary
+transfer to Berne, which may serve as an example
+amongst many others.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 15, 1883.</p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">My dear Adams</span>,<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have settled that Legh is to be at Berne on the
+28th, and I hope you will like him. He is clever and well
+informed, though some people think he does not look it.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It need scarcely be added that many of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+communications of this nature are of a more
+elaborate character, and refer to persons who now
+occupy distinguished positions in the British
+Diplomatic Service. As Lord Lyons grew older he
+became more and more reluctant to part with men
+whom he knew well, and it was pathetic to witness
+the obvious sorrow which he felt at their departure.</p>
+
+<p>Paris has always been the most coveted post
+on the Continent, and in addition to the social
+attractions of the place, the Embassy enjoyed the
+reputation of carrying on its business in an efficient
+manner chiefly owing to the qualities of the Ambassador.
+The reputation was well deserved, and
+I can only recall one serious <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">lâche</i>, not devoid,
+however, of humour, as to which I was unjustly
+alleged to be the culprit. At a moment when
+critical negotiations respecting intervention in Egypt
+were proceeding with the French Government, a
+member of the Embassy had an extremely confidential
+conversation with an important French
+Cabinet Minister, in the course of which the Minister
+criticized in very uncomplimentary terms his Ministerial
+colleagues, and the conversation was immediately
+embodied in a confidential despatch to the
+British Foreign Office. The following morning a
+much agitated Chef de Cabinet appeared at the
+Chancery, bearing the despatch, and announced
+that he 'thought that some mistake had occurred,
+as the despatch had been received by the French
+Minister for Foreign Affairs.' To the general consternation,
+it now became evident that the despatch,
+instead of being placed in the Foreign Office bag,
+had found its way into a lithographed envelope
+addressed to the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Ministre des Affaires Etrangères</i>,
+and the whole horrid mystery was laid bare. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+question arose whether Lord Lyons should be told
+or not; the arguments of fear prevailed; the French
+Minister behaved in an honourable manner and kept
+silence, and Lord Lyons, fortunately for all concerned,
+never heard of an incident which he would
+have looked upon as little short of a calamity.</p>
+
+<p>The only possible criticism that could be brought
+against Lord Lyons as an Ambassador would be
+that he led too narrow a life, and moved in too
+restricted a circle. Day after day and week after
+week he led the same existence; even his holidays
+were laid out on the same mechanical principle;
+every year he left his post, much about the same
+date, took the waters at some spa, and then proceeded
+on a round of visits in England, chiefly at
+the country houses of the governing families, such
+as Knowsley, Chatsworth, Woburn, and Hatfield,
+but always including a prolonged stay with his
+relatives at Arundel. He was essentially a diplomatist
+of the old type, consorting entirely in Paris
+with the official classes, the Faubourg, and the
+Haute Finance; keeping the press at arm's length,
+avoiding everything which did not come within the
+scope of his duties, and confining himself strictly
+to his own business. The modern developments of
+diplomacy; the use of the press, the hasty missions
+of amateur diplomatists, the gushing speeches which
+are apparently now considered to be obligatory
+upon the professional diplomatist&mdash;all this would
+have been hateful and perhaps impossible to a man
+who could boast that he had spent five years in
+America without making a speech or taking a drink.
+But in an impartial survey of the twenty-eight
+years which Lord Lyons spent at Washington,
+Constantinople, and Paris, it would be rash to assert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+that any other man would, under similar circumstances,
+have retained to an equal extent the confidence
+of successive British Governments and the
+esteem and friendship of the long series of Foreign
+Ministers with whom he was called upon to negotiate
+questions often of the most vital importance.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main interest in foreign politics in the
+summer of 1880 lay in the Balkan Peninsula. Mr.
+Goschen had been sent out to Constantinople in
+the place of Sir Henry Layard, and Her Majesty's
+Government were endeavouring energetically to
+force the Porte to carry out the provisions of the
+Treaty of Berlin with regard to the rectification of
+the Montenegrin and Greek frontiers. The Greek
+Frontier Question made little way, and the Gladstone
+Government in their diplomatic campaign on
+behalf of the Greeks met with little encouragement
+or support from the other Powers, not even excepting
+France, who had always been the leading
+advocate of Greek claims. When M. de Freycinet
+was asked what he was prepared to do if the Turks
+resolved to defy the Conference which was then sitting,
+nothing more satisfactory could be got out of him
+than: <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">nous marcherons avec vous</i>, or <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">nous ne marcherons
+pas sans vous</i>, and to the question whether he
+would go far if necessary, he only made the cryptic
+reply, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">peut-être bien</i>. The British Government were
+hankering after a naval demonstration, and it was disheartening
+to work with so pusillanimous a comrade.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 21, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>In answer to your private and personal letter of the
+day before yesterday, I may say that I am not much afraid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+of the French not being willing to go as far as we are willing
+to go in coercing the Turks, if they set Europe at defiance
+about the Greek Frontier. Freycinet seems to shrink from
+the idea that actual coercion may be required, but his only
+distinct limit to the action of France is that she will not
+do more than England.</p>
+
+<p>I myself very much doubt whether the Turks will yield
+anything to naval or other demonstrations, unless they are
+quite sure that these demonstrations are the prelude to the
+actual use of force, and it will not be easy to get them to
+believe this, unless we are ourselves quite sure that that
+is what we mean.</p>
+
+<p>Supposing we pushed demonstrations to the point of
+forcing the Dardanelles, and sending the allied fleets to
+Constantinople, we might produce a revolution, without
+obtaining the cession of the territory to Greece. If the
+populations are in parts really unwilling, the central
+government may be truly unable to compel them to give in.</p>
+
+<p>Supposing the Greek troops (<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">par impossible</i>) be defeated
+either by the Turkish troops or by recalcitrant Albanians,
+the ships of the Powers might not be able to do much to
+get them out of the scrape.</p>
+
+<p>I am very far from meaning to say, in answer to your
+question as to the mildest and safest form of coercion, that
+it would consist in moving troops to occupy the territory.
+To do so would be neither mild nor safe, nor easy to arrange.
+But I am afraid we shall find that in the end the treatment
+must be topical, and that if the Greeks cannot take possession
+for themselves, we shall hardly be able to obtain it for
+them by pressure exercised at Constantinople only.</p>
+
+<p>A rendezvous of the fleets at Corfu might have a good
+effect on the Albanians, and perhaps increase the chance
+of the Greeks not being seriously resisted.</p>
+
+<p>I see Goschen suggests that the decision of the Conference
+should be announced to the Porte by an identic
+note. I think a collective note would have more effect
+and be more appropriate.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Turks, however dense they may be in other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+respects, are usually intelligent enough to perceive
+whether the Powers are in earnest or not, and as
+no Government except the British felt much enthusiasm
+for either the Greek or the Montenegrin
+cause, they showed no signs of giving way.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 2, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am afraid it does not look as if the Turks were going
+to yield to the moral force of United Europe. Léon Say
+and Montebello seem to hold even less resolute language
+to you than Freycinet does to me. Did the King of Greece
+understand Gambetta to say that France, with or without
+the co-operation of other Powers, would support Greece
+with troops? Freycinet will no doubt do whatever
+Gambetta tells him, but one of the inconveniences of the
+power behind the Government greater than the Government,
+is that Gambetta does not talk as cautiously as he would
+if he felt direct responsibility. No power except Russia
+seems to be willing to bell the cat. France seems to be the
+only one that has in abundance the three elements&mdash;men,
+ships, and money. Freycinet always says he will do anything
+with us, but nothing alone, and does not seem much
+more willing than Austria to look the chance of having to
+use force in the face.</p>
+
+<p>I do not see much prospect of an immediate diplomatic
+lull, and I very much want one because it is of importance
+to my health (at least the doctors say so) to get away, but
+I conclude that I ought not to shrink from going through
+the national Festival of the 14th July, and that I should
+do what is to be done at least as well as any of my colleagues.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Reviews, it may be said, were functions which he
+abhorred beyond all others.</p>
+
+<p>The King of Greece was in Paris at the time,
+vainly trying to stir up Gambetta to come to his
+assistance, although Gambetta in conversation with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+Sheffield expressed strong opinions as to the desirability
+of France and England acting energetically
+in concert, and even professed himself in favour of
+their making a joint demonstration at Constantinople,
+and landing troops there if necessary. Upon the
+same occasion he betrayed his gross ignorance of
+English politics by lamenting that Lord Beaconsfield
+had not postponed the dissolution until the
+autumn, 'when he would have been certain of
+success.'</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet, however, remained deaf to Lord Granville's
+appeals, even when the latter reproached
+him with the humiliating position in which France
+would be placed by abandoning a question which
+she had made her own, and when the British Government
+proposed a naval demonstration in favour of
+the Prince of Montenegro, made all sorts of excuses
+for evading it if possible.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 13, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I was more displeased than disappointed by the refusal
+of the French to join in the naval demonstration in favour
+of the Prince of Montenegro. They always try to act with
+Germany and have a horror of sending away a ship or a
+man unless Germany does the same: such is their confidence
+in the friendship they profess to believe in, that they want
+always to be ready at the shortest notice to attack their
+friend or to defend themselves from him. They are also,
+no doubt, jealous of any separate help to Montenegro which
+does not explicitly pledge the Powers to action in the
+Greek Question also.</p>
+
+<p>I quite agree with you that separate threats from the
+French to the Porte about Greece (however incorrect their
+acting separately may be) are more likely to do good than
+harm. One Power in earnest would frighten the Porte<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+more than the six, if the Porte were convinced that the
+five others would not restrain the energetic one.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>During the next three months the Sultan, single
+handed, conducted a campaign against the six
+Great Powers, which, as will be seen, nearly ended
+in success; and it must, in fairness, be admitted
+that there was a good deal to be said from the Turkish
+point of view. The Powers were engaged in endeavouring
+to force the Porte to comply with conditions
+directly or indirectly resulting from the
+provisions of the Treaty of Berlin. But no steps
+whatever were taken, or ever have been taken, to
+force other States to comply with stipulations which
+appeared to be disagreeable to them. The right of
+the Sultan, which had been secured to him under
+the Treaty, to occupy Eastern Roumelia, remained
+in reality an empty phrase: the Bulgarian fortresses
+which were to have been demolished, remained
+untouched, the tribute due from Bulgaria
+remained unpaid, and there was no indication of
+an intention to reinstate the unfortunate Mussulmans
+who, as the result of the war, had been driven
+away from their homes, and had been despoiled of
+their property by their new Christian masters.
+Neither could it be justly maintained that, in agreeing
+to a rectification of the Greek frontier at Berlin, the
+Turks had recognized the right of the Greeks to
+annex a territory equal in extent to half of the Greek
+Kingdom. Added to this, were the difficulty and
+the humiliation involved in surrendering against
+their will, a large number of Mussulman subjects.
+The difficulty had in fact proved insurmountable
+in the case of Montenegro, and the Albanians who
+were in the first instance allotted to Montenegro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+offered so successful a resistance that the original
+plan was abandoned, and after much negotiation,
+the Porte accepted 'in principle' the cession of the
+Dulcigno district as an alternative. But the concession
+of anything 'in principle' by the Turks,
+usually means something quite different from the usual
+interpretation of that expression, and the Sultan
+succeeded in organizing a highly successful so-called
+Albanian League, and ably supported by a resourceful
+local Pasha, contrived by various expedients to
+delay the surrender of Dulcigno for so long that it
+began to look as if it would never take place at all.
+Finally, the resources of diplomacy becoming exhausted,
+a policy of coercion was decided upon, and
+an international fleet assembled off the coast of
+Albania in the month of September, under the command
+of Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Each
+power signed a declaration of disinterestedness and
+a pledge not to acquire territory, but the hollow
+nature of this imposing manifestation was betrayed
+by a provision that no troops were to be landed,
+and the Sultan, who probably had some inkling of
+the situation, still refused to give way. A bombardment
+of Dulcigno would presumably have left
+him philosophically indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>As the Dulcigno demonstration did not appear
+likely to produce any satisfactory result, the British
+Government decided upon the hazardous step of
+proposing the seizure of Smyrna, that being considered
+the most efficacious means of coercing the
+Turks and of preventing the concert of the Great
+Powers from becoming the laughing stock of Europe.
+This step was evidently taken chiefly at the instigation
+of Mr. Gladstone, and the letters of Lord Granville bear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+witness to the extreme anxiety which he felt as to the
+result. No encouragement whatever was received
+from France; the timorous Freycinet having in the
+meanwhile been succeeded at the Foreign Office by
+the equally timorous Barthélemy St. Hilaire, an aged
+survival of the Louis Philippe period.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 4, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Barthélemy St. Hilaire's answer about the Greek Frontier
+does not look as if we should receive any energetic help
+from France towards obtaining the settlement of that or
+any other question in the East. The answer was all ready
+cut and dried, and the declaration as to France sticking to
+the Concert, but not taking any initiative, had been made
+before to my colleagues. A more experienced diplomatist
+would have acknowledged more elaborately your courtesy
+in offering to communicate first with France, before
+addressing the other cabinets on the Greek Frontier affair.</p>
+
+<p>The fact is that the present Cabinet is still more
+frightened than the last by the disapproval which has been
+manifested by all parties in France of even the little that
+has already been done. With regard to this, M. St. Hilaire
+made a remark to me yesterday which seems to be true
+enough. France, he said, has quite recovered her financial
+strength, and in great measure her military strength, but
+the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">moral</i> of the people is not yet <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">relevé</i>. They are
+horribly afraid of another war and consequently utterly
+averse from anything like a risky or energetic policy.
+Another popular sentiment, which is extremely inconvenient
+just now, is the feeling that France made the Crimean War
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">pour les beaux yeux de l'Angleterre</i> and had better not
+repeat the experiment. Altogether I am afraid France will
+be a trouble, not a help to us, and I am a good deal put out
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>Barthélemy St. Hilaire talked to me a long time about
+Gambetta, with whom he described himself as very intimate.
+He described Gambetta as having a naturally generous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+nature, as being somewhat impulsive and incautious, but
+at the same time somewhat 'Genoese.' He said that if I
+took opportunities of associating with him, I should find
+his character an interesting study. The study will not be
+a new one to me, and I am not sure that too apparent an
+intimacy between me and Gambetta would be viewed
+without jealousy.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Jules Ferry, the new Prime Minister, was no
+more amenable than his colleague.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 8, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As to the French agreeing to the Smyrna proposal, I
+cannot prognosticate favourably. I had a long conversation
+yesterday with Jules Ferry, the Prime Minister. I
+seemed to make some impression by urging that to break
+up the European Concert now would be to keep the questions
+open, with all their inconveniences and all their dangers,
+for an indefinite time. He also admitted the many
+advantages of the Smyrna plan, and was quite unable to
+suggest any other course of action so likely to bring the
+Sultan to reason without inconvenient consequences. But
+he perpetually reverted to the argument that it would be
+going too near war to be admissible under the French
+Constitution, and that the Chambers on that account would
+call the Ministers severely to task. The argument from
+the Constitution seems to me almost absurd, but it is
+constantly used already in the press, and will no doubt be
+used hereafter in the Chambers. The fact is that Jules
+Ferry and his colleagues are horribly afraid of the effect
+which they believe any action on their part would produce
+on public opinion and on the Chamber.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen B. St. Hilaire this afternoon. I went over
+with him the same ground I had gone over with Jules Ferry
+yesterday, but with much the same result. He told me
+that the question had been discussed in the Cabinet this
+morning and was to be discussed in another Cabinet
+to-morrow. Perhaps they would not like to stay out in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+cold if Germany and Austria came in, but I am afraid they
+will certainly not say 'yes,' though they may say 'no'
+before those Powers have given their answer. They seem
+to argue from the delay of the German Government, that
+Bismarck is against the proposal. Orloff, my Russian
+colleague, tells me that he is strongly urging the French to
+agree. Beust and Radowitz (the German) talk as if they
+themselves thought well of the Smyrna plan, but say they
+have heard nothing from their Governments.</p>
+
+<p>I spoke to B. St. Hilaire about your reasons for communicating
+first with him about the Greek Question, and
+he sent with effusion the message of thanks which he ought
+to have sent at first.</p>
+
+<p>Choiseul is applying with vigour the <em>épuration</em> system
+to the Foreign Office and the Diplomatic Service. He
+seems to have dismissed some very good men in both.
+Des Michels is one of his victims, and to-day he has decapitated
+the head of the Commercial Department.</p>
+
+<p>I think it better not to communicate at present the
+draft instructions to the Admiral. They would, I think,
+be seized upon as arguments that the occupation of Smyrna
+would be an act of war.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Her Majesty's Government were in effect in a
+very bad mess. The Smyrna proposal had received
+no real support from any Power. Bismarck had
+announced that the so-called Eastern Question was
+not worth the bones of a Pomeranian Grenadier,
+and nothing was to be expected from him. The
+same thing applied to Austria; neither Italy nor
+Russia were to be relied upon, and France was unwilling
+and unenterprising. No wonder that Lord
+Granville felt singularly uncomfortable: the Concert
+of Europe, as he expressed it, had 'gone to the
+devil,' no one was going to help him, and unless
+within a few days the Turks yielded, the British
+Government would be confronted with the alternatives
+of seizing Smyrna single handed or of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+confessing defeat and abandoning the contest. Lord
+Granville himself was in favour of the latter course,
+as being logical, and the natural consequence of the
+action of the other Powers, who would neither
+agree to the English proposals nor propose anything
+themselves. Mr. Gladstone, on the other hand, was
+apparently all for going on and acting as the mandatory
+of Europe, and as he usually got his way,
+it is possible that this dangerous course might have
+been adopted; but in the very nick of time, just
+at the moment when the situation looked to be at
+its worst, the Sultan suddenly gave way and
+announced that Dulcigno should be handed over to
+the Montenegrins. What brought about this sudden
+decision has always remained more or less of a
+mystery, but there is no proof that the proposed
+seizure of Smyrna (which would have probably inconvenienced
+European interests quite as much as
+the Sultan) was the deciding factor. According to
+the late Lord Goschen, who was in as good a position
+to know the real facts as any one else, the
+sudden surrender of the Sultan was caused by a
+Havas Agency telegram from Paris; but the
+contents of this communication have never been
+divulged, and Lord Goschen himself never ascertained
+what they were. The surrender of Dulcigno,
+which took place in November, terminated the
+crisis and enabled the Gladstone Government to
+claim a striking if lucky success for their own
+particular sample of spirited Foreign Policy.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1880 the relations between the
+Liberal Government and the Irish Nationalists were
+the reverse of cordial, and a good many inquiries
+used to come from the Foreign Office respecting
+alleged Irish plots and conspiracies at Paris with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+requests that the French police authorities should
+be asked to give their assistance. These requests
+Lord Lyons was in the habit of discouraging as
+much as possible, partly from an ingrained dislike
+to being involved in any secret and equivocal
+transactions, and partly because he knew that if
+the French police gave their assistance in tracking
+down Irish conspirators, they would certainly expect
+reciprocity in regard to Bonapartists and other
+opponents of the existing system of Government
+at that time residing in England. For these reasons
+he always urged that the English police authorities
+should communicate direct with the French police
+authorities without using the Embassy as an intermediary.
+But the efforts of the Gladstone Government
+were not confined to endeavouring to check
+Irish plot by means of the police, and an attempt
+was made to restrain the turbulent bishops and
+priests engaged in the Home Rule agitation by applying
+pressure upon them from Rome. The credit
+of this expedient seems to have been chiefly due to
+the active and enterprising cleric, Monsignor Czacki,
+who was acting as Nuncio at Paris, and who appears
+to have conceived the idea that if the Pope
+could be persuaded to intervene on the side of the
+British Government, it might be possible to re-establish
+regular diplomatic relations between
+England and the Papacy. As far back as December,
+1879, Monsignor Czacki had made certain
+overtures, but they met with no attention from Lord
+Salisbury.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 18, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Last October a very quiet, not to say dull, old
+Italian prelate was succeeded here as Papal Nuncio by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+a very active, talkative and agreeable Pole, Monsignor
+Czacki.</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of December Monsignor Czacki came
+to me and told me that he had received a letter from Ireland
+accompanied by, or referring to, letters from very important
+people, among which was, he said, one from you. He had
+in consequence written to the Pope, and the Pope had
+written to the Irish Bishops to exhort them to do all in
+their power to restrain their flocks from taking part in
+violent or seditious proceedings. Monsignor Czacki asked
+me whether the state of affairs in Ireland was at the moment
+so serious as to render it advisable that the Pope should
+repeat these exhortations to the Irish Bishops. I made
+a somewhat banal answer to the effect that though there
+were no grounds for feeling alarm as to the ultimate issue
+of what was going on, there was good reason that those
+who possessed influence there should use it for the prevention
+of crime and outrage, and also of turbulence and
+disorder.</p>
+
+<p>I reported what has passed in a private letter to Lord
+Salisbury, but I received no answer from him, and I heard
+no more of the matter till yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday, however, Monsignor Czacki came to see me
+and showed me a letter he had received a few days before
+from Lord Emly. The letter said that previous intervention
+had produced the best results, that several Bishops had
+denounced the agitation in the strongest terms, but that
+unfortunately the Socialists were publicly supported by
+various Bishops. It mentioned that the Roman Catholic
+Bishop of Meath, and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of
+Cashel had manifested their sympathy with Mr. Parnell,
+and that the Roman Catholic Bishop of Kilmore had
+himself recommended Mr. Biggar to the electors as a candidate.
+The letter begged Monsignor Czacki to intervene
+again, but it made the request only from Lord Emly himself,
+without any allusion to you or to any other person, as being
+cognizant of it.</p>
+
+<p>Monsignor Czacki said that he entirely sympathized
+with the views of the writer and intended to send the letter
+to Rome; and he proceeded to ask me whether I would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+authorize him to say that he had shown it to me and that
+he sent it with my approval.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me that this would be bringing the thing
+much too near Her Majesty's Government for it to be right
+for me to assent to it without knowing your wishes.</p>
+
+<p>I confess this mode of communicating with the Vatican
+does not commend itself to my judgment, and that
+it seems to me that it might lead to awkwardness and
+interfere with better means you have of communicating
+with the Pope, if you wish to communicate with His Holiness
+at all. At the same time I was not absolutely sure that
+you might not think there might be some convenience in
+having this channel open. I did not therefore rebuff
+Monsignor Czacki, but without giving any hint that I
+should refer to you, said simply that I would think about
+what he had said.</p>
+
+<p>He is very fond of enlarging academically upon the
+advantages England would derive from entering into regular
+diplomatic relations with the Holy See, or if that were
+impossible, from re-establishing an unofficial agent at
+Rome.</p>
+
+<p>You will gather from all this that Monsignor Czacki is
+not altogether disinclined to be busy.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The energetic Nuncio returned to the subject
+at the close of the year.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Dec. 31, 1880.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You may remember that in June last I gave you in a
+private letter a long account of a conversation which
+Monsignor Czacki, the Papal Nuncio here, had volunteered
+to have with me on Irish affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Monsignor Czacki came to see me three days ago, and
+enlarged on the great advantage to the cause of order and
+tranquillity in Ireland it would be for the Pope to pronounce
+an authoritative condemnation of the wicked acts perpetrated
+in that country. He hinted that the Pope had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+misled by some of the Irish Bishops who had recently been
+at Rome, and he dwelt on the inconvenience which arose
+from the British Government's having no channel of its
+own through which to communicate direct with His
+Holiness.</p>
+
+<p>On the last occasion Monsignor Czacki offered to be
+himself a channel of communication. He did not repeat
+this offer, but his object in what he had said appeared to
+be to lead up again to the question of the establishment of
+regular diplomatic relations between England and the
+Vatican, or if that could not be immediately, then to the
+return to Rome of an unofficial agent, in the same position
+that was occupied by Odo Russell, and before him, by me.
+He told me he spoke entirely of his own accord, but that
+he was sure that Pope Leo XIII. would most willingly
+receive even an unofficial agent.</p>
+
+<p>Monsignor Czacki is a very great talker, which makes
+it easy to say very little in answer to him, and I took full
+advantage of the facility for being conveniently silent which
+this afforded me.</p>
+
+<p>The impression he left upon me was that for some
+reason or other the authorities at the Vatican decidedly
+wish to have some sort of agent there, from whom they
+could receive information respecting the views of the British
+Government upon the accuracy of which they could fully
+rely.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think that if it had depended on me I should
+have discontinued the unofficial agent, awkward as the
+position had been made by the presence of the Italian
+Government and of a regular British Embassy. But to
+establish one now would be a question of far greater
+difficulty than to have kept one going.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Whether influenced by Monsignor Czacki or not,
+Her Majesty's Government sent Mr. Errington, a
+Liberal Member of Parliament, to Rome in an
+ambiguous capacity which was loudly denounced
+in the House of Commons both by Home Rulers
+and by fervent Protestants, and in the course of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+one of the discussions on the subject, Mr. Gladstone
+informed an astonished audience that there was all
+the difference in the world between an Agent and
+an 'Agente.'</p>
+
+<p>The French Municipal Elections which took
+place in January, 1881, produced a reassuring impression
+throughout the country, as both the extreme
+parties were decisively defeated, and the effect
+was largely to increase the power and influence of
+Gambetta, who was now in the enviable position
+of being able to make or unmake Ministries, and
+who at the opening of the Chambers made a kind
+of 'speech from the throne' which considerably
+perturbed the uninspiring President Grévy.</p>
+
+<p>Everything that Gambetta now said was of importance,
+and his views on the European situation
+were ascertained in the usual manner through
+Sheffield.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 8, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Gambetta asked Sheffield to breakfast on Saturday, and
+as usual talked freely to him.</p>
+
+<p>He appeared to think that the three Emperors had
+come to an understanding with each other, and that whatever
+might be their plans, it was certain that they would
+not be beneficial to French interests. According to him,
+it was with the Emperors not a question of the position of
+their Empires, but of their own individual positions. They
+were opposed to liberal views and liberal institutions.
+They were intent upon doing whatever would be most
+hurtful to the prestige and success of the Republic in
+France. They were, in fact, reconstituting the Holy
+Alliance.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment France was unfortunately powerless.
+Until the General Election had taken place, her destinies
+must be at the mercy of any old women who were employed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+as stopgaps in ephemeral ministries. Since Barthélemy
+St. Hilaire had been in office he had only seen him once.
+He knew nothing or next to nothing of what went on at
+the Ministère des Affaires Étrangères, and what little he
+did know, he disapproved. 'Que voulez vous,' he said:
+'nobody will do anything to commit himself in any way,
+pending the uncertainty of the elections.'</p>
+
+<p>He seemed well informed about Egyptian affairs. He
+praised Malet and said de Ring was entirely in the wrong
+in his quarrel with de Blignières, which was very injurious
+to the calm direction of Egyptian affairs. He expressed an
+intention to urge the immediate recall of de Ring.</p>
+
+<p>I mark this letter private because we should get into
+a great scrape and close a very convenient channel of
+communication if Gambetta found that he was quoted or
+that his sayings transpired in any way.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The interest of the year 1881 lies in the fact that
+it makes a fresh departure in French foreign policy
+and the abandonment of the retiring and timorous
+attitude which had prevailed ever since the war
+with Germany. The first State to experience the
+inconvenience of this new development was Tunis,
+and early in the year it became evident that a very
+acute Tunis question was imminent. The trouble
+began over a large property known as the Enfida
+Estate. This property was sold to an important
+French financial association, but upon the sale
+becoming known, a certain Mr. Levy, a Maltese
+British subject, put in a claim of pre-emption under
+Tunisian Law, and it was believed by the French
+that he had been instigated by the Italians, and
+was merely utilized by them as a convenient means
+of obstructing French enterprise. The dispute over
+the Enfida Estate rose to such proportions that a
+French ironclad, the <em>Friedland</em>, was sent to Tunis
+in February, and the British Government, who were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+bound to make a show of defending the interests of
+Mr. Levy, in spite of his dubious position, followed
+suit with H.M.S. <em>Thunderer</em>. Both vessels were soon
+withdrawn, but before long it was generally believed
+that a French invasion of the country was contemplated.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 25, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The French public are getting very cross about Tunis.
+Reasonable people see that we cannot allow our own
+subject to be bullied, but the French in general do not
+distinguish between the Enfida case and the Tunisian
+questions regarding predominant influence, Italy, and so
+forth. Drummond Wolff's question last night was very
+mischievous. It was his own party which gave the
+assurances at Berlin which have made Tunis so very
+delicate a matter between the French and us, and which
+dispose the French to allege that the present Government
+is less friendly to them about that country than the late.
+Anyhow, Tunis is the point on which above all others the
+French are susceptible and irritable; and the Italians, and,
+however unconsciously, our own Consul too, I am afraid,
+are always stirring up awkward questions on the spot. I
+should be heartily glad to be rid of the Enfida question in
+any creditable manner. I so strongly suspect that Levy
+is simply put forward by the Tunisians for their own gain,
+and supported by the local enemies of goodwill between
+France and England, in order to make mischief, that I only
+wish we could wash our hands of the whole affair. There
+seems to me to be no evidence that he is a <em>bona fide</em> purchaser
+on his own account. Tunis is the really ticklish point in
+our relations with France.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Enfida Estate case was not only unsatisfactory
+on account of Mr. Levy not being a very
+desirable <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">protégé</i>, but because it enabled the French
+to manufacture a grievance against the Bey, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+gave the Italians an opportunity to encourage that
+unfortunate potentate in the belief that he would
+receive foreign support in the event of French
+aggression.</p>
+
+<p>The intentions of the French Government were
+disclosed before long. Shortly after the wretched
+Bey had protested against a memorial containing
+a long list of alleged French grievances against the
+Government of Tunis, M. Jules Ferry, on the ever
+convenient plea of the necessity of chastising hostile
+frontier tribes, asked for votes of credit for both
+the army and the navy, which were unanimously
+agreed to. Before the expedition actually started,
+the French agent at Tunis, M. Roustan, visited the
+Bey and informed him that the French preparations
+were intended to protect him against the Sultan of
+Turkey, who desired to convert Tunis into a Turkish
+Pashalic, and that, under these circumstances, it
+was very desirable that Tunis should be placed
+under a French Protectorate. It was quite in vain
+that the unhappy Bey urged that he had no reason
+to suspect the Sultan of any such intention and that
+he had not the slightest desire for a French Protectorate;
+he was informed that he was not the
+best judge of his own interest, and that French
+troops would shortly enter his country to chastise
+the Kroumirs, a race of whom nobody had yet
+heard, but who apparently constituted a serious
+menace to the French Republic.</p>
+
+<p>The obvious design of the French drew from
+Lord Granville an opinion that they could not be
+allowed to seize upon Tunis without the consent
+of Turkey, and the permission of other Powers; but
+to this opinion not much attention seems to have
+been paid.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">April 5, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have thought it necessary to instruct you to inquire
+into the state of affairs at Tunis. You are not likely to do
+so in an unnecessarily offensive manner.</p>
+
+<p>I am told that the French are determined to establish
+their Protectorate. This will be very awkward at the
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>Pray look as mysterious as you can, as to what might
+be our attitude.</p>
+
+<p>We do not wish to follow the example of the foolish
+opposition made to Algiers, but the French cannot be
+allowed to seize Tunis without the consent of Turkey and
+communication with the rest of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The Italians wish us to move vigorously in the matter;
+the Italian Government seems alarmed at the excitement
+of their chamber.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It was all very well to say that the 'French
+cannot be allowed to seize Tunis,' but when a big
+European Power decides to pounce upon a weak
+and decaying Oriental State, it is not of the slightest
+use to employ such language if merely moral suasion
+is contemplated. The recent action of the Italian
+Government with regard to Tripoli<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> was the exact
+repetition of French action with regard to Tunis,
+and remonstrances were of no more avail in one case
+than in the other. The Bey sent piteous protests
+and appeals for justice to all the Great Powers, but
+as Italy, the only Power which really objected, was
+not prepared to fight, his lamentations fell upon
+deaf ears. Meanwhile, in an attempt to justify
+their bare-faced aggression, the French Government
+apparently handed to M. Blowitz, the <em>Times</em> correspondent
+at Paris, a despatch from Lord Salisbury
+written in 1878, which it had been agreed should be
+treated as confidential, and it was intimated in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+press that further private and confidential communications
+would appear in a forthcoming Yellow
+Book. This produced a very justifiable remonstrance
+from Lord Salisbury.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Hatfield, April 24, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am not sure that I am not irregular in addressing to
+you any communication on public affairs. But I think I
+have been told that a certain license is accorded to disembodied
+Foreign Secretaries, of haunting the scenes of their
+former misdeeds.</p>
+
+<p>My cause of writing is this. My eye caught a statement
+in one or two English papers that St. Hilaire intended to
+print in the forthcoming Yellow Book, Waddington's first
+despatch to d'Harcourt on coming back from Berlin. I
+had a dim recollection that it was undiplomatically phrased
+and had been withdrawn: but I could remember no more.</p>
+
+<p>Is it not rather a strong measure for a Government to
+withdraw a despatch to which objection is taken at the
+time, when it might be answered, and then to publish it
+three years later, when the materials for answering it no
+longer exist? However, perhaps I am wrong in assuming
+that the newspaper report is correct.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Salisbury was quite correct in his recollection,
+and the intention of publishing the despatch
+referred to was not carried out, but various attempts
+were made to fix upon him the responsibility for
+French action in Tunis.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Granville, although he confessed to disliking
+the process, had to content himself with ineffectual
+barking.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">April 22, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You will not like a despatch I send you, and I am rather
+sorry to send it. But I do not see how we are to give
+France <em>carte blanche</em>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I dislike barking without biting, but if the result of not
+barking (in contradistinction to all that was done under
+Louis Philippe and Napoleon, when English remonstrances
+certainly stopped the French) is the annexation of Tunis,
+or the creation of the great port of Bizerta impregnable
+by naval force and neutralizing Malta, we should look
+rather foolish.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the present Chauvinism about Tunis,
+it would not be a sweetmeat for the French to have
+England, Italy and the Arabs inside and outside Algeria
+against her.</p>
+
+<p>It is as well that she should not imagine that this is
+perfectly impossible.</p>
+
+<p>But, of course, I wish to ruffle her as little as possible,
+and nobody will wrap up the warning of our doctrine as
+to the Ottoman Empire better than you will.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Undeterred by Lord Granville's just remonstrances
+and equally undeterred by the Sultan's
+assertion of his suzerainty claims, the French
+entered Tunis and occupied the capital on May 11,
+after little more than a mere promenade. On the
+following day the Treaty of the Bardo, which
+practically established a French Protectorate over
+the country, was extorted from the Bey, and
+declarations by the French Government made it
+clear that no intervention, direct or indirect, would
+be tolerated.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 13, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Barthélemy St. Hilaire certainly foreshadowed the
+Tunisian Treaty accurately when he said that it would very
+much resemble a Protectorate. It is so like one that it
+would be difficult to point out a difference. The guaranteeing
+the execution of the Treaties of the European Powers
+is sufficiently impertinent. As in all these French expeditions,
+there is a vast amount of dirty pecuniary stockjobbing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+interests at the bottom, which have been the real motive
+power.</p>
+
+<p>The whole affair is of very bad augury. It will inspire
+the French Public with a love of resorting to high-handed
+proceedings which can be indulged in without any real
+risk. Gambetta said to Dilke that his Cherbourg speech
+was the first glass of wine given to the Convalescent France,
+good for her but somewhat startling to her system. This
+Tunis expedition is the second. The patient has swallowed
+it so complacently that she may soon wish for another, and
+perhaps a stronger stimulant. They got Bismarck's leave
+for this, and it will perhaps be a long time before they do
+anything of the kind without his leave. But then he will
+be sure to push them on to any undertakings which will
+occupy their minds and their forces, and tend to put them
+on bad terms with other Powers. And this is disquieting,
+for there are not wanting all over the globe places and
+questions in which the French might make themselves very
+inconvenient and disagreeable to us, and might, if encouraged
+by Bismarck, come at last to a downright quarrel
+with us.</p>
+
+<p>Add to this the state of feeling in the English manufacturing
+districts which is likely to be produced by the
+Commercial proceedings of the French, and their virulent
+Protectionism, and the prospect looks gloomy enough.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The actual proceedings of the French in Tunis
+were in reality of less importance as regards England
+than the spirit which they betrayed, for their reception
+by the French public indicated a state of
+feeling which might have dangerous consequences.
+The preparations for the expedition were not considered
+by impartial critics as particularly creditable
+to the skill or efficiency of the French military
+administration, and there had been nothing like
+serious fighting in the short campaign. The question
+had simply been one of bullying a defenceless
+ruler, and of carrying on a high-handed policy in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+the face of Europe. Nevertheless the whole affair
+was hailed with almost unanimous delight by the
+French people. Nor, apparently, was this delight
+diminished by the reflection that the expedition
+had not been undertaken without the approval
+and encouragement of the German Government,
+and that the favour had been acknowledged with
+almost humiliating gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta had represented that his object was
+to emancipate France from the humiliation of having
+to consult Bismarck confidentially beforehand upon
+every step she took, but this humiliating precaution
+was certainly not neglected in the case of Tunis,
+and if there had been the slightest suspicion that
+the expedition would have involved France in any
+difficulty with Germany, public opinion would at
+once have declared against it. From the German
+point of view this was satisfactory enough, but
+scarcely reassuring as far as other Powers were
+concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The French had shown that they rejoiced in any
+high-handed proceedings which did not bring them
+into collision with Germany, and whilst it was not
+improbable that their rulers would seek popularity
+by gratifying this feeling, it seemed not unlikely
+that the policy pursued by Germany with regard
+to the Tunis expedition would be persevered in.
+To disseminate the forces of France and to divert
+the minds of the French from Alsace and Lorraine
+by encouraging them to undertake distant enterprises
+for the gratification of their vanity, was an
+obvious means of increasing the safety of Germany,
+and the more such enterprises tended to alienate
+from France the sympathies of other Powers, the
+more they would contribute to the security of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+Germany. Unfortunately there were scattered over
+the globe, numerous islands and other territories,
+the annexation of which by France might be prejudicial
+to English material interests or objectionable
+to English feeling; and there were, moreover,
+various countries in which the undue extension of
+French influence might be dangerous to England,
+and where France, if tempted or encouraged to
+resort to arbitrary proceedings, might, without
+deliberately intending it, become involved in a downright
+quarrel with England. These considerations
+made it desirable that especial caution should be
+exercised in the case of Egypt. The effect of the
+Tunis expedition upon Egypt had been twofold.
+On the one hand, it increased Egyptian suspicions
+of the insincerity and rapacity of European Powers;
+on the other hand, it increased the reputation of
+France in Egypt at the expense of the other
+Powers and of England in particular, and diminished
+any confidence in being effectively protected
+from French encroachments. The lesson of the
+Tunis expedition was obvious; it would clearly be
+folly, either by withholding the tribute or by any
+other step to weaken the connexion of Egypt with
+the Porte, for the French Government had taken
+elaborate pains to show that in dealing with Tunis
+it was dealing with an independent Power. This
+contention had naturally been resisted by the Porte,
+and there was little difficulty in proving that
+suzerainty had been effectually established by a
+Firman of 1871. But the Sultan of Turkey, who
+in the past had enjoyed the possession of more
+suzerainties than any other potentate, had seldom
+derived anything but embarrassment from this
+particular attribute, and in the case of Tunis it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+proved to be singularly inconvenient. Encountering
+no opposition from other Powers, the French flouted
+the claims of Abdul Hamid, and in order to signify
+their new position, announced that the French representative
+would thenceforth take charge of all
+foreign questions. In spite, however, of the flexibility
+of the European conscience with regard to the general
+principle of the Sultan's suzerainty, it was recognized
+that under certain circumstances that principle
+must be conscientiously upheld; and it was, therefore,
+intimated, more or less directly to the French
+Government, that although the Sultan's suzerainty
+in Tunis was a negligible quantity, the situation
+in Tripoli was quite different, and so, in a far
+greater degree, was that of Egypt.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 17, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>It is most true that the danger of bad relations between
+us and the French arises from their proceedings not ours,
+and that this makes the great difficulty in meeting it.</p>
+
+<p>The change of their position with regard to Bismarck
+is another great difficulty. A little while ago dread of
+Germany made them unwilling to send a regiment or a ship
+to a distance from France, but since the Tunis affair, they
+have gone into the trap he has set for them with their
+eyes open. They feel sure of his support and encouragement
+in any distant enterprises, and the surer of it in proportion
+to the hostility which such enterprises may provoke
+in England and Italy. They thus find a cheap way of
+gratifying their vanity, and of advancing some of their
+apparent interests. This coquetting with Bismarck does,
+moreover, divert their thoughts from Alsace and Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think it would be prudent to make any special
+advances to Gambetta at this moment. We might not
+please him and we should very probably offend Grévy and
+Barthélémy St. Hilaire, and so interfere with the practical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+treatment of present questions, such as the Commercial
+Treaty, the West Coast of Africa, Newfoundland, etc.</p>
+
+<p>The anomalous position of the French in Tunis, and the
+proceedings of Roustan<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> there, will keep up irritation in
+England and Italy&mdash;and I suppose the French, annuente
+Bismarck, will cut the Gordian knot, sooner or later, by
+annexing it. They ought in consequence to acquiesce in
+some improvement of the position of England in Egypt,
+but this is dangerous ground.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The overbearing attitude of the French officials
+in Tunis caused considerable irritation in England,
+and something akin to exasperation in Italy. The
+Italians, had they felt strong enough to do so,
+would have resisted the French pretensions by force,
+but being without an ally at the time, had to content
+themselves with violent ebullitions in the press. The
+ill-feeling between the two countries was marked
+by serious riots at Marseilles and other towns in the
+South of France.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 24, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I did my best to impress upon B. St. Hilaire yesterday
+that there was real bitterness of feeling among the public
+in England, and that if the French Government and its
+agents persisted in a series of irritating measures, the
+consequences might be very inconvenient. The French
+had got all they could want, I said, and I could not help
+wondering that it did not strike them that their policy
+should now be to let the new system settle down quietly,
+to avoid occasions of controversy about it, and in short,
+to let Tunis be as little heard of as possible at present. It
+was an ill return, I observed, for the great patience and
+friendliness shown by our Government, to be perpetually
+springing upon them surprises unpalatable to English
+public opinion. He professed to <em>abonder dans mon sens</em>.
+I entreated him to keep his subordinates in order.</p></blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The French seem to have an unpleasant business in
+Western Algeria, and there is beginning to be an outcry
+against the military and civil management of the troubles
+there.</p>
+
+<p>Good feeling between French and Italians will not be
+promoted by late events at Marseilles. The feelings of the
+French towards the Italians there are like those of the
+American workman towards the Chinese at San Francisco,
+or of the Irish towards the negroes at New York. There
+are said to be more than 50,000 Italians at Marseilles, and
+they are apt to use their knives.</p>
+
+<p>There are symptoms of a growing antagonism between
+Jules Ferry and Gambetta, signs of the feeling between
+the Elysée and the Palais Bourbon.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>After all, the Tunis expedition turned out to be
+a rather more troublesome affair than had appeared
+probable at first. At the end of June insurrections
+broke out at Sfax and other places, necessitating
+the recall of French troops who had been sent
+back to France; bombardments, and other severe
+measures of repression. The insurrection spread into
+Algiers on the western side, and on the eastern side
+the disturbances created the possibility of a violation
+of the frontier of Tripoli by the French troops.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 5, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Retribution has come quickly upon the French for
+their hypocritical seizure of Tunis. The Arabs seem to be
+upon them in all directions. Although this serves them
+right, it is, I think, much to be regretted for political
+reasons, independently of the suffering it causes to un-offending
+Europeans of various nationalities in Africa.</p>
+
+<p>If the French have to send a large force to Tunis, they
+will very probably, formally as well as virtually, annex
+the Regency. Tripoli will then stand exactly in the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+relation to them that Tunis did before the assumption of
+the Protectorate. After Tripoli would come Egypt; but
+happily there is, I believe, a very impracticable desert tract
+between them.</p>
+
+<p>How great must be the complacency of those who desire
+to occupy French troops in distant countries, and to
+involve France in difficulties with other Powers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>If the action of the French in seizing Tunis was
+hypocritical, the contention that the case of Tripoli
+stood on an entirely different footing was equally
+unconvincing. The real truth, of course, was that,
+with the exception of the Italians, no one really
+objected to the French going to Tunis. They went
+there, under distinctly false professions, announcing
+that the expedition was intended solely to punish
+refractory tribes, and that the occupation was merely
+temporary. The disclosure of their real objects
+naturally caused irritation in England as well as in
+Italy, but all hostile criticism was met by the assertion
+of the Liberal Government that Lord Salisbury
+had himself invited the French to take Tunis at the
+time of the Berlin Congress. The French themselves
+were careful to represent that they had only
+followed Lord Salisbury's advice, and Lord Granville,
+in defence of his own policy, always maintained
+that the phrase attributed to Lord Salisbury,
+<em>Carthage ne doit pas rester aux barbares</em>, had cut
+the ground from beneath his feet, and rendered
+remonstrance useless. But to make Lord Salisbury
+responsible for this act of flagrant immorality
+seems, in the face of such evidence as is available,
+unjustifiable. All that he had done was to intimate
+that he had heard that the French were
+extremely anxious to go to Tunis; that if they did
+so, British interests would not be endangered, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+that he should consequently look on with indifference.
+When M. Waddington, in 1878, construed this opinion
+as an invitation to France to appropriate Tunis,
+Lord Salisbury felt bound to remonstrate, and he
+wrote to Lord Lyons, as has been already shown.
+'He (Waddington) makes me talk of Tunis and
+Carthage as if they had been my own personal
+property, and I was making him a liberal wedding
+present.' The real instigator of the Tunis expedition
+was not Lord Salisbury, but Bismarck. The
+latter, who was omnipotent in Europe at the time,
+could have stopped French action at any moment
+he pleased, but instead of doing so, he naturally
+encouraged an enterprise which was certain to lead
+eventually to difficulties between France, Italy, and
+England.</p>
+
+<p>While, however, it was convenient to overlook
+any French illegality with reference to Tunis and
+to its connection with the Turkish Empire, it would
+have been, as has already been shown, manifestly
+imprudent to allow Tripoli, which stood in a precisely
+similar position, to be menaced with a similar fate:
+besides which, Italy had already marked Tripoli down
+as her own prey. Accordingly the French Government
+were informed that 'in view of the unquestioned
+incorporation of Tripoli in the Turkish
+Empire, as well as its proximity to Egypt, Her
+Majesty's Government could not regard interference
+of whatever description on the part of the
+French Government in that province in the same
+manner as they viewed the recent occurrences at
+Tunis. That Her Majesty's Government should
+take this view of the question of Tripoli cannot,
+they feel assured, be a source of surprise to that of
+France, since they have, on all occasions when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+question of the extension of French influence in the
+direction of Egypt has been under discussion, been
+perfectly frank in their explanations with the French
+Government on the subject.' In his reply to this
+communication, M. B. St. Hilaire (who had previously
+announced that to annex Tunis would be a
+great mistake), effusively stated that the French
+Government looked upon Tripoli as an integral
+part of the Ottoman Empire, over which it did not
+pretend to exercise a predominant or exclusive
+influence, and gave a formal denial to all rumours
+which attributed to France any designs upon that
+country. The British Government professed itself
+quite satisfied with these assurances, and the Porte,
+for once in a way, showed sufficient intelligence
+to make its suzerainty quite clear, by despatching
+troops to garrison the country, and by other precautionary
+measures. In consequence of these steps
+Tripoli remained immune from attack for another
+thirty-two years, and when, in 1912, the Italians,
+following the French example of 1881, fell suddenly
+upon it without any serious attempt at justification,
+they did not allege that they were attacking a semi or
+wholly-independent State, but declared war upon
+Turkey itself, and incidentally brought about the
+destruction of Turkish power in Europe. The future
+of Tripoli under Italian rule is still obscure, while
+the numerous prophecies of failure which attended
+the seizure of Tunis by the French have not been
+fulfilled, but in either case it would be difficult to
+justify the morality of the enterprise or to defend
+the policy of these two Great Christian Powers.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1881 witnessed the renewal of negotiations
+for a new Commercial Treaty between
+France and England, and in consequence of opinions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+expressed by M. Tirard, the French Minister of Commerce,
+it was determined to take the negotiations
+out of the hands of diplomatists. M. Tirard had
+declared that he believed that an understanding
+could be effected if the question could be freed from
+diplomatic dilatoriness, and that if he were brought
+face to face with a 'competent and well-disposed
+man,' the whole matter would be settled within a
+week by making a few mutual concessions. To
+meet these views, the late Sir Charles Dilke, M.P.,
+was appointed principal British Commissioner with
+the late Sir Joseph Crowe, Sir Alfred Bateman, and
+other distinguished experts as his colleagues or
+assistants, but M. Tirard's prognostication turned
+out to be entirely incorrect. In spite of the great
+ability and indefatigable industry of Sir Charles
+Dilke and the other British Commissioners, the
+negotiations made a very unsatisfactory start, were
+constantly broken off, and were not even concluded
+by the end of the year, so that it must have been
+impressed upon M. Tirard that dilatoriness was not
+necessarily due to diplomacy. From the first, the
+negotiations were unpromising, for Free Trade had
+continually receded in France since the Empire, and
+the necessity of cultivating good political relations
+with England was evidently less in 1881 than it
+had been upon the last occasion.</p>
+
+<p>The representatives of the two nations met in
+London in June, and an inauspicious beginning was
+made by the French Commissioners repudiating
+the bases signed in 1880 by Lord Granville and
+M. Léon Say. By the middle of the month the
+breaking off of the negotiations was already being
+considered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Sir C. Dilke, M.P.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 14, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I received last evening your letter of the day before,
+asking me whether I had anything to say on the policy of
+breaking off the commercial negotiations when you get
+to work.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think we should lose sight of the fact that there
+will in all probability be a thorough change of Government
+in France in the autumn. We might <em>perhaps</em> get a decent
+treaty from the new Government if they found the negotiations
+in progress. It might not be so easy to get negotiations
+reopened if they had once been broken off, and the
+French had become accustomed to the idea of having the
+general tariff applied to British goods.</p>
+
+<p>Politically, it would, I think, be a great pity to begin
+ill with the new Government, and I don't think we could
+possibly begin well, in the state of feeling which would be
+produced in this country, and still more I suppose in England,
+by a commercial rupture.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the French would be very glad that
+the general tariff, or still higher duties, should be enforced
+against English goods, but they would none the less be
+irritated by our breaking with them.</p>
+
+<p>I confess, too, that I am alarmed, perhaps without
+sufficient reason, at the effect which may be produced
+both at home and abroad by the cry in England for
+retaliation.</p>
+
+<p>My own plan would be, for the present, to pursue the
+negotiation as seriously and as steadily as is compatible
+with not committing ourselves to any decidedly objectionable
+duties so definitely as to be hampered in subsequent
+negotiations if we find the new Government more fairly
+disposed towards us.</p>
+
+<p>If there was ever any possibility of concluding a Treaty
+in time for it to be passed by the Chambers this Session,
+there is certainly none now. Gambetta wanted to get
+the question out of the way before the elections; but even
+if the Treaty were signed, I don't think the Chambers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+could be induced to consider it under present circumstances.
+Nor would they, I should think, pass a bill to prolong the
+existing Treaties.</p>
+
+<p>To my mind, our most prudent course would be to let
+the new Chambers find the negotiations going on when they
+meet in the autumn. I don't of course mean that you
+should go on sitting every week from this time to the
+autumn: it would suffice that there should not be any
+adjournment <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">sine die</i>, and that we should not give any
+ground for an assertion that we are not really willing to
+conclude even a moderately fair treaty.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons, as has already been stated, was,
+like almost every British official of the time, a firm
+and almost bigoted Free Trader; and it is possible
+that his alarm at the prospect of retaliation was
+caused by the appearance of the Fair Trade League;
+that harbinger of Tariff Reform to which somewhat
+inadequate justice has been rendered by its imitators.
+But it is surprising to learn of these qualms,
+when he is found predicting that the smaller countries
+who were willing and able to retaliate on French
+goods, would obtain better terms than England.
+The very different spirit in which the smaller States
+approached commercial questions with France is
+shown in the following instructive account of the
+views of the Swiss Minister at Paris, M. Kern.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Sir C. Dilke.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 25, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Last evening, after my letter to you of yesterday had
+gone, I met Kern, who told me that in the course of the
+day he had had an interview with M. Tirard, and also one
+with M. Gambetta. He had, he said, declared most
+distinctly to both, first, that Switzerland would not sign
+a Treaty placing her in a less advantageous commercial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+position than that now existing; and secondly, that if the
+general tariff were applied to Swiss goods, French goods
+would be forthwith subjected to duties of precisely the
+same amount in Switzerland. He had, he said, somewhat
+surprised M. Tirard by informing him that the Swiss
+Government had power to impose such duties at once,
+without waiting for legislative sanction.</p>
+
+<p>The impression left upon Kern's mind by the two
+interviews was, that as hard a bargain as possible would
+be driven by France, but that in the end they would rather
+make moderate treaties than no treaties at all, if they
+saw that this was the only alternative.</p>
+
+<p>He is going to Berne to confer with his Government,
+and he says that he is sure they will approve and confirm
+his language to Tirard and Gambetta.</p>
+
+<p>After these interviews, Kern was very positive that the
+French Government were making a great fight to justify
+themselves to the Chambers, but that if the Powers, and
+particularly England, were firm, the French would yield
+rather than incur the political and other inconveniences
+of not making any treaty at all.</p>
+
+<p>I am not so sure as he seemed to be of this, but I think
+that the French are alive to the political inconveniences
+of breaking with England altogether; and it might therefore
+be worthy of your consideration, whether, when you
+go back to the Articles you reserved in the Tariff, you
+should not make a last effort to see whether the French
+cannot be brought to consent to a Treaty which would be
+better commercially than no Tariff Treaty at all. It
+might interfere with whatever chance of success such an
+effort might have, for the French to feel beforehand that
+they could get out of the political difficulty by signing a
+simple Most Favoured Nation Treaty.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless I am not shaken in my opinion that it
+would be advisable for you to sign a Most Favoured Nation
+Treaty, if better may not be, before you break up the
+Commission, or adjourn it for any long time.</p>
+
+<p>Commercially we had better make sure at once of sharing
+the concessions which may be made to other Powers under
+threats of retaliation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Politically we should, I think, find it most disadvantageous
+to have even the appearance of being on bad terms
+with France.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The British Government apparently still entertained
+the illusion that there were real French Free
+Traders. M. Challemel Lacour was the chief French
+Commissioner and Lord Granville welcomed him as
+a brother Free Trader. His brother Free Trader
+said it was true that he was <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Libre-Echangiste</i>, but
+he was <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Libre-Echangiste Français</i>, and recognized
+the necessity of paying due consideration to the
+interests of native industries. To this chilling response,
+Lord Granville was forced to retort that he
+must venture to doubt whether a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Libre-Echangiste
+Français</i>, in His Excellency's acceptation of the term,
+was not what in England was called a Protectionist.
+M. Waddington had once stated that he was a Free
+Trader 'bar cotton,' and whenever the French
+Radical Parliamentary candidates, who were then
+perambulating the country in view of an approaching
+general election, were asked whether they were
+Free Traders or not, they replied in the affirmative,
+but qualified by a reserve in favour of French industries
+which would be ruined by Free Trade. As
+a matter of fact, the spirit of Protection was becoming
+more and more ingrained in the French people, and
+the best chance of getting a reasonable Commercial
+Treaty lay in the hope that an election would bring
+Gambetta into power.</p>
+
+<p>The London negotiations which had been temporarily
+suspended were resumed at Paris in the autumn,
+and continued during the remainder of the year; but
+interest was diverted from commercial matters to
+the events which were occurring in Egypt and their
+probable effect upon Anglo-French relations.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">ARABI'S REBELLION</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">(1881-1882)</p>
+
+
+<p>In September, 1881, the long-drawn-out Egyptian
+crisis culminated in the military <em>coup d'état</em> of Arabi
+and the colonels, which resulted in the dismissal
+of the Ministry and the practical establishment in
+Egypt of a military dictatorship. From that
+moment European intervention, in some form,
+became inevitable, and it was the object of the
+British Government to continue to adhere honestly
+and consistently to the policy of working in conjunction
+with France, and to avoid carefully as long
+as possible any action which might necessitate the
+employment of force.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Sept. 30, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The article in the <cite>Times</cite> has produced an anti-English
+explosion on the subject of Egypt, and was certainly well
+calculated to do so.</p>
+
+<p>For my part, I think the best thing to be done is to take
+an opportunity of distinctly manifesting at Cairo the
+continuance of the Anglo-French understanding.</p>
+
+<p>If we let either the Egyptians or Foreign Powers
+suppose they can upset that, we shall not be able to maintain
+the English and French Controllers, and if they disappear,
+the financial prosperity will disappear with them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+and we shall have the bondholders, French and English,
+on our backs again.</p>
+
+<p>If we let in other Foreign Powers, and at the same time
+try to establish English predominance, we shall have those
+Powers coalescing with France against us.</p>
+
+<p>A split with us would very probably lead to France
+throwing herself into the arms of Bismarck, and he would
+encourage all her ambitious aims out of Europe, and, in
+particular, those the prosecution of which would widen
+the breach between her and England: or, in other words,
+be especially annoying and inconvenient to us.</p>
+
+<p>I hope things are so far calming down in Egypt, that
+we may not be called upon to take any special measures
+this time; and the best hope of avoiding them in future
+seems to be in making it understood that England and
+France united will resist attempts to overthrow the existing
+system.</p>
+
+<p>I am all against letting the Turks thrust the smallest
+finger into the pie. At this moment the French would
+never consent, and would consider our bringing in the
+Turks a specially unfriendly act, with a view to their
+Tunisian affairs. The less they merit any consideration
+from us, the more sore they will be at not receiving it.
+Besides which, where the Turkish hoof has trod, no grass
+grows, and woe to the finances of any country with which
+the Turk can meddle.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, in what I have said about Egypt I have confined
+myself to the present and the immediate future.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The chances of being able to avoid active intervention
+were in reality non-existent; for temporizing
+measures taken in conjunction with France could
+not put off for ever the day when, moral pressure
+having been found insufficient, armed force would
+necessarily have to be employed. When that day
+arrived, the probability was that France would want
+to send troops in conjunction with ours, and our
+consent to that course might involve us in war with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+France in a very short time. If we had the courage
+to tell the French that our interests were paramount
+in Egypt, and that therefore all other European
+Powers must be kept out, then we must be prepared
+to back our words with force, and everything therefore
+pointed to the naval superiority of England in
+the Mediterranean as being our paramount necessity.
+With real naval superiority in the Mediterranean
+we were practically able to make the French
+do our bidding, if we chose. We had the power to
+shut up their navy in French ports, to stop their
+communications with Africa, to render powerless
+two millions of French soldiers, and to demolish
+Bismarck's schemes of elbowing us out of the
+Mediterranean. Such was the happy position which
+we enjoyed in 1881, and it was a great contrast to
+that which we occupy at the present day; but it
+did not tend towards promoting goodwill between
+the two nations, and Lord Lyons constantly urged
+that some joint understanding should be arrived at,
+in the event of another military outbreak in Egypt.
+The situation had been complicated by the despatch
+of a Turkish mission, and the general impression
+in France was that Arabi and the colonels would
+shortly be engaged in a conspiracy to dethrone the
+Khedive and to restore something like the old
+<em>régime</em> in the country. A positive declaration from
+the English and French Governments that they
+would not tolerate the overthrow of the Khedive and
+the established system might have effected much
+if it was felt that the two Governments would interfere
+by force, if necessary, rather than permit it;
+but this would not be felt or believed unless the two
+Governments had really come to an understanding
+and had agreed upon details; and when it came to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+discussing details the question at once presented
+difficulties. These difficulties were not lessened by a
+French Ministerial crisis in the autumn, as a crisis
+usually produced a fit of petty Chauvinism, such an
+encouragement to Consuls in the East to <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">porter haut
+le drapeau de la France</i>, the bullying of local authorities,
+and a demand for the extortion of monopolies
+and concessions for French speculators.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 4, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The Treaty of Commerce and Egypt will probably be
+the two first questions we shall have to discuss with the
+new Government.</p>
+
+<p>The Commercial negotiations seem to me to have been
+brought exactly to the right point. Having obtained the
+three months prolongation, we have resumed the negotiation
+on the day fixed, and have continued it <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bona fide</i>; and
+it now stands over in a manner which will enable us to see
+in due time whether or no we can make a treaty with the
+new Government.</p>
+
+<p>As regards Egypt, the opinion gains ground here that
+at the bottom of the agitation there is (or soon will be) a
+plot to dethrone Tewfik and put Halim in his place as a
+'National': <em>i.e.</em> anti-European, anti-French, and anti-English
+Control, Khedive. I understand that de Blignières
+represented strongly to Gambetta that the only way to
+produce quiet in Egypt and counteract intrigues in favour
+of Halim at Yildiz Kiosk is for England and France to
+declare positively at Cairo and Constantinople that they
+will not stand it, but will resolutely support Tewfik and
+the existing state of things. I do not know how far
+Gambetta assented to this, but I am told he did not dissent
+from it.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The result of much political man&oelig;uvring was
+that in November, 1881, Gambetta was forced to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+take office and to exchange the irresponsible power
+which he had hitherto wielded in the background
+for Ministerial responsibility. As frequently occurs
+in similar cases, when the great mystery man was
+dragged out into the light of open day, his appearance
+was somewhat disappointing. His Administration,
+with one exception only, was composed
+entirely of men belonging to his own immediate
+following, and contained no one of any weight
+beside himself. Gambetta took the Foreign Office
+as well as the Presidency of the Council, and on the
+principle that <em>il vaut toujours mieux avoir affaire à
+Dieu qu'à ses anges</em>, this was an advantage, although
+it was believed that he entertained so great an
+admiration for Bismarck, that, following the latter's
+example, he would probably hand over the foreign
+diplomatist to an under secretary. The first impressions
+produced by the new Ministry were not
+favourable.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 18, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I don't think the present Ministry is so far at all a
+success. Among other inconveniences arising from the
+appointment of men of so little personal importance is that
+there is no one in Gambetta's party who does not think
+that he ought to have been a Minister; or, in other words,
+who acquiesces in the superiority of any of those chosen.
+The fact that Léon Say and Freycinet were offered portfolios,
+but would not accept them on Gambetta's terms,
+tells against the selection ultimately made. Gambetta's
+personal genius must make up for all deficiencies. He
+appears to have a talent in particular for parliamentary
+tactics, especially for making the right move on the spur
+of the moment. I doubt his having deep-matured plans.
+So far as I can see, he lives <em>au jour le jour</em> like ordinary
+men.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I had a long visit yesterday from Spüller, but we did
+not get much beyond generalities. Gambetta and I have
+exchanged visits, but have not met.</p>
+
+<p>I do not hazard conjectures on commercial matters, as
+Dilke will ascertain to-morrow exactly how the land lies.
+... As a diplomatist, I cannot but feel that there is
+convenience in being a bachelor just now.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The last sentence does not refer to the fact that
+he had just been created a Viscount, but to the
+somewhat peculiar domestic circumstances attaching
+to certain members of the new Government.</p>
+
+<p>It had been assumed that Gambetta's accession
+to office would be marked by a more vigorous foreign
+policy, especially in the direction of acquiring fresh
+territories in distant regions; but this was not
+justified by his own language or bearing, and at his
+first interview with the Ambassador he abstained
+from pompous common-places about preferring
+England to all the rest of the world, and desiring
+peace at any price, which was looked upon as a
+good sign. At the same time, there was, in his
+speeches about Tunis and the Mediterranean, a
+slight flavour of Chauvinism which would not have
+excited remark before 1870, but which would not
+have appeared in 1880, and would certainly not have
+been applauded in 1881, unless it had become generally
+known that Bismarck had sanctioned and
+encouraged French enterprises away from the continent
+of Europe.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 6, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Gambetta gave the Diplomatic Body an excellent
+dinner last Saturday, and played his part as host very
+successfully.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What may be at the bottom of his heart, nothing has
+yet shown.</p>
+
+<p>The change which has come over the relations between
+France and Germany opens to him the door for a comparatively
+safe yet ambitious Foreign Policy. Will he
+resist the temptation?</p>
+
+<p>During the years which immediately followed the war,
+the feeling of France towards Germany was composed of
+furious hatred and of mortal dread. The line taken,
+consciously or unconsciously, by Germany tended to add
+bitterness to this feeling. She interfered dictatorially with
+France even in internal matters. Her object seemed to
+be not only to impede the restoration of French strength
+and wealth, but to prevent the French recovering even
+prestige anywhere. She was, or affected to be, convinced
+that a war of revenge on the part of France was imminent.
+She was believed by the French to be angry at their showing
+so much vitality and to be preparing to give them the
+<em>coup de grâce</em>.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, however, neither France nor Germany
+appears to apprehend an attack or to be prepared to make
+one. Each appears to consider the other too strong to
+be attacked with impunity. Certainly Gambetta would
+not find the nation in heart to follow him in defying
+Germany. If therefore his policy or his passions incline
+him to do something striking to flatter the national vanity,
+how is he to find the means? The Tunis affair has given
+Bismarck an opportunity of showing him. It has enabled
+the Chancellor to convince the French that they will have
+the countenance of Germany in any enterprise in which
+they may engage out of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>How far this may be part of a great plan of Bismarck's
+to secure German supremacy in Europe by pushing Austria
+into the Levant, Russia into Asia, and France into Africa
+and the Mediterranean, and by shutting up England in
+her own islands, we need not inquire. In any case it
+must suit Prince Bismarck to see France making acquisitions
+of territory or influence, which weaken her military
+force in Europe, throw burthens on her finances, and make
+ill blood between her and other Powers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Unhappily if Gambetta is so short-sighted as to give in
+to temptation of this kind, difficult questions are, more
+than with any other Power, likely to arise with England,
+who is in contact with France all over the world and
+especially in the Mediterranean.</p>
+
+<p>I hope better things, and I am not at all willing to
+despair of a thorough good understanding between France
+and England which would avert danger from both, and
+enable both to do good to all the world. Still one cannot
+but be anxious at this moment. Egypt may be the
+ticklish point.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Parliamentary skill of Gambetta was seen
+to advantage during the short winter session, and
+compared favourably with the want of tact and
+vigour which had been displayed by his predecessors.
+He even obtained a success in the Senate, where he
+had not expected to find any sympathy at all, and
+some of the more sensible Conservatives became
+disposed to support him, more from fear of what
+might result if he fell than from personal attachment.
+Some of his appointments, however, aroused alarm,
+and he perturbed Lord Lyons by bestowing upon
+a journalist a most important post in the Foreign
+Office.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 30, 1881.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I will not despair, but I am feeling very great anxiety
+about the Commercial Treaty. I am afraid that on this
+side of the Channel, much more than in England, the failure
+of the negotiations would have a most undesirable political
+effect. In France and on the Continent generally, it would
+be taken as a sure indication of a coolness between the two
+Governments. Gambetta would be taunted by the Opposition
+with having alienated England (Italy having been
+alienated before). Gambetta's supporters in the press and
+elsewhere would try to throw the blame upon England, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+English press would retort upon France, and a very unpleasant
+state of feeling would be the result.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta has astounded people by appointing a flashy
+newspaper writer, of no particular principles, to the post
+of Political Director in the Foreign Office. The Political
+Director is almost the most important person in the office,
+as he drafts all the political despatches and notes. I hope
+the communications to the foreign ambassadors are not
+to be in the style of 'smart' newspaper articles. I confess
+that when I saw the appointment in the <cite>Journal Officiel</cite>, it
+did not occur to me that the man could be the same Weiss
+who had been writing in the <cite>Figaro</cite>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The friendly disposition of Gambetta towards
+England has already been noted, and beyond a
+certain tendency in his speeches towards Chauvinism,
+there was nothing in his conduct calculated to arouse
+alarm, but nevertheless a critical moment in Anglo-French
+relations appeared to be approaching at the
+beginning of 1882. The Government of France had
+passed into the hands of a Minister far more influential,
+more able, and more ambitious than any
+man who had taken part in public affairs since the
+retirement of Thiers, and the time was at hand
+when that Minister must decide on the line of policy
+to be followed with regard to Foreign Powers. The
+character and temperament of Gambetta naturally
+disposed him to endeavour to make his Foreign
+Policy more vigorous, more successful and more
+striking than that of his predecessors, and with that
+object he would probably take one of two courses.
+Either he would aim at emancipating France from
+her existing confidential servility towards Germany;
+or, despairing of that, he would continue the existing
+relations with Bismarck, and thus ensure the latter's
+willing acquiescence in aggressive proceedings on the
+part of France beyond the limits of Europe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In order to shake off the German yoke, Gambetta
+evidently considered it essential that he should be
+able to place himself on distinctly friendly and
+intimate terms with England, and if he failed in
+this, the probability was that he would be obliged
+to revert to the patronage which was felt to be so
+irksome. But the change which had come over the
+relations between France and Germany opened the
+door to a foreign policy which was comparatively
+safe and easy, and yet did not present the disadvantage
+of being unambitious. The period which
+immediately followed the war of 1870, was, as has
+already been pointed out, marked by a feeling in
+France towards Germany of fierce hatred combined
+with extreme fear, and German policy, whether
+consciously or unconsciously, tended to embitter
+this feeling. Germany interfered dictatorially and
+ostentatiously even in French internal affairs, and
+the object seemed to be not only to crush the
+reviving strength of France, but to prevent her
+recovering anywhere, or in any matter, the smallest
+portion of her lost <em>prestige</em>. The German Government
+professed to believe that a war of revenge
+was meditated, and was credited with the intention
+of finally destroying France before the latter
+should be sufficiently recuperated to resume the
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p>But with the lapse of time, a change of policy,
+and, to a certain extent, a change of feeling had
+taken place on both sides. Neither country was
+in any immediate apprehension of an attack from
+the other. A somewhat ostentatious interchange of
+courtesy had been substituted for their former
+reserve, and Bismarck had seized the opportunity
+of the invasion of Tunis to let the French understand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+that they would have the countenance of Germany
+in enterprises undertaken by them out of Europe.
+Apart from all far-reaching schemes for securing
+German supremacy in Europe, it was obviously
+in the interests of Germany that France should
+engage in enterprises and make acquisitions which
+dispersed her armies, disorganized her finances and
+created ill feeling with other Powers.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta was much too intelligent a man not
+to see through this policy, but the temptation to
+direct the energies of France into the Colonial,
+rather than the continental direction, might prove
+too strong for him if he despaired of gaining
+credit for his Government in another way. Unhappily,
+in such a case, with no Power were difficulties
+so likely to arise as with England, which was
+more or less in contact with France in all parts of
+the world, and especially in the Mediterranean.
+Nor could it be forgotten that in the speeches
+lately delivered on the subject of Tunis, Gambetta
+had made strong appeals to national pride with
+regard to French possessions and interests beyond
+the seas.</p>
+
+<p>Still there was no reason to suppose that the so-called
+Colonial Policy was Gambetta's first choice.
+He was known to chafe under the practical subservience
+of France to Germany, and to feel deeply
+humiliated by it. At the bottom of his heart he
+cherished an ardent desire to recover the lost provinces,
+but he knew that neither the military strength
+of France nor the spirit of the people would warrant
+his attempting this within any assignable period.
+He did, however, aim at freeing the French Government
+from the sort of occult control which Germany
+had recently exercised over it, and at improving the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+position of France as a Great Power. He desired
+to present the Government over which he presided
+to France and to Europe as taking a dignified and
+important part in international questions, and
+feeling that these objects could best be attained by
+a real and visible friendship with England, he was
+evidently disposed to treat pending questions with
+a view to maintaining and manifesting a cordial
+understanding.</p>
+
+<p>The two most important questions of the moment
+were, of course, Egypt and the Commercial Treaty.</p>
+
+<p>As regards Egypt, there was so far complete
+unity between the two Governments&mdash;the strain
+having not yet arrived&mdash;but the conclusion of a
+Commercial Treaty appeared to be a more arduous
+affair. Gambetta was apparently ready to go as
+far towards making an acceptable Treaty as was
+possible without risking a defeat in the Chambers.
+But if the negotiations were to fail, he would probably
+despair of keeping up good feeling towards England
+in France. He would conceive that the failure
+would discredit him in the eyes of France and of
+Europe; that it would convey to foreign Governments
+an impression, which he could not remove, of
+there being a coolness between France and England,
+and that it would oblige him to seek for his Foreign
+Policy some other basis than union with England.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the fear that unsuccessful commercial
+negotiations would convert Gambetta into a foe
+was partly due to a communication from Sir Charles
+Dilke announcing that a commercial ultimatum was
+about to be hurled at the French Government.
+This communication is extremely instructive from
+the English Parliamentary point of view, for it
+recommended that in despatches the word 'bargain'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+should be carefully avoided, 'as it would strengthen
+the reciprocity argument.' In other words, although
+wine duties were to be utilized for the purpose of
+bargaining, the fact was not to be disclosed lest it
+might be construed as a departure from the sacred
+principles of Free Trade.</p>
+
+<p>Attention was, however, quickly diverted from
+the Commercial Treaty to Egypt. On January 8,
+the British and French Governments presented the
+so-called Dual Note, in which they declared their
+intention of 'warding off by their united efforts all
+causes of external or internal complications, which
+might menace the <em>régime</em> established in Egypt.'
+The Dual Note was by no means as successful as
+had been hoped, and it is clear that Gambetta was
+in favour of more decided and independent action
+than the British Cabinet. Within a few days Lord
+Granville was already writing to Lord Lyons and
+asking him whether it would not be advisable for
+England and France to ask permission from the
+Powers to appear as mandatories of Europe.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Jan. 17, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The news from Egypt is certainly not reassuring, and
+the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">mauvais quart d'heure</i> may arrive at any moment.</p>
+
+<p>M. Gambetta would probably desire joint intervention;
+the objections to this are immense: I need not recapitulate
+them all to you.</p>
+
+<p>Single occupation, by England or by France, still
+more so.</p>
+
+<p>I am not quite sure that Turkish occupation under
+proper conditions and control by France and England,
+although a great evil, would not be less bad than the three
+alternatives I have mentioned. But it is not only bad in
+itself, but it would be strongly opposed by the French,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+although it would be supported by the German Powers.
+In these circumstances, an observation of Malet's struck
+me as having some force. Talking of the intentions of
+some of the other Powers to have their part in the question,
+he said it would not be so objectionable, if they consented
+to allow the English and French to be the mandatories.</p>
+
+<p>The idea seemed to me to be worth considering, and
+I spoke to Tenterden and Rivers Wilson (but to no one
+else) and requested them to draw up a memorandum as to
+how this could be carried out. I send you an extract, and
+I should like to have your opinion on it before I submit it
+even to Gladstone as a possibility.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta of course would not like it. But his difficulty
+is as great as ours if he were to understand that we will
+not agree to joint occupation. There would be nothing
+humiliating to France if the proposal was freely consented
+to by both countries and jointly offered to Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>For us it would only be acting on the Concert of Europe
+principle, about which we have been making such a fuss.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This somewhat half-hearted proposal met with
+no approval from Lord Lyons, who expressed his
+objections in more decisive terms than were usual
+with him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 19, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>In your letter of the day before yesterday you ask me
+for my opinion on a suggestion as to admitting other
+Powers to take part in the Egyptian Question, on the
+supposition that France and England should be their
+mandatories.</p>
+
+<p>This would, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">ipso facto</i>, be the abandonment of the
+exceptional position which England and France have taken
+up in Egypt. Whether this position can be, or ought to
+be, maintained for a long time, is a question which I will
+not stop to examine.</p>
+
+<p>That a proposal to abandon it, at this moment, would
+have a very bad effect on our relations with France, does<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+not, I think, admit of a doubt. It would be taken as an
+abandonment of our intention to give up, in the face of
+Europe, all special intimacy with the French Government.
+It would give rise to suspicions that we were trying to use
+the other Powers for the purpose of ousting France from
+Egypt. The union of England and France on the Egyptian
+Question is the principal symbol of there being a good
+understanding between them, and to this symbol the French
+attach no little importance.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know that the designation of mandatories of
+Europe would mend the matter. The other Powers would
+not commission England and France to decide by themselves
+what measures should be recommended for Egypt.
+They might depute England and France to enforce the
+decisions of Europe, but this would only bring us back to
+the joint intervention of the two Powers in a particularly
+awkward and unmanageable form.</p>
+
+<p>Practically, it would, I think, be found much more
+difficult for us to keep well with France, if the other Powers
+were also to have a voice in details. Hitherto England
+and France have managed to come to an agreement with
+each other on the questions that have arisen. It might be
+made more difficult for them invariably to side with each
+other against other Powers. Political considerations as to
+affairs distinct from Egypt might come into play. Setting
+aside a natural and not improper jealousy on the part of
+each, lest its associate should obtain separate and undue
+influence, the interests of England and France in Egypt
+are very much the same. The main interest of some Governments,
+and in particular that of the Porte, might be
+antagonistic to cordiality between the two Western Powers.</p>
+
+<p>A Commission appointed now to deal with questions
+relating to the government and administration of Egypt
+would be a different matter from the Commissions of 1878
+and 1880.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, it seems probable that the Sultan
+would protest strongly against it, and that he would do so
+whether or no there were Turkish members of it appointed
+by him. His Majesty might possibly acquiesce under strong
+pressure from all the Powers, but would all the Powers put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+such pressure on him? In all matters bearing upon the
+relations between the Porte and Egypt, it must, I am
+afraid, be taken into consideration that neither France
+singly, nor England singly, nor the two acting together,
+are likely at the present time to exercise predominant
+influence at Constantinople; and that, on the other hand,
+the Power which does exercise predominant influence
+there shows no disposition to jeopardize that influence
+by giving unpalatable advice, and is not supposed to have
+any desire to promote cordiality between England and
+France.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, we have to consider not only the Sultan and
+the Khedive, but the mutinous officers and the so-called
+National Party in Egypt. From a telegram which Gambetta
+showed me yesterday, it would appear that Arabi had
+expressed some idea of appealing against England and
+France to the Great Powers collectively. But would he
+and his party, whose watchword seems to be 'Egypt for
+the Egyptians,' submit passively to the installation of a
+Foreign Commission to settle all the important national
+questions? Would they acquiesce in the subsequent
+enforcement of the decision of the Commission?</p>
+
+<p>The Commission might certainly sit at Alexandria, and
+it might perhaps have the support afforded by the presence
+of an Anglo-French squadron, or an International squadron.
+In either case, would the squadron be provided with men to
+be landed in case of need, and would the Commission be
+authorized to call for the assistance and protection of a
+force to be put on shore? If this were so, it might be
+merely a small beginning which might ultimately render
+intervention in arms on a larger scale inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, if the presence of the squadron were
+to be merely a naval demonstration, would the fact of its
+being more or less representative of all the Great Powers
+give it much more weight than if it were made on behalf
+of England and France alone? Would it, in either case,
+be safe to trust to the moral effect of its being sufficient,
+and to its not rendering further action imperative?</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta seems to hope that firm and decided language,
+used collectively now by France and England, may ward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+off a crisis. If there be any chance of warding off a
+necessity for action, it no doubt lies in this; but I suppose
+that with Gambetta the wish is father to the thought.
+On the one hand, in face of the present unpopularity of the
+Tunis expedition, it would be very awkward for him to
+have to send another French force to Africa at the present
+moment. But, on the other hand, he could not confront
+the mass of enraged bondholders if he abandoned their
+interests; and public opinion here, which is very sensitive
+about Egypt, would not tolerate his letting France be
+openly set at naught in that country.</p>
+
+<p>It is needless to add that the French Government
+would bitterly resent it, if any hint were given to a third
+Power, without their having been previously consulted, if
+there is any idea on our part of withdrawing from our
+separate understanding with them, and merging Egypt
+in the general Eastern Question. If they were ever
+brought to consent to calling in the other Powers, they
+would not readily forgive having their hands forced in
+the matter.</p>
+
+<p>For my own part, I would certainly, as regards Egypt,
+rather have to deal with France only than with four or
+five more Powers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There can be no shadow of doubt that Lord
+Lyons's view was the correct one, but Lord Granville
+and Mr. Gladstone (no other member of the Cabinet
+is mentioned) seem to have hankered after the
+Concert of Europe, probably in consequence of the
+stroke of luck at Dulcigno.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'Your very powerful letter,' Lord Granville wrote on
+January 21, 'is gone to Gladstone. It is not easy to
+find an answer to all your arguments. The question is
+whether there are not stronger arguments against any
+other course. I think it is likely that I shall write to
+you to ask you to speak to Gambetta.</p>
+
+<p>'On the imminence of the crisis: the importance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+perfect union between England and France: our strong
+objection to intervene alone&mdash;giving as reasons:&mdash;opposition
+of Egyptians; of Turkey; jealousy of Europe;
+responsibility of governing a country of Orientals without
+adequate means and under adverse circumstances;
+presumption that France would object as much to our
+sole occupation as we should object to theirs.</p>
+
+<p>'Have carefully considered joint occupation; some of
+the objections to sole occupation lessened, but others
+most seriously aggravated.</p>
+
+<p>'Deprecate Turkish intervention, but think it a lesser
+evil than the two to which I have alluded, giving some
+reasons.</p>
+
+<p>'Then propose the European element, as sketched out
+in my private letter.</p>
+
+<p>'Any concessions to Europe after any demonstrations
+on the part of the German powers and Italy would place
+us in a false position; but if made spontaneously and
+jointly by France and England, would not have that
+inconvenience.</p>
+
+<p>'Please reflect upon the way such arguments might
+best be put, but let me have all your opinions upon it.</p>
+
+<p>'Such able letters as your last are very valuable.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Another letter written on the same day asks for
+advice as to what should be done 'if the crisis
+arrives, as is probable, in a week.' It was very
+evident that the Cabinet had no definite plan of
+their own, and were only too glad of the opportunity
+of consulting some one whose opinion was worth
+having.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, January 22, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have received this morning your two letters of yesterday
+about Egypt; and I have reconsidered the letters from
+me of the 19th to which they are answers.</p>
+
+<p>There exists at this moment one new difficulty, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+uncertainty whether Gambetta will still be in office this
+day week.</p>
+
+<p>I do not, however, find in this circumstance any reason
+to modify the views expressed in my long letter.</p>
+
+<p>Whoever may be in office here at the time, if we proposed
+to call in the other Powers, we should be held (to
+use Commercial Treaty slang) to have 'denounced' our
+good understanding with France. We should be reproached
+with deserting our comrade at the critical moment, and I
+am seriously afraid that for a long time the feeling in France
+towards England would be bitter, and the relations of the
+French Government towards the English Government more
+than cold.</p>
+
+<p>In my communication to the French Government
+respecting Egypt, there are some topics in particular which
+would require delicate handling.</p>
+
+<p>First of these, I should mention Turkish intervention.
+This has been a subject of difference between France and
+England for half a century, and the French have a traditional
+feeling on the subject at all times. But at this
+moment they (rightly or wrongly) think it a matter of vital
+importance to them with regard to Algeria and Tunis, and
+they would go very great lengths to resist the introduction
+of the Turkish Troops into Egypt, or the increase of Turkish
+influence there. They always suspect us of hankering
+after Turkish support against them, not reflecting that
+our influence at Constantinople is not so predominant as
+when they supported Mehemet Ali against the Porte and
+England.</p>
+
+<p>Another topic on which the French might be sensitive
+would be the question of governing a country of Orientals.
+This is a matter on which I feel strongly myself, but it
+would need to be dealt with very cautiously, or the French
+would see in it a sneer against their own shortcomings in
+Tunis and even in Algeria.</p>
+
+<p>The objections to joint dual occupation are strong, but
+almost any statement of them would apply with equal
+force, or more, to joint sextuple occupation, or to the
+occupation by two Powers as mandatories of the rest.</p>
+
+<p>Malet, I see, telegraphs that the Chamber would, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+thinks, listen to the united Great Powers, but would not
+listen to England and France alone.</p>
+
+<p>Admitting that Malet is right (and he generally is right),
+there always remains the difficulty as to putting this
+cumbersome six-wheeled waggon into motion in any
+reasonable time.</p>
+
+<p>And this brings me to the question in your second
+letter, what course should I recommend, if the crisis, as is
+probable, arises in a week.</p>
+
+<p>It seems to me that in that case either things must be
+let 'slide,' or England and France must take some step
+together, without waiting for the other Powers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>All the anxious speculations which had taken
+place with regard to Gambetta's future foreign
+policy turned out to be quite unnecessary, for on
+January 27, after little more than two months of
+office, he resigned, having been defeated, like any
+ordinary political mediocrity, on a question of
+domestic interest. His place was taken by M. de
+Freycinet, who succeeded in forming a respectable
+Ministry, but whose policy with regard to Egypt
+was as vague and undecided as that of the British
+Government, and whose views with regard to a
+Commercial Treaty were supposed to be identical
+with those of his predecessor.</p>
+
+<p>Advantage was taken of the change by Lord
+Granville to again urge the substitution of the
+Concert of Europe for purely Anglo-French control
+in Egypt, and Freycinet showed himself much more
+amenable than Gambetta. As far as can be
+gathered, the attitude of both Governments was the
+reverse of heroic; the British Government was
+anxious to hand over its responsibility to other
+parties, and the French Government was not disposed
+to take any initiative at all. The French<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+were, in fact, waiting for England to make a
+suggestion, and while perhaps ready to act in conjunction,
+wished that the responsibility of whatever
+proceedings were adopted in common, should rest
+primarily, if not exclusively, upon England. The
+Tunis enterprise had proved to be so much more
+troublesome and expensive than had been expected,
+that the Government shrank from becoming involved
+in anything of the same nature in Egypt.
+But the condition of affairs in Egypt was such that
+even the timid Freycinet Government might find
+its hand forced. An insult to a French functionary
+might produce an outbreak of Chauvinism which
+would force the Government to send a force to
+avenge it, and Gambetta would certainly have had
+a force ready for a contingency of this kind.</p>
+
+<p>Nubar Pasha was in Paris at the time, and his
+views on the Egyptian situation were not without
+interest.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 7, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not find the least diminution of the French opposition
+to Turkish intervention in Egypt, even if it were only
+moral.</p>
+
+<p>Nubar has been here for some months, and often comes
+to see me. His first object in life seems to be to get
+Blignières out of Egypt, and his second to get Tewfik
+deposed. I conclude that he thinks that both are obstacles
+to his own return to power. His language is, that the
+dictation of the English and French Controllers in Egypt
+was more than any country could bear; that the present
+state of things is much better; office and power being in
+the same hands; that Arabi Bey and his compeers will do
+very well if they are properly managed, and that two quiet,
+conciliatory (perhaps we should read imbecile) Controllers
+would keep everything straight. I think he inclines to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+moral intervention of the Sultan. He seems to be intriguing
+with Germany. He had an interview with
+Freycinet, to whom, according to his own account, he held
+the language I have described above. He talks more ably
+than any one else about Egypt, but always with a view to
+his own interests.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Any one who ever conversed with the late Nubar
+Pasha could not fail to be impressed with his ability,
+but like many other able Orientals, he was a consummate
+intriguer, and probably the predominant
+feeling in his mind was a desire to be reinstated in
+power. It should be explained that, at this time,
+Arabi was already practically at the head of the
+Government, although only occupying the post of
+Minister of War, and that M. de Blignières was
+still French Controller. M. de Blignières, however,
+resigned his post on March 12, and an open letter<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
+from him to M. Clémenceau threw a lurid light on
+the tortuous and inexplicable course of French policy
+in Egypt.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">'Lorsqu'il (Cherif Pasha) a du quitter le pouvoir;
+lorsque j'ai compris que les chefs du parti militaire, qui
+l'avaient renversé, pouvaient compter sur la bienveillance
+de notre gouvernement, ce jour-là, ne me faisant
+aucune illusion sur les conséquences nécessaires de cette
+politique nouvelle, j'ai résigné mes fonctions.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>If, therefore, M. de Blignières was correct, the
+French were playing a double game; ostensibly
+acting in concert with England against the Nationalist
+agitation in Egypt, while secretly encouraging Arabi
+and his friends to persevere in their efforts. In one
+respect, however, they were consistent, namely in
+their opposition to Turkish intervention, and the
+traditional French opposition to Turkish influence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+in Egypt was accentuated in consequence of the
+recent events in Tunis and Algeria.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, April 4, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You will have seen by the despatches I sent you by
+post yesterday that Freycinet has at last put the dots on
+his i's, and distinctly proposed that Tewfik shall be deposed
+and Halim put in his place. I cannot say I take to the
+idea. As you said to Tissot, there might be some good in
+it if Halim had great moral and intellectual qualities. But
+I don't see that we have any reason to suppose he has such
+qualities. Nor indeed, if he had, do I see how his mere
+appointment would at once set things straight in Egypt.
+The removal of Ismail was a great blow to the prestige
+of the Khediviate, and it would require a genius to re-establish
+its authority, if another deposition takes place
+in so short a time. I do not understand how Freycinet
+reconciles his present idea with his objection to Turkish
+interference. If the Khedive is in daily fear of being
+deposed by the Sultan, there will be abject submission to
+Yildiz Kiosk and a constant flow of backsheesh to the Porte.</p>
+
+<p>Halim no doubt promises the French that he will be
+their man, and if he becomes so, they may go great lengths
+to support him; but how will this suit us? And how long
+will it be before it leads to something very like armed
+intervention of the French in support of him?</p>
+
+<p>Then it seems to me that to depose Tewfik would be
+something very like treachery, after the dual declaration
+made to him in January.</p>
+
+<p>It seems to me that the things to aim at should be: to
+keep Tewfik; to give him some strength against military
+dictation, and to preserve the Anglo-French Control, which
+means a reasonable financial administration, and gives us
+at any rate some means of knowing what the Egyptians
+(perhaps I ought to add) what the French are about.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The immoral proposal to depose Tewfik met with
+no encouragement from Her Majesty's Government,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+as was only to be expected, and the only conclusion
+to be drawn from the equivocal language of M. de
+Freycinet was that he felt armed intervention to
+be inevitable, but wanted the proposal to come from
+England. He tried to persuade Lord Lyons to
+propose a plan of his own which should be put forward
+privately, but this met with no approval at all.
+'"Private and between ourselves conversations,"
+between Ambassadors and Foreign Ministers generally
+cause mischief.'</p>
+
+<p>As the situation in Egypt continued to get worse,
+the British Government was forced to take some
+action, and accordingly suggested that three generals,
+French, English, and Turkish, should be sent to
+Egypt 'to restore discipline to the Egyptian army.'
+As it was not proposed that these generals should
+employ anything but moral force, it is difficult to
+see how they could have succeeded, but Lord Granville
+appears to have considered that it would
+obviate armed interference, and the French Government
+having no plan of their own were presumably
+ready to accept almost anything, but caused
+considerable embarrassment by asking for a pledge
+that Turkish intervention by force of arms, in any
+circumstances, would not be tolerated. What
+Freycinet wanted, in fact, was to be able to declare
+to the Chamber that England and France were
+agreed not to allow armed Ottoman intervention.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 5, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Freycinet asked me just now to let him speak to me
+'privately and academically' about intervention in Egypt.
+He said his great objection to Turkish intervention was
+that as matters now stand, it would take place for a vague<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+and indefinite object: that thus it would be impossible to
+fix the exact time at which that object would be accomplished,
+and that thus the Turks would have pretexts for
+prolonging it indefinitely, for mixing themselves up in the
+administration, for laying their hands on the Treasury,
+and what not.</p>
+
+<p>If the intervention was simply for installing a new
+Khedive, his objections would be less. This would be a
+single definite sovereign act of the Sultan. It might be
+accomplished in a week or ten days, and the Ottoman
+troops would have no pretext for staying, or for interfering
+in the administration. He should not object to a Turkish,
+French, and English fleet going to Egypt to support some
+single definite act of this kind, nor even, speaking solely
+for himself personally, to Turkish troops being landed.</p>
+
+<p>After some questioning from me, he said that, for a
+single definite object, he personally might even prefer
+a Turkish intervention, but that for any such vague purpose
+as supporting Tewfik and restoring order, he thought
+Turkish intervention absolutely inadmissible. If anything
+of that kind was to be attempted, Anglo-French seemed
+to him the least open to objection. Italian seemed to him
+to be worse than Turkish.</p>
+
+<p>His idea was that we should set on foot some Government
+that could stand by itself. Under Tewfik no such
+Government would in his opinion be ever possible. He had
+no predilection for any particular individual as Khedive:
+all he wanted was to have some reasonably efficient man
+at the head of the Government.</p>
+
+<p>He begged me to consider all this as strictly confidential,
+personal, private, and academic; and he said that except
+in a conversation of this character, he could not even have
+mentioned the possibility of France consenting under any
+conceivable circumstances to Turkish intervention; for he
+was by no means sure that it would ever be agreed to by
+his colleagues or borne by public opinion.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The 'confidential, personal, private, and academic'
+character of M. de Freycinet's conversation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+was, of course, merely intended to conceal his own
+vacillation and fear of having to communicate to
+the Chambers any announcement that he had
+sanctioned Turkish intervention in any shape whatever.
+A little later, however, he nerved himself
+to make a proposal that there should be a joint
+Anglo-French Naval Demonstration off Alexandria.
+An allied squadron consequently proceeded to that
+port, and its appearance produced a temporary
+panic in the ranks of the Nationalists; the latter,
+however, speedily recovered when it was realized
+that there were no troops on board, and that the
+Sultan, far from approving of the demonstration,
+had protested against it. The ultimatum of the
+allies was practically rejected, and Arabi, who had
+been compelled to resign, was reinstated in office
+nominally as Minister of War, in reality as dictator.
+To make Freycinet's position still worse, he got into
+difficulties in the Chamber.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 26, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The explosion has come, and if the irritation that prevails
+in Paris to-day continues, Freycinet will be out of
+office, or will, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">per fas et nefas</i>, back out of his proposal that
+Turkish intervention may be resorted to in Egypt. His
+Chauvin speech in the Chamber about French preponderance,
+and what not, is now of course turned against him.</p>
+
+<p>There is an impression here that in order to keep
+Gambetta out of office, Bismarck may help Freycinet to
+eat his words.</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid that now, whether Freycinet stays in or
+goes out, it will be next to impossible to have any comfortable
+understanding with France about intervention in
+Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>Even supposing all the other Powers cordially united<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+with us, to repeat the experiment of 1840 would be dangerous,
+and would produce a scarcely ever to be remedied
+coldness (to call it by a mild name) between us and France.</p>
+
+<p>Then I share all Dufferin's misgivings as to the possibility
+of either controlling the Turks if they set foot in Egypt, or
+of ever getting them out. I have also a very strong fear
+of my own as to the mischief they would do to the country.
+Even if they went with the acquiescence of France, I
+think we should be constantly in hot water with the French
+as long as they stayed.</p>
+
+<p>If Gambetta comes in he will no doubt again propose
+joint Anglo-French intervention. Unless the Porte is
+backed up very strongly indeed, he will very likely make
+its intervention in Egypt something like a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">casus belli</i> with
+Turkey&mdash;or in fact do as the French did with regard to
+Tunis&mdash;declare that he will oppose by force the despatch
+of Turkish troops to Egypt.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Anglo-French Naval Demonstration had
+been intended as a compromise between the two
+Governments over the question of Turkish intervention,
+but when it was seen to be useless, it was
+agreed that the Sultan should be asked to send a
+Special Commission to Cairo, and communications
+were made to the other Powers with a view to convoking
+a European Conference on Egypt; M. de
+Freycinet, who had for three months opposed the
+English proposal for Turkish intervention, suddenly
+discovering that there was no danger about it, if
+requested jointly by England and France. The
+Turkish Commission which proceeded to Egypt was
+not more successful in restoring order than the Anglo-French
+Naval Demonstration. It consisted of three
+persons; one of whom, Dervish Pasha, was instructed
+to support the Khedive and to threaten
+the Nationalist leaders; the second Commissioner
+was instructed to support Arabi and his associates;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+and the duty of the third Commissioner was to spy
+upon his two colleagues. In order to make everything
+quite safe, the latter was accompanied by a
+fourth official, whose duty it was to spy upon him,
+and it was perhaps owing to these over-elaborated
+precautions that the mission proved to be a complete
+failure.</p>
+
+<p>On June 11, the massacre at Alexandria took
+place, and armed intervention became more and
+more inevitable, but some Governments still entertained
+the hope that diplomacy might yet be
+successful, and the Conference assembled at Constantinople
+towards the end of the month. The
+chief advantage of the Conference was that it disclosed
+the views of the various Great Powers, and
+the conditions which were to govern the despatch
+of Turkish troops to Egypt were of so engrossing
+a nature that they were still being discussed when
+the battle of Tel-el-Kebir was fought two months
+subsequently, and the victorious British troops
+entered Cairo.</p>
+
+<p>The vacillations and dilatoriness of M. de Freycinet
+irritated even the easy-going Lord Granville,
+who complained of having twice been put in a hole
+by him, and was justifiably anxious as to how he
+could defend his Egyptian policy successfully in
+Parliament if the French Government could not be
+relied upon for any consistent line of action. But
+while admitting that nearly everything had gone
+wrong up till now, and that the failure of the Sultan's
+Special Mission made the outlook still more gloomy,
+he consoled himself with the reflection (which was
+shortly afterwards shown in one respect to be quite
+erroneous) that, 'we have avoided a rupture with
+France, a rupture with Europe, and a possible war.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+Within a few weeks, the error of this last assumption
+was to be conclusively established.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 20, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not hope much from the Conference: certainly I
+have very little expectation of its forwarding the strong
+measures which the Alexandria massacres seem to me to
+call for imperatively.</p>
+
+<p>I think Germany will be very little inclined to urge
+the despatch of Turkish troops. Bismarck's great object
+appears to be to keep Freycinet in, and he fears, not without
+some reason, that when the first Turkish soldier sets his
+foot in Egypt, Freycinet will fall at Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The Freycinet Ministry would probably be succeeded
+by a Cabinet in which Gambetta would not actually have a
+seat, but over which he would exercise very great influence.
+Bismarck very probably exaggerates the strength of that
+influence and looks for more direct hostility to Germany
+than it would really provoke. But he is perhaps right in
+thinking that, under Gambetta's influence, France would
+coquet with the Anti-German party in Russia, and would
+lose no opportunity of fostering enmity to Germany whenever
+she could find an opening for doing so. At all events,
+it would be impossible for Germany to feel as much at her
+ease as she does now, if Gambetta were the virtual director
+of French policy.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet's strength lies partly in the disinclination of
+the nation for anything like what it calls adventures, but
+mainly in the dread which the present Chamber has of
+Gambetta, the Scrutin de Liste and a dissolution.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile general dissatisfaction with the whole state
+of things, and despondency do not diminish. People who
+looked to Gambetta as the man to set things straight are
+directing their eyes to other quarters, and there is even a
+sort of revival of Orleanism.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A few hours after this letter reaches you, you will in all
+probability receive from me by telegraph the French
+answer to the proposal to them to concert measures with
+us for the protection of the Suez Canal. I don't think
+Freycinet likes the idea of anything which may tend
+towards sending French troops to Egypt. He seems to
+me to want to lean on the Conference in the hope that by
+so doing, he may be able to stand quite still. Strange to
+say, the Chamber and the public seem to be in the same
+mood. They like to think that it is more upon England
+than upon them that the discredit of putting up with the
+Alexandria massacre and the recent patch up in Egypt
+would fall. Their present pusillanimity seems so unnatural
+that I cannot think it will last. Gambetta will
+rouse them from it, if he has the chance.</p>
+
+<p>They are full of suspicions of designs on our part to
+seize the Suez Canal with or without the assistance or
+connivance of Turkey. You will see by a telegram I have
+just sent, that Freycinet has asked me a question about
+this. I imagine the French would object very much less
+to our acting entirely alone than to our acting in any way
+with the Porte.</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan seems to tell de Noailles all kinds of stories
+against England and Dufferin. It is not, however, from
+Freycinet that I hear this.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In Lord Lyons's opinion, the French, at this
+stage, were quite prepared for England acting alone
+in Egypt, but he considered that it was most important
+to be very frank with them, to afford them
+every opportunity of joining us, but to do it in such
+a way that other Powers should not be given too
+much time in which to raise objections.</p>
+
+<p>It was not apparently until June 27, 1882, that
+the British Government seriously considered the
+probability of having to employ 'material force'
+in Egypt, whether alone or in concert with other
+Powers; but in consequence of the danger of the
+situation and of the necessity of acting quickly, they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+then applied to the War Office for information as to
+what forces were available for an expedition. In
+view of our alleged military capacity at the present
+time, it is of interest to learn what the War Office
+was prepared to do thirty-one years ago. The
+military authorities stated that they were prepared
+to embark within twenty-four hours, 3500 infantry,
+and 500 garrison artillerymen, with a small siege
+train, from Malta and Gibraltar, with necessary
+camp equipage and reserves of food and ammunition.
+These troops could be conveyed in the ships of the
+Channel Squadron now in the Mediterranean. A
+force of about 12,000 fighting men, complete in
+infantry, cavalry, and field artillery, with forty-eight
+field guns, was also available, to embark from
+England. The first 5000 of the infantry could sail
+within a week, and the whole force could leave
+England in a fortnight from the date of the order,
+with complete supplies for an army in the field.
+The force from England would be made up partially
+by the First Class Army Reserve, and a Brigade was
+also available to be sent from Bombay to Suez.
+Such was the purport of a most confidential communication
+to Lord Granville from the War Office,
+dated June 27, 1882.</p>
+
+<p>On July 11, the bombardment of Alexandria by
+the British fleet took place; the departure of the
+French ships marking, in an unmistakeable form, the
+refusal of the French Government to incur further
+responsibility, and foreshadowing the permanent
+renunciation of the old French position in Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>The news of the Alexandria bombardment, which,
+owing to the absence of troops for landing, could
+hardly be described as a very effective operation,
+was received without much excitement in Paris,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+and Freycinet stated that the Chamber would certainly
+not have sanctioned the co-operation of the
+French fleet. The main point on which sensitiveness
+was shown was the Suez Canal. The French
+seemed disposed to resent any landing of English
+troops alone at Port Said, and to insist, if not on
+joining with us, on sending a 'lateral' expedition
+of their own. It was important, therefore, that
+they should be given a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">bona fide</i> invitation to join in
+anything we might determine to do, and the French
+were accordingly invited by Lord Granville to
+concert measures at once for the protection of the
+canal; questions of detail being left to the Conference
+at Constantinople. Upon the whole the
+bombardment of Alexandria had tended to improve
+rather than to impair Anglo-French relations, and
+the chief danger seemed to lie in the projected
+Turkish intervention, which would alienate public
+opinion and provoke strong opposition from Gambetta
+and his followers. Extraordinary French
+Naval Credits were voted and Lord Granville appears
+to have thought that joint action was secured after
+all, at least as far as the Canal was concerned.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">July 19, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I wish you and ourselves joy of the renewed <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">entente
+cordiale</i>. It will not be popular in many quarters here,
+but it is an immense national advantage, and ought to
+relieve us from many dangers.</p>
+
+<p>I am not in the least jealous of the dual action in the
+Canal, though I should prefer its being triangular. But I
+own I dread it, if we are obliged, as is probable, to intervene
+in Egypt itself.</p>
+
+<p>I hope they do not think we are pressing them too fast.
+I believe the Cabinet will settle to send 15,000 men to
+Malta. If so, I will let you know.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Remember I am always grateful for suggestions and
+criticisms. I hear Bismarck is really ill and cannot sleep
+at night. The preparation of his own financial measures
+does not act as an anodyne.</p>
+
+<p>I am told that the debate in the Commons last night
+did us good and not harm. I suppose we shall have a more
+formidable one in the Lords.</p>
+
+<p>It is rumoured that the Peers will pass the Second
+Reading of the Arrears Bill, and mutilate it in Committee.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The voting of the extraordinary French Naval
+Credits, which had caused it to be supposed that
+the French Government intended to take some
+decided action, was soon shown to mean nothing
+at all. Freycinet, whose position had been much
+shaken, was in the uncomfortable situation of being
+blamed by the Chamber for doing too much and
+denounced in the Senate for not doing enough. On
+July 19, an important debate took place in the
+Chamber, during which Gambetta, with his accustomed
+eloquence, adjured the Government to adhere
+to the English alliance at all costs, and urged
+that to quarrel with England would be the most
+fatal of mistakes. The Credits asked for were
+agreed to, and the Government obtained a large
+majority; but when Freycinet appeared in support
+of his modest proposals before the Senate, he was
+obliged to admit that the Conference at Constantinople
+had refused to entrust France and England
+with a Mandate, and that in consequence of this
+refusal the French Government would leave England
+to act alone, and would confine their own action
+to the protection of the Suez Canal. A fresh credit
+amounting to about £350,000 was asked for with
+this object, but met with formidable opposition.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 26, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>When I saw Freycinet this afternoon he seemed in
+absolute despair. There are two modes of escape which
+are supposed to be still open.</p>
+
+<p>Though the majority of the Chamber are strongly
+opposed to military intervention in Egypt, they may still
+hesitate to turn Freycinet out, lest by showing it to be
+impossible to make their own existence compatible with
+anything like a stable Government in France, they may
+bring about a dissolution.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that they are casting about for some means
+of refusing the Credit and yet not turning out Freycinet;
+and the second device, which might enable Freycinet to
+stay in, is the singularly undignified one of his playing into
+their hand, by declaring that he does not make the Credit
+a Cabinet question, and that if it be refused, he will bow
+to the will of the Chamber and withdraw from the protection
+of the Canal.</p>
+
+<p>So long as it is undeniable that we have <em>bona fide</em> invited
+and pressed France to take part in all our operations in
+Egypt, I shall not break my heart if she chooses to decline
+to do so.</p>
+
+<p>I believe that Freycinet would have been in a better
+plight if he had taken a decided course either way; if he
+had distinctly refused all intervention, or if he had boldly
+joined England in all her operations.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On July 29, the question of voting the fresh
+Credit was brought forward in the Chamber and
+made one of confidence in the Ministry. Every one
+by this time was much alarmed at the prospect of
+France being dragged into some vague and desperate
+adventure; the Credit was refused by an overwhelming
+majority; Freycinet resigned office, and
+France definitely retired from the scene of action.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 30, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Among the innumerable Ministerial crises which I
+have seen here, I do not recollect one in which there has
+been so much uncertainty as to who would be the new
+Prime Minister.</p>
+
+<p>Grévy, in conformity with his own views, and with
+those of the great majority of the Chamber and indeed of
+the country, is trying to form an absolutely non-intervention
+Cabinet. But such a Cabinet might have difficulties with
+the Senate. Léon Say and Jules Ferry, the most able
+members of the late Ministry, were for full intervention
+and the English Alliance.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet very unwisely began with a perfectly idle
+dispute with Gambetta as to whether the English Government
+would, or would not, have consented to armed intervention
+with France only, if Gambetta had remained in
+power. Gambetta did not speak yesterday, but he and
+his followers voted against Freycinet.</p>
+
+<p>Hohenlohe seemed, I hear, dreadfully put out by the
+result of the division yesterday. It was Bismarck's communication
+which gave Freycinet the <em>coup de grâce</em>.
+Hohenlohe had evidently hoped that it would save him,
+by giving him an excuse for withdrawing the Bill.</p>
+
+<p>I was very much disappointed to hear from Freycinet
+that Russia had gone back to the Conference. I hoped
+her retirement would have given us a good opportunity of
+freeing ourselves from that cumbrous clog.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Aug. 1, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>All is still uncertain as to who the new French Ministers
+will be. Grévy is doing his best to keep Freycinet, and
+Hohenlohe is working in the same direction, which is not
+wise. Hitherto Freycinet has positively declined, but he
+is a man who sometimes changes his mind. He will be in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+an extraordinarily false position if he does come back.
+Grévy may, perhaps, manage to appoint a warming-pan
+sort of Ministry, just to keep the offices warm during the
+recess and to make room for something more serious in
+October.</p>
+
+<p>The French are in very good disposition towards us at
+this moment. The way to keep them so will be to endeavour
+to make their present position comfortable to
+them, without being humiliating, and, above all, not to
+crow over them, as part of our press seems too much
+inclined to do. Their fleet, next to our own, is the most
+important factor in the Mediterranean question. We can
+do as well or better, without any aid from France or other
+countries, but we ought to have the field to ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>I wish we were well rid of that dangerous Conference.
+I had a sort of hope that just now it might have a sort of
+use, as a means of letting the other Powers talk while we
+were acting. But in fact, as worked by Bismarck and by
+the Turks under his direction, it seems merely to supply
+the machinery for formally placing us in opposition to the
+so-called European Concert, and for embarrassing France.
+I think the French would be glad to be delivered
+from it.</p>
+
+<p>Public opinion in France is at this moment friendly to
+us, but it is in a very susceptible state.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A new Ministry was in course of time formed
+under M. Duclerc, one of the many uninteresting
+mediocrities who have governed France during the
+last forty years, and a sort of formula was agreed
+upon that there was no 'solution of continuity in
+the Entente,' which was not intended to commit
+the French to anything in particular.</p>
+
+<p>A vast amount has been written respecting the
+events in Egypt in 1882; much of it by persons
+who occupied responsible and important positions
+at the time; but the reasons for the inaction and
+eventual retirement of the French have never been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+clearly explained. Probably the French themselves
+would be unable to give a satisfactory explanation,
+and would attribute their inglorious attitude to the
+Freycinet Government, which did not know its own
+mind. But it may be assumed that a variety of
+reasons were responsible for the French refusal of
+co-operation with England. Had the invitation
+been received some months earlier, it would probably
+have been accepted with enthusiasm; but the Tunis
+expedition, which had opened with so much success
+and enthusiasm, had proved a much more troublesome
+and unsatisfactory business than had been
+anticipated, and had created a decided disinclination
+for further enterprises in North Africa. In the second
+place, the difficulties of an Egyptian campaign were
+greatly over-estimated; the French calculation was
+that no less than 60,000 men would be necessary,
+and the ordinary French Minister would not venture
+to allow so many men to leave the country. Lastly,
+the French were quite unable, rightly or wrongly,
+to get it out of their minds that they were being
+deliberately led into a trap by Bismarck, and this
+by itself was sufficient to daunt a Government of
+the Freycinet type.</p>
+
+<p>France having now definitely declined, the British
+invitation was transferred to Italy.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'We have asked the Italians to join us,' Lord Granville
+wrote on July 27, 'but we have not pressed them.
+They also will try to <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">se faire prier</i>, and will be too late.
+I told Menabrea I could not delay operations.</p>
+
+<p>'I hope they will decline, but I myself was not very
+hot for even the offer. But the balance of argument
+seemed to be in favour of it, and you did not raise any
+objection to it.</p>
+
+<p>'Please explain that the <cite>Times</cite> is entirely off the track
+as to our wish for a protectorate.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The refusal of the Italians was welcome and not
+unexpected, and as no other Power was in the least
+inclined to co-operate, the British Government was
+able to set about the task of smashing Arabi with a
+clear conscience, in its own way, and unhampered
+by allies; for the Turks, who had agreed to send
+troops, protracted the negotiations with regard to
+their employment to such an extent, that the campaign
+was finished long before an agreement was
+arrived at.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Cromer in his well-known work 'Modern
+Egypt,' has exposed with much skill and lucidity
+the futile nature of many of the proposals put forward
+by the British and French Governments during the
+period that they were acting together. But the
+really remarkable fact is, that each Government
+succeeded in bringing about the result which it least
+desired. The policy of the British Government was
+governed by a sincere, if mistaken, determination
+not to be dragged into assuming sole responsibility
+for Egypt, and in particular to avoid the necessity
+of military occupation. The efforts of the French
+Government were chiefly directed towards the prevention
+of Turkey or any other Power establishing
+its predominant influence in Egypt, and that French
+policy should have unconsciously and involuntarily
+thrust England into this unsought and unwelcome
+position is one of the real ironies of recent history.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the most fortunate event for England
+during the crisis which preceded the Egyptian expedition
+was the fall of Gambetta early in the year.
+Had that statesman remained in office he would
+certainly have never consented to remain a supine
+and indifferent spectator; he would undoubtedly
+have insisted on France taking an active part: a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+joint expedition would have taken place, and the
+sequel might have followed the Schleswig-Holstein
+precedent.</p>
+
+<p>It was hardly to be expected that the skill and
+rapidity with which the campaign against Arabi was
+conducted would evoke much enthusiasm in France,
+nor could the French reasonably expect that upon
+the restoration of peace and order the old state of
+things would be renewed. Before the end of October
+Lord Granville informed the French Ambassador
+in London that the Control would not be restored;
+and when the French Government objected, on the
+ground that such an alteration must be submitted
+to the Powers, it was pointed out the matter was
+one for the Khedive to decide himself. In order
+to soothe wounded French feelings various compromises
+in the shape of posts in the Egyptian
+administration were offered in vain.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 3, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I thought it simpler and better to let Duclerc have a copy
+of your despatch, as you had no objection to my doing so.
+He has not yet given any sign of life since he received it.</p>
+
+<p>The argument that the Financial Adviser will have only
+a small position in Egypt, or at all events a less important
+position than the Controllers, cuts both ways here. Duclerc's
+line is to say that we are making a distinction without any
+real difference: that in practice the adviser will have all
+and more than all the powers of the Controllers; and
+that thus virtually France is to be deprived of her share
+in the Control without receiving, even nominally, any
+compensation.</p>
+
+<p>A complaint of a very different kind is made by the
+'Haute Finance.' They say that the only real compensation
+which could be given to France, if she is to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+ousted from the Control, would be the establishment, under
+the auspices and responsibility of England, of such a
+strong practical supervision of the Egyptian Administration
+as would make the regular payment of the Debt and the
+maintenance of the commercial and other interests of
+foreigners secure. They pretend that the proposed establishment
+of the Financial Adviser is in form injurious to
+the dignity of France, while in substance it does not
+sufficiently provide for the control by any one of the
+Egyptian Government. These seem to be the opinions of a
+very influential body here. It is quite consistent with
+them that Dufferin's mission should be looked on with
+favour by those who hold them.</p>
+
+<p>Clémenceau's views seem to be confined to himself.</p>
+
+<p>The thing most favourable to our coming to an understanding
+with France, is the very general belief among
+Frenchmen that Bismarck is egging indirectly both England
+and France on to a quarrel.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime the alarm caused by the anarchists is
+enough to keep the minds of the great majority of the
+French fixed on their own internal affairs. People are
+sending away their securities and other valuables to foreign
+countries. I suppose an absolute outbreak in force enough
+to resist the Government, if the Government be resolute, is
+not to be expected. But there may be explosions of
+dynamite here and there, and the employment of the other
+new-fangled means of creating panic which the French
+seem to be inclined to adopt from the Russians.</p>
+
+<p>The competition of America and other causes are producing
+a curious change in the French peasantry, and a
+change not favourable to peace and order. The tenacity
+with which the very small proprietors have hitherto clung
+to their land is visibly diminishing. They now offer their
+land for sale to an extent hitherto quite unprecedented.
+They say that they can get better interest by putting the
+price of the land into the funds or other speculations, and
+can thus lead a pleasant life, instead of slaving from
+morning to night to get a bare subsistence out of their
+fields. The tendency of all this is to reduce the numbers of
+the hitherto ultra-Conservative laborious class, and to fill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+the towns more and more with idle and very often disappointed
+and discontented speculators, who form a
+material ready to the hand of anarchists.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The letters from Lord Granville show that
+although the British Government had embarked
+most unwillingly upon the Egyptian enterprise, and
+viewed additional responsibility with so much horror
+that some members of the Cabinet were even opposed
+to the office of Financial Adviser to the Egyptian
+Government being given to an Englishman, yet that
+the Cabinet was at all events unanimously against
+the maintenance of the Control, and of the old dual
+arrangements. The French Government, with an
+entire absence of logic and common sense, was quite
+indisposed to recognize the complete change in the
+situation which had taken place, and continued to
+claim that England and France should remain on
+an equality as regarded themselves, and in a superior
+position as far as the other Powers were concerned.
+The difficulty lay in discovering some means of
+satisfying French vanity without yielding on the
+essential point of equality, and efforts to ascertain
+what would be considered satisfactory did not meet
+with much success.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 14, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I tried to make Duclerc see yesterday that the practical
+way towards obtaining some satisfaction for French
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">amour-propre</i> was to enter upon the discussion of details
+as to the Boards in Egypt. I went as far as I could without
+running the risk of provoking lofty language, which might
+have been an obstacle to moderate arrangements hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>However, at the moment Duclerc did not go back
+from his old grounds. He does not insist upon a literal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+re-establishment of the Control, but he does claim a virtual
+return to the <em>status quo ante</em>, and he interprets that status
+as equality between England and France and superiority
+of the two jointly over other Powers.</p>
+
+<p>The single Financial Councillor pleases no one here.
+As he must of course be an Englishman, the sticklers for
+French <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">gloriole</i> declare that whether his functions be
+great or small, he will simply be a symbol of English
+supremacy and French decadency. To the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">haute</i> and
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">petite finance</i>, the mode of his appointment and the smallness
+of his powers seem an additional cause of complaint,
+as not giving sufficient security for a proper administration
+of the finances of Egypt. I shall be very anxious to hear
+how it all strikes Dufferin.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, at the present moment, the French are too uneasy
+about their internal affairs to pay much attention to Egypt.
+But they may fire up if any special event comes to irritate
+them. It is more, however, future lasting ill will than
+violence at the moment which I apprehend. If we leave
+them bitterly discontented with arrangements in Egypt,
+I hardly see when we shall be able to withdraw our troops
+and still maintain the influence which is a necessity to us.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The idea that the British occupation of Egypt
+was anything more than a temporary expedient does
+not seem to have been considered a serious possibility
+by any English Minister so far. Partly by luck,
+partly by the skill of Sir Garnet Wolseley and Lord
+Dufferin, we had found ourselves in possession of
+Egypt, unhampered by association with any European
+Power or with the Turks; but for a time it
+looked as if the brilliant results achieved were to be
+thrown away because the British Government had
+no clear idea what its policy was to be. Fortunately
+for all concerned, the step was taken of
+sending Lord Dufferin on a special mission to Cairo,
+and unlike most special missions of more recent date,
+the experiment proved a complete success, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+quickly destroyed the mischievous delusion entertained
+by a section of English politicians that an
+evacuation of Egypt was possible at any early date.
+This delusion had never been shared by the French,
+who naturally judged the action of others in the
+light in which they themselves would have acted
+under similar circumstances, and who made little
+effort to conceal their annoyance.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 1, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I don't succeed in making Duclerc <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coulant</i> about
+Egypt. He rather implied that it was not from Tissot that
+he had heard that you were going to send him a favourable
+communication, and that you were thinking of sending an
+expert to discuss details. He did not, however, say who it
+was that told him. Perhaps d'Aunay may have had something
+to do with it. Duclerc went on to hint at there being
+two currents in the English Cabinet, one more favourable
+to the French than the other, but I declined to listen to
+this. He talked as if he had some special source of information
+as to your intentions and sentiments. He seemed
+to take to the idea of a discussion between experts.</p>
+
+<p>He was amiable about Madagascar, but we shall see
+what his written answer will be. He represented himself
+as having overwhelmed the Ambassadors with kindness,
+and then as having broken off the negotiation on the point
+of the leases being for 99 years.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime prospects at home do not brighten.
+Railroads and other public works have been begun, with
+very little system, in all kinds of places to please Deputies
+and their constituents. The Government dare not stop
+them for fear of what the workmen would do if large numbers
+of them found themselves out of work. To go on, is
+ruinous to the finances. There must be a limit to the
+floating debt. The Government are again negotiating
+with the railway companies. People are beginning to
+talk of Saviours of Society. The names most mentioned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+are those of General Chanzy and the Duc d'Aumale.
+Gambetta would have been everybody's man, if he had
+never been Minister. However, I don't think that we are
+very near any violent change.</p>
+
+<p>Grévy is certainly not brisk, but he may grow old
+without things coming to an early catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>There is a not unaccredited rumour that it was in
+wresting the revolver from a female hand that Gambetta
+got wounded. The bulletins at the office of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">République
+Française</i> are that he is going on as well as possible.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The last paragraph refers to the wounding of
+Gambetta by a pistol shot. The accident (which
+terminated fatally) occurred at his villa outside
+Paris, and was surrounded by a mystery which has
+never been dispelled, but it may be assumed that
+a lady really was involved.</p>
+
+<p>The allusion to Madagascar relates to the mission
+despatched by the Queen of the Hovas to Europe
+in the autumn in the vain hope of coming to some
+agreement with the French Government, which had
+raised questions ominously resembling those which
+had, in the previous year, formed the prelude to
+the Tunis expedition. The Hovas, like the Kroumirs,
+constituted 'a serious danger' to the French
+Republic, and demands were put forward which
+involved general French rights over the whole of
+Madagascar, and a protectorate over the northwest
+coast. The unhappy Hova envoys proceeded
+from Paris to London, but met with little encouragement
+there, and before long a semi-official announcement
+was made in which the stereotyped statement,
+with which small and defenceless states are so painfully
+familiar, appeared: 'The Cabinet is resolved
+to enforce the respect of the rights and interests of
+France in Madagascar, and orders in conformity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+with the situation have, therefore, been sent to the
+Commander of the French naval station.' Signs
+of the same ominous activity were also beginning
+to manifest themselves in Tonquin; and the only
+compensating factor was that Madagascar and
+Tonquin served to distract a certain amount of
+French attention from Egypt, although the tone
+of the press, and especially of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">République
+Française</i>, the organ of Gambetta, became increasingly
+hostile to England.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 19, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>There are reports afloat that Gambetta's cure is not
+going on as steadily as it ought. At all events there is no
+change for the better in the tone of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">République
+Française</i> respecting England in Egypt. I don't like the
+idea of having the French there in bitter opposition to all
+we do. It may make it very difficult for us with safety
+to ourselves to give any large measure of independence to
+the Egyptian Government. At all events, the less we are
+able to sacrifice to satisfy French <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">amour-propre</i>, the more
+we must do to give security to legitimate French material
+interests by providing for a really good honest financial
+administration. If the French take the protection of their
+material interests exclusively into their own hands, they
+may go very great lengths indeed to protect them, if they
+are seriously threatened; and, besides, the pretext that
+the credit, property or persons of Frenchmen are threatened,
+will always be at hand to sanction interference.</p>
+
+<p>At present it looks as if the Duclerc Government would
+be glad to back out of its expeditions to Tonquin, etc., etc.
+The proceedings of the Hova Ambassadors and their supporters
+in England may make it difficult for the French
+Government to be as reasonable as it might otherwise wish
+to be about Madagascar.</p>
+
+<p>The prevalent feeling of depression and uneasiness about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+the general condition of France does not seem to diminish.
+There seems to be a profound distrust of the abilities, if not
+of the intentions, of the men who so rapidly succeed one
+another in office, and no one seems to know where to turn
+for something better.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It was somewhat unfortunate that French
+aggression in Tonquin and Madagascar was unconsciously
+stimulated by the English press. 'The
+English press is driving the French public wild on
+the subject of Tonquin, Madagascar, and other
+beyond sea questions, which the Government would
+probably have been glad enough to back out of if
+they had been let alone.'<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
+
+<p>Until the end of the year private negotiations
+continued between Lord Granville and the French
+Government with reference to the abolition of the
+Control with completely unsuccessful results.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 26, 1882.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I hear, not from himself, that Duclerc's present intention
+is to make a very strong protest if we abolish Control without
+coming to a previous understanding with France; and
+that our making our own Control, or that of Europe in
+general, over the Egyptian finances weak, would not
+mollify him. On the contrary, he would try to make a
+point of what he would call our abandonment of French
+material interests&mdash;and deduce from it an argument that
+France is bound to protect them herself. While we are
+absolutely at two with France, we shall find it very difficult
+to relax our material hold on Egypt. Egypt for the
+Egyptians is only too likely to become Egypt for the
+French.</p>
+
+<p>Gambetta's illness seems to have rather strengthened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+his position. The anxiety of his opponents in the press
+to make out that he is worse than is really the case and the
+disgusting statements they have in consequence put forward,
+have served to impress on friends and foes his importance.
+According to the best information I have been able to get,
+he is not at this moment seriously ill, though his recovery
+is too slow to be satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>Confidence and tranquillity do not appear to revive in
+France, and the disappearance of Gambetta would increase
+uneasiness. People do not exactly know what they are
+afraid of, but there is a general vague uneasiness. Perhaps
+the most definite cause of fears or hopes is the intrigue in
+which certain officers of the army are said to be engaged
+with a view of putting the Duc d'Aumale at the head of
+the state.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The childish frame of mind in which the French
+Government of the day considered the question of
+the Control may be judged from the fact that Duclerc
+in private conversation had admitted in the autumn
+that, if for form's sake, the <em>status quo ante</em> could
+be restored for only five minutes, he would agree
+subsequently to its immediate abolition. In
+December, however, he was in a more intractable
+mood, and, at the end of the year, Lord Granville
+found it necessary to break off all private negotiations
+on the subject, observing that it was very
+painful and disadvantageous to be on bad terms
+with the French, but that it was, at the least, equally
+disadvantageous to them.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">ANGLOPHOBIA</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">(1883-1885)</p>
+
+
+<p>The first day of 1883 was signalized by the announcement
+of the death of Gambetta, and those who were
+present at the Elysée on the occasion of President
+Grévy's New Year's Day reception will remember
+the singularly embarrassed demeanour of that uninteresting
+personage; an embarrassment which
+might have been accounted for on various grounds.
+Gambetta's death was followed in a day or two
+by that of General Chanzy, an event which caused
+consternation amongst the Monarchical and Conservative
+parties, as he was looked upon as the only
+man capable of stopping the too rapid progress of
+the Republican car. It was doubtless with the
+view of anticipating other pretenders, that Prince
+Napoleon seized the opportunity to issue a Proclamation
+denouncing the Republic, which resulted in his
+immediate incarceration in the Conciergerie.</p>
+
+<p>For some months there had existed in France a
+feeling of uneasiness and of distrust in the maintenance
+of orderly government, and this feeling was
+greatly increased by the double loss of Gambetta
+and Chanzy. Gambetta was the only man in the
+Republican party whose ability and popularity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+were sufficient to induce the country to acquiesce
+in his wielding great power, and who was believed
+to have the will and the courage to exercise that
+power energetically in case of need. Chanzy was
+looked upon as the only man whose military reputation
+and influence qualified him to keep the army
+united and to use it with effect, in the case of grave
+political troubles.</p>
+
+<p>As for the President of the Republic, M. Grévy,
+his energy and influence continued to diminish; the
+Chamber of Deputies was becoming more and more
+discredited, and the professedly anarchical parties
+were certainly increasing in violence, and apparently
+in numbers and influence as well. The public
+generally, even amongst the lower orders, showed
+few signs of great attachment to the Republican
+Government. That Government had not augmented
+their material prosperity, had not raised
+their social position, and had not realized their
+dreams of absolute equality with, or rather of predominance
+over, the rich and the educated. Every
+form of Monarchical Government was repugnant to
+them, but nevertheless a moderate Republic excited
+no enthusiasm whatsoever. The upper classes were
+alarmed and discontented; they did not believe
+that their property was secure, and they considered
+the work of administration was deplorably carried
+on by the various obscure Ministers who succeeded
+each other so rapidly in office; their religious
+feelings were daily shocked, while bad harvests, bad
+trade, and an unpromising financial situation added
+to the general feeling of dissatisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the 'spirited Colonial Policy,'
+which was now so much in evidence, did little to
+counterbalance this feeling, and the attempts which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+had been made to pander to the national vanity by
+the overbearing policy adopted towards Madagascar;
+the extension of French predominance in Tunis;
+annexations on the Congo; and the consolidation of
+the French Protectorate over Tonquin and Annam,
+had met with little success. The disquieting fact
+from the English point of view was that ill-feeling
+towards England, chiefly with regard to Egypt, had
+risen to a high pitch, and that each successive step
+taken by the British Government, and each declaration
+made by it, seemed only to increase the irritation.
+It was in this direction that, Lord Lyons
+feared, attempts would be made to divert public
+discontent by those who might be in power; and
+the procedure of the new French Government certainly
+justified the fear. The position which the
+French Government took up, was that of defending
+French influence and French interests in Egypt by
+its own independent means. It declared that by
+the abolition of the Control, a deep wound had been
+inflicted upon French dignity, while the principal
+security for the regular payment of the sums due
+in regard to the loans had been taken away. It did
+not hesitate to declare that any tampering with the
+Law of Liquidation, or with the lands and revenues
+pledged to the loans; or any failure to provide for
+the charges on the loans, would be regarded as a
+breach of international obligations on the part of
+Egypt, which would warrant the active interference
+of France. It hardly made any pretence of
+concealing its intention to work against English
+influence in Egypt by every means in its power,
+and unfortunately it was evident that in this anti-English
+policy it could reckon on the support of
+public opinion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 9, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Blowitz's<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> intelligence certainly comes from the French
+Foreign Office, sometimes, I dare say, directly, but often
+only through the <em>Temps</em>. The <em>Temps</em> is published the
+afternoon before the day on which it is dated, and some
+hours before Blowitz's letter goes to the <em>Times</em>. Blowitz's
+letter always goes by telegraph, the <em>Times</em> having the
+exclusive use of a line for some hours every night.</p>
+
+<p>It seems that Ferry will succeed Gambetta in the
+leadership of the largest portion of the Republican party.
+I do not think he is hostile to Duclerc, but if he attains to
+anything at all near to Gambetta's position, Duclerc will
+only hold office during his sufferance. Probably neither
+would be willing to serve under the other.</p>
+
+<p>If, as seems likely, the death of Gambetta leads to the
+decay of the spirit of revenge upon Germany, this will (as
+I have said before) increase the danger of all other Powers
+from the restlessness of France, and will in particular
+increase our difficulties in Egypt. If any modification of
+the arrangement of the Law of Liquidation is proposed or
+any other step taken which can give France a pretext for
+interfering in defence of French interests, we may have
+trouble. If we leave a door open for French intrusion,
+France may get so far in, that her <em>amour-propre</em> may force
+her to push on at all risks.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 16, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Prince Napoleon's Proclamation and his arrest have
+put all other things out of people's heads here for the
+moment. He was arrested, very roughly I understand,
+at 3 o'clock, as he drove up to his own door in the Avenue
+d'Autin, and his papers were examined and seized in the
+usual way on such occasions. There is not so far any
+appearance of his having anything behind to back up the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+Proclamation. It is said that he has rendered himself
+liable to very severe penalties as a conspirator against the
+State. What seems to be more generally expected is that
+the law enabling the Government to exile the members of
+any family that has reigned in France will be revived. If
+it is to be the beginning of political proscriptions, in however
+mild a form, it will be a calamity and perhaps a prelude
+to revolutionary times and ways.</p>
+
+<p>The only good I can see in it is that it may divert attention
+here from Egypt, for the French were getting excessively
+cross with us on that subject. I should not have
+been surprised if Duclerc's Declaration and Yellow Book
+had been much more unfriendly than they are. The
+Declaration was, it seems, received with icy coldness in
+the Chamber. It is creditable to Duclerc that he did not
+fish for a cheer by a Chauvin wind up, as Freycinet used
+to do. But if Duclerc had been popular and had been
+thought to be firm in the saddle, he would have met with
+a better reception.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Prince Napoleon's Proclamation did not in reality
+cause any great commotion or alarm, as it was
+obvious that he had no backing of importance; but
+it served as an excuse to introduce a preposterous
+Exclusion Bill directed against the members of all
+ex-reigning families. This measure created great indignation
+amongst the French Conservatives, more
+especially the provision which deprived the Princes
+of their Commissions in the army, and in consequence
+of modifications which were introduced.
+Duclerc and his colleagues resigned office, giving
+place to an ephemeral Cabinet under M. Fallières,
+subsequently President of the Republic.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 2, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Everything is at sixes and sevens here, and no one
+knows to whom to turn in the absolute dearth of any man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+of decided superiority since the death of Gambetta. It is
+curious that he should come to be regretted as the mainstay
+of Conservatism.</p>
+
+<p>I send you by the messenger a despatch from Villiers<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>
+which seems to me to give a very clear and correct account
+of the state of feeling in the French Army. I don't think
+it at all overrates the dissatisfaction that exists among the
+officers. For my own part I do not believe there is any
+organized movement, Legitimist, Orleanist, or Bonapartist,
+actually in preparation at this moment. But I do see
+that confidence in the duration of the present institutions
+is diminishing, and that, as a cause or a consequence, dissatisfaction
+and disquietude are increasing. Something subversive
+may happen with very little warning beforehand.</p>
+
+<p>Barring accidents, the probabilities seem to be that the
+present Ministry may last about ten days, and that then
+Jules Ferry may come in for some months and <em>après lui
+le déluge</em>. Challemel Lacour is talked of as Minister for
+Foreign Affairs. As a diplomatist you know him better
+than I do. The little social (so to call it) intercourse I have
+had with him has been pleasant enough, but he has the
+reputation of being irritable and cross-grained.</p>
+
+<p>The proceedings against the Princes are bad enough in
+themselves, and they are of evil augury. The Reds having
+once tasted blood, may become ravenous for more, and who
+can say where they may look for the next victims?</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the critical state of home affairs, the
+French papers find room occasionally for bitter articles
+against us about Egypt. The great point to attend to, in
+order to prevent the smouldering irritations bursting into
+a blaze, seems to be to avoid touching the Law of Liquidation,
+or the administrations of the Daira and Domains.
+Any alteration, however great an improvement it might be
+in reality, would give rise to unlimited suspicion and
+dissatisfaction here.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Prince of Wales had intended visiting Paris
+about this period, but in consequence of the violent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+feelings aroused by the Exclusion Bill and of the
+bitterness of the extremists against constituted
+dynasties, he was advised to keep away.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Their newspapers would have no scruple in attacking
+any personage, however exalted, whom they believed to be
+opposed to their deplorable bill. Indeed, the more exalted
+the personage, and the more entitled to respect, the greater
+might be their scurrility. Nothing can be more lamentable
+than all this, and I am obliged to add that the general
+feeling towards England is not particularly cordial. Taking
+everything into consideration, I have, though very reluctantly,
+come to the conclusion that it is my duty to
+report to Your Royal Highness that I cannot feel quite
+sure that if you were at Paris something unpleasant might
+not happen, or that at least very improper language might
+not be used by a portion of the press; and I cannot conceal
+from Your Royal Highness that the present moment is far
+from an opportune one for a visit.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The increasing bad feeling produced a complaint
+from Lord Granville, who considered that 'it is hard
+upon me, that being probably, of all English public
+men, the one who for various reasons is most attached
+to France, we should always have such difficult
+moments to pass when I am in office.'</p>
+
+<p>After all the fuss that had been made about
+Prince Napoleon's Proclamation, it came as a
+distinct anti-climax that his arrest was discovered
+to be illegal. He was accordingly released, and
+nothing more was heard of him; meanwhile it was
+generally believed that General Billot, the late
+Minister of War in the Duclerc Government, had
+actually made all preparations for a <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">pronunciamento</i>
+in favour of the Duc d'Aumale, and that his
+project was only foiled on account of the want of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+enterprise shown by the Orleans princes themselves.
+General Billot was superseded by a certain General
+Thibaudin, who was considered to be especially
+well adapted for the purpose of carrying out the
+dirty work in connection with the dismissal of the
+Princes from the army.</p>
+
+<p>After a period of much uncertainty, during which
+for more than a month there was no one at the
+French Foreign Office to whom the Foreign Diplomatists
+could speak on foreign affairs, or even any
+subordinate who could express an opinion or give
+an instruction, M. Fallières was got rid of, and a
+new administration was formed under M. Jules
+Ferry, M. Challemel Lacour becoming Foreign
+Minister.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 20, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I suppose Ferry must have made his Ministry by to-morrow
+or the next day. I will not bore you with the
+innumerable conjectures as to who his colleagues will be.
+It is said Thibaudin is to be kept as Minister of War, long
+enough at all events to take the measures against the
+Princes which a more respectable general would shrink
+from.</p>
+
+<p>I only hope the new Ministry will not try to divert
+public attention from home difficulties by a 'spirited'
+Foreign or Colonial Policy. Egypt is always a source of
+trouble ready to their hand, if they want to produce
+excitement. I think the great thing is to avoid touching
+the Law of Liquidation or the administration of the
+securities for the loans; in short, to avoid giving them any
+pretext for saying that the material interests of France are
+injured, and the guarantee she held weakened. But it is
+premature to speculate on these matters in ignorance of
+who the incoming Ministers may be and what policy they
+will adopt.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The urbane M. Challemel Lacour, in his new
+capacity as Foreign Minister, was not likely to
+begin by making gushing protestations of deep
+affection for England, but Lord Lyons was disposed
+to consider this a hopeful symptom. 'I know by
+long experience that ardent professions of love for
+England on the part of an incoming Minister are
+not to be trusted to as good signs.' Mr. Gladstone
+was in Paris at the time and paid visits to the
+President, Challemel Lacour, and Jules Ferry; but
+much to the relief of the Ambassador, he avoided
+the subjects of Egypt and of Commercial Treaties,
+and no harm was done.</p>
+
+<p>The Ferry administration possessed the advantage
+of attracting a better class of French politician than
+had lately been the case, and M. Waddington now
+reappeared upon the scene.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 6, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Jules Ferry appears to have hinted to Waddington that
+he would be offered the Embassy in London, if he voted
+with the Government on the interpellation in the Senate
+on the Decree putting the Orleans Princes <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en non-activité</i>.
+The Embassy at Vienna has, I understand, been actually
+offered to and refused by him. He would not, under any
+circumstances, take any Embassy but London, and moreover
+he would in no case serve a Government of which
+Thibaudin was a member.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington asked Rivers Wilson if he could not suggest
+some offer which might be made to France in order to
+place her once more in cordial union with England in
+Egypt. There is, moreover, a notice in the Havas, purporting
+to come from London, but very likely put in more or
+less on authority here, to the effect that France cannot, and
+England ought to, take the initiative of proposing something.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+I entirely agree with you that the matter had better lie still
+for the moment. I suppose you don't want to make any
+such concession to France as would satisfy her, and certainly
+matters would not be mended by our making another
+unsuccessful proposal. I hope Waddington spoke entirely
+on his own hook and not in concert with Challemel Lacour.
+It would be intolerable if Challemel Lacour tried the system
+of indirect irresponsible communications, the delight of
+Duclerc, which produced so much annoyance and inconvenience,
+and in fact rendered any real understanding
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Jules Ferry is believed to be contemplating a conversion
+of the 5 per cents. If he makes the attempt, it will bind
+him over to keep things quiet abroad and at home, in order
+to secure the success of the operation.</p>
+
+<p>It is very provoking that the French should have put
+down the New Hebrides among the places to which to
+transport their relapsed criminals.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Granville, who owned that he had nothing
+to propose about Egypt, even if he wished to do
+so, was not at all enthusiastic at the prospect of
+Waddington coming to London, 'I am not particularly
+anxious to have Waddington instead of
+Tissot, he would be burning to distinguish himself,
+and very <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">agissant</i>.' Lord Granville's fears of Waddington's
+activity were founded upon the fact that
+he had been selected as the French Representative
+at the Coronation at Moscow, and that, therefore,
+he would find it impossible to settle down quietly
+at the London Embassy without burning to distinguish
+himself, after 'flourishing about Europe.'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 23, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>It is whispered, at least by Waddington's friends, that
+it is intended that his special Embassy to Russia shall be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+a prelude to his becoming regular Ambassador in London:
+that the idea is that he shall offer a Commercial Treaty to
+us; that he shall by this means enlist the support of some
+members of Parliament and influential manufacturers in
+England, and that then he shall obtain concessions for us
+about Egypt, on the plea that, without such concessions,
+the Chambers could not be brought to ratify a Commercial
+Treaty favourable to us. The statements in the newspapers
+about the assumption of Commercial negotiations between
+England and France are stated to be <em>ballons d'essai</em> to
+see how the wind sets with regard to such a policy.</p>
+
+<p>I just give you all this for what it may be worth. I
+doubt very much whether formal negotiations or a stirring
+French Ambassador in London would be likely to lead just
+now to cordiality between France and England. The
+French could hardly do anything that would satisfy us
+about trade, and we should find it very difficult to do anything
+that would satisfy them about Egypt. My hope
+would rather be that we might glide back into cordiality
+by avoiding critical questions.</p>
+
+<p>In talking to me about his Embassy to Russia, Waddington
+mentioned, amongst its advantages, that it would bring
+him into contact with important personages of various
+countries, and he said he should probably visit Berlin and
+Vienna on his way home.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>With Challemel Lacour at the Foreign Office
+there did not appear to be much prospect of 'gliding
+back into cordiality,' judging by the following
+account of an interview between him and some
+members of the Rothschild family who were frequently
+employed as intermediaries between the
+two Governments.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 30, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Alphonse de Rothschild and his cousin Sir Nathaniel
+came to see me yesterday and told me that they had had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+an interview with Challemel Lacour on the subject of the
+proposed sale of the Domain Lands in Egypt. They told
+me that they found Challemel Lacour extremely sore about
+the whole Egyptian Question. He appears to have distinctly
+refused to forward in any way the sale of the
+Domain and to have alleged as his reason that he would
+not help to do away with any board of management in
+which a Frenchman still had a seat; that this would tend
+to diminish the number of Frenchmen holding influential
+positions in Egypt, while his object was to increase, or at
+all events, to maintain the existing number. As indeed
+might have been foreseen, he was very far from desiring to
+facilitate any financial or other arrangements required by
+England. We shall no doubt find the French very inconvenient
+and embarrassing in Egypt at every turn. I
+hope they will not be dangerous, unless some disregard
+of positive international engagements affecting French
+interests gives the Chauvinists the pretext they are looking
+out for, and drives the sensible men into a corner, in face
+of their public declarations and of popular irritation.</p>
+
+<p>I understand Louise Michel has been arrested. The
+Government may gain ground by showing vigour, but
+unless it finds means of convincing the officers in the army
+that it will secure their position against the Radical endeavours
+to undermine it, things may end in that fatal
+solution, a military <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">pronunciamento</i>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The arrest of Louise Michel had taken place as
+the result of one of the numerous riots which
+occurred at Paris in the spring of 1883; they were
+not of much importance, but possessed some significance
+as being the first appearance of disturbances
+in the streets since the suppression of the Commune,
+and were due largely to the distress caused by bad
+trade, and to artificially stimulated expenditure on
+building, and other modes of finding employment.
+The result of the latter expedient was to raise the
+price of labour artificially and consequently to drive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+manufactures to other places, thus creating unemployment
+in Paris itself. In connection with
+these disturbances there was one singular peculiarity
+in the attitude of the so-called Conservative
+classes. Not only the Royalist and Imperial parties,
+but a considerable number of the richer people who
+were without any strong political bias, sympathized
+rather with the people in the streets than with the
+Government. The upper classes were, in fact, so
+dissatisfied with the existing state of things that
+they appeared willing to run the risk of seeing the
+Republican Government discredited and ultimately
+overthrown by popular tumult.</p>
+
+<p>The following letter is an admirable illustration
+of the spirit in which the French viewed all English
+action in Egypt. Lord Dufferin, in the course of a
+despatch, had spoken in most appreciative terms
+of the friendly attitude adopted towards him by
+M. de Raindre, the French Agent and Consul-General
+at Cairo, and the British Government
+naturally supposed that it would be agreeable to
+the French Government if the despatch were communicated
+to them. Lord Lyons, however, who
+was much better acquainted with French opinion,
+thought otherwise.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 15, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am rather frightened by the praises given by Dufferin
+in his despatch of April 29th to the 'very correct and loyal
+attitude of M. de Raindre, the French Agent and Consul-General,
+and of all the French officials in Egypt.' If this
+despatch came to the knowledge of the French Government
+or the French public, it might do de Raindre a serious
+injury, and lead to the immediate substitution for him of
+an Agent whose attitude would be more correct in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+French sense. I am afraid also that the claim Dufferin
+makes to have considered the interests of the French in
+the Egyptian service, however true it is, would provoke a
+howl of contradiction.</p>
+
+<p>I do not mean to imply that Raindre's conduct has been
+at variance with his instructions. I don't think it is the
+policy of the French Government at this moment to get
+up irritating discussions with us on small everyday
+matters, either in Egypt or in other parts of the world.
+The French Foreign Office seems to me to be, on the contrary,
+more conciliatory than usual in its answers respecting
+such matters. I mark this with satisfaction because I
+hope that in this way, provided we can avoid irritating
+controversies, we may return insensibly to satisfactory
+relations. But we are far enough from such relations in
+reality at this moment. Challemel Lacour is not given, as
+you know, to talk about general diplomatic policy, but
+others do not hesitate to let us understand that while they
+are civil about small matters, they are only biding their
+time till an opportunity comes of opposing us in effect
+with great ones.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The course of affairs in Tonquin had not tended
+to restore the French to good humour by providing
+a compensation for their eclipse in Egypt, and the
+attempt to indulge in Chauvinism on the cheap had
+turned out to be a costly and unsatisfactory experiment.
+Had it not been for the provocations of the
+foreign press, it is possible that the spirited Colonial
+Policy with regard to Tonquin, Madagascar, etc.,
+would have been abandoned quietly; but it was
+found intolerable to endure the daily administration
+of threats, ridicule, and supercilious advice showered
+from abroad. As it was, these expeditions did
+serve one useful purpose, namely, that of temporarily
+diverting attention from Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>The reputation of the French Republic was not
+enhanced by a most discreditable incident which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+occurred at Paris in the autumn. The young King
+of Spain who had been visiting some of the European
+capitals, arrived at Paris on September 29, shortly
+after having been created by the German Emperor
+an Honorary Colonel of an Uhlan regiment at Strasbourg.
+On the strength of this honorary distinction
+he was met by a howling mob, which proceeded to
+demonstrate its patriotism by insults such as have
+seldom been offered to any foreign potentate, and
+for which the President of the Republic was forced
+to make an apology on the following day.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 5, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not remember any moment at which affairs here
+have appeared to me so gloomy. The more I learn of the
+proceedings of the French authorities, no less than those
+of the mob, the more unpardonable do they appear. I
+have never felt the same repugnance (and I have had my
+trials in this way) to the people with whom I have to deal.
+It is a comfort to contrast the bearing of the King of Spain
+with that of His Majesty's so called hosts. Jules Ferry
+himself appears to have behaved decorously. I will forbear
+from speculating on the ultimate effect of this deplorable
+affair on French institutions. So far as I can see, Ferry
+and Wilson both calculate on obtaining the advantage in
+a battle in the Chambers, if they put off the fight till the
+session opens on the 23rd. In the meantime, decency (if
+decency were at all taken into account here at this moment)
+would seem to require that Thibaudin should resign or be
+dismissed.</p>
+
+<p>Our own political questions with the French Government
+do not seem in a much more hopeful state than the
+general political condition of things here.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Not content with having by carelessness allowed
+the King of Spain to be insulted, the French Government
+prevented a correct and complete report of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+President Grévy's apology from being published in
+the <cite>Journal Officiel</cite>, this action being on a par with
+the whole disgraceful proceedings. As, however,
+the only alternative to the existing Government
+appeared to be a thoroughgoing Intransigeant
+Cabinet, and there was no telling what the latter
+might do both at home and abroad, it was hoped
+that Jules Ferry and his colleagues would succeed
+in holding their own.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn, Challemel Lacour, who had
+become unpopular owing to the unsatisfactory campaign
+in Tonquin, resigned office, and his place at
+the Foreign Office was taken by Jules Ferry himself.
+Towards the end of November there arrived the
+news of Hicks Pasha's disaster in the Soudan, and
+although this event was not by any means unwelcome
+to the French, the chances of a speedy termination
+of the British occupation of Egypt naturally grew
+more remote.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 23, 1883.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I suppose there can be no hope that the disaster which
+has overwhelmed Hicks's army is less serious than is
+reported. It seems to be a grievous misfortune which has
+come at a most inopportune moment for us. It is far from
+causing sorrow to our friends here.</p>
+
+<p>I quite understand your not being keen to arbitrate
+between France and China, and I don't think the French
+will be willing to accept the arbitration of anybody. What
+they understand by our good offices, is that we should help
+them to carry all their points against the Chinese. It is
+supposed that the Committee will press on the Government
+a larger vote for Tonquin than the Government has asked
+for.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time things at home are looking gloomy in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+France. There is likely to be a stagnation of trade and
+generally much distress during the winter. People of all
+classes are getting irritable, and seem to seek to vent their
+irritation on foreign Powers. Add to this that the depression
+and pusillanimity which followed 1870-1871,
+seem to be giving place to the former overweening
+opinion of the strength of France and consequently to
+Chauvinism.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote a despatch to you by the last messenger as
+to the effect the lowering the wine duties for Spain would
+have here. I am never quite at ease when I think of our
+holding Most Favoured Nation treatment at the pleasure
+of the French. The lowest class who are gaining power
+are certainly not Free Traders.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In consequence of the Soudan disaster the
+Egyptian Government became anxious to call in
+the Turks to their assistance, and this project
+excited a strong feeling in France against the
+admission of the Sultan's troops, or of any Turkish
+fighting men into Egypt, to take part in the defence
+against the Mahdi, that feeling being founded on
+the old ground of danger to the French position in
+Tunis and Algeria. But, for the same reason, the
+French were disposed to throw a heavy responsibility
+upon England for taking precautions that
+the Mahdi should be effectually stopped somewhere
+or other. Everything, in fact, that England did in
+Egypt was wrong in French eyes, and there was a
+fresh outburst over an arrangement made between
+Lesseps and the English shipowners with regard to
+the Suez Canal.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1884, the British Government decided
+definitely upon the evacuation of the Soudan,
+and Gordon was despatched to carry out the
+operation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 19, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not know that in the main any marked change in
+public opinion in France about Egypt has taken place since
+I wrote ten days ago; but as the state of things there
+remains unchanged for the better or becomes changed for
+the worse, excitement and reproaches against England
+increase. A catastrophe with regard to the garrison of
+Khartoum or that of Sinkat, or any massacre of Europeans,
+would probably produce a violent outcry against us, of a
+much more intense character than the present general
+upbraiding as to our allowing the advance of the Soudan
+towards civilization to be stopped, and the slave trade to
+be revived.</p>
+
+<p>I am told confidentially that Barrère, the French Agent
+at Cairo, writes to urge his Government to decide upon
+some distinct line of policy, in view of the present crisis.
+His own idea would seem to be to ingratiate himself with
+the Egyptians at the expense of the English, to lead them
+to attribute all the present misfortunes to England and to
+teach them to look to France for ultimate deliverance from
+them. I hear that he rates Baring's ability very highly,
+but writes very disparagingly of the other Englishmen in
+office in Egypt. One of his topics in decrying England is
+said to be the sum charged by her on the Egyptian Treasury
+for the occupying troops. He is said not to be averse to
+touching the Law of Liquidation, because he conceives
+that, if this is done, France will get her finger into the pie
+again.</p>
+
+<p>Tonquin is, at this moment, secondary to Egypt in
+interest here, but the French are getting impatient for news
+from Admiral Courbet.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing particularly critical has yet taken place in the
+Chamber.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Granville's reply seems to show that General
+Gordon was almost as great an optimist as himself.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Jan. 19, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Many thanks for your important private letter about
+Egypt. The information may be of use to Baring.</p>
+
+<p>Barrère is a very clever fellow, and has persuaded Baring
+that he is very friendly.</p>
+
+<p>Gordon went off yesterday, in a very good humour,
+determined to help us in carrying out our policy of evacuation
+in the best manner.</p>
+
+<p>He is wonderfully optimistic, with a great contempt for
+the Mahdi and disbelief in Arab fanaticism or love of real
+fighting. He is not much afraid of a massacre. I trust
+he may be right.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A fresh disaster in the Soudan&mdash;Baker Pasha's
+defeat&mdash;encouraged the idea that these reverses were
+symptoms of weakness on the part of England, and
+gave France a reason for desiring to interfere, and
+a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">locus standi</i> for asserting a claim to do so.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 11, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The large majority obtained by the Government against
+the coalition of the extreme Right and the extreme Left
+on Paul Bert's extravagant proposals relative to the
+salaries of schoolmasters and schoolmistresses, has strengthened
+their hands and has given some confidence to the
+Union Républicaine Party, on which they mainly rely.
+They also succeeded in defeating a very mischievous
+motion made by Clémenceau in the Committee of 44 to
+send a deputation to Anzin in order to inquire into, or
+more properly to foment the troubles in the Anzin coal
+districts. Nevertheless, the state of the country and of
+Paris in particular is far from comfortable. The distress
+of the workmen, and the folly and unreasonableness of
+their demands and expectations are on the increase. I
+send you by this messenger a good despatch by Crowe<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+the violent cry for protection from the competition of
+foreign workmen as well as that of foreign goods, which has
+been one of the consequences.</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid all this does not tend to make the Government
+more conciliatory on foreign affairs. They are hourly
+expecting to hear of the fall of Bac-Ninh, and if they are
+quite successful there, they are only too likely to turn their
+thoughts to getting a little glory out of the Egyptian
+question, as well as out of the Madagascar, Congo, and
+other matters in which they are more or less opposed to
+England.</p>
+
+<p>So far as we are concerned, the effect the reconciliation
+between Russia and Germany has had upon the French
+is not good. So long as they had any hopes of a quarrel
+between Germany and Russia, they felt bound to reserve
+their strength in order to take advantage of it, and to
+cultivate good relations with other Powers, in order to
+secure at least their non-interference. Now they have
+given up the hope of a break between Russia and Germany,
+and are at the same time confident that all the Continental
+Powers are determined on peace. They think therefore
+that they may expect to be <em>tête-à-tête</em> with us and to be
+free to act as suits them in affairs in which we are concerned.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 12, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Your letters are most interesting, though not comforting.
+The difficulty of keeping on friendly terms with
+France is not to be underrated.</p>
+
+<p>I await with almost equal interest the news which we
+shall probably get this evening from [illegible] and that
+which I suppose will come in a few days from Bac-Ninh.</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid victory will make the French Government
+very difficult to deal with; on the other hand, a defeat,
+which is not likely, will make the Chinese intolerable.</p>
+
+<p>Our own troubles, especially in the Soudan, are great.
+If things could settle there, I am confident that Egypt
+would soon recover the state in which she was before Hicks's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+defeat, and this notwithstanding all the intrigues which are
+going on there.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck says he shall give us no trouble about the
+Law of Liquidation, but that other nations will. What
+will be the best way of approaching the French Government
+when we have made up our own minds?</p>
+
+<p>As to protection, it will create a very angry feeling here.
+It will ruin the French and it will make us the monopolists
+of the neutral markets of the world so long as we can keep
+at peace.</p>
+
+<p>The Egyptian blister has diverted public attention from
+Merv. The question was treated in excellent speeches in
+the Lords, but the debate was dull and flat.</p>
+
+<p>We do not make you a very handsome present in
+Mohrenheim. He is like a diplomatist on the stage.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Baron Mohrenheim, a diplomatist of a very conventional
+type, had just been transferred to Paris from
+the Russian Embassy in London, and was generally
+credited with strong anti-English sentiments.</p>
+
+<p>On the question of the financial condition of
+Egypt, the British Government finally decided to
+propose a European Conference, and the decision
+was communicated to the French Government. As
+was only to be expected, the English proposal produced
+a conflict of opinion in France. Some
+approved of calling in Europe generally, but others
+denounced the proposal as a new proof of the
+treachery of England, who, according to them, was
+bound to treat with France alone, and called loudly
+upon the French Government to refuse to go into
+a Conference on equal terms with other Powers.
+All seemed to think, however, that the moment had
+come for France to reassume a position equal
+with that of England, if not superior to it. The
+attitude of the French Government itself was more
+moderate. Jules Ferry accepted the Conference 'in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+principle,' and endeavoured to show that two absolutely
+false notions prevailed in England which
+seemed to be the great obstacles to an understanding
+between the two countries. One was that if the
+English withdrew their troops from Egypt, France
+would send hers in; the other, that France sought
+to re-establish the Control.</p>
+
+<p>The position in which Gordon now found himself
+in Khartoum began to cause Her Majesty's Government
+serious misgivings, and many expedients were
+suggested for relieving Ministers from their embarrassment.
+Amongst them appears a serio-comic
+proposition from the Baron de Billing, a well-known
+figure in Anglo-French society.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 4, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I send you copies of a letter written to me by Baron de
+Billing yesterday and of a memo annexed to it. I don't
+know what you will think of the offer to rescue Gordon
+which they contain, but I deem it right to lay it before you.
+Billing made it to me verbally yesterday, and I begged him
+to put it in writing. The inclosed papers are the result.</p>
+
+<p>Billing did not tell me who the persons were by whom
+the rescue was to be effected, but I understand that they
+were Arab Sheikhs or something of that kind. Apparently
+they are in Paris, for he professed to go to consult them
+before he sent me the memo.</p>
+
+<p>He says you have known him from a boy.</p>
+
+<p>'<em>Il se porte garant de l'honorabilité des personnes en jeu.</em>'
+For my part '<em>Je ne me porte garant de rien</em>' in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>Billing insisted much on the importance of his receiving
+a speedy answer.</p>
+
+<p class="p1">MEMO.</p>
+
+<p>'<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Gordon Pasha sera remis aux autorités egyptiennes ou
+anglaises à un des ports de la Mer Rouge ou aux avant-postes
+de l'armée anglo-egyptienne moyennant:</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>1°. <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">le paiement immédiat par Lord Lyons d'une somme de
+deux mille livres sterling à une personne désignée par le Baron
+de Billing, ancien chargé d'affaires de France à Munich,
+Tunis et Stockholm.</i></p>
+
+<p>2°. <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Le versement d'une somme de 48,000 livres sterling
+au credit du Baron de Billing chez Messrs. Coutts, ses
+banquiers ordinaires, le jour même où parviendra à Londres
+la nouvelle officielle de la remise de Gordon Pasha entre les
+mains des autorités anglo-egyptiennes.</i></p>
+
+<p><em>N.B.</em>&mdash;1°. <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Un compte détaillé sera rendu à Lord Lyons de
+l'emploi des deux milles livres sterling immédiatement
+exigibles.</i></p>
+
+<p>2° <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Gordon Pasha devra prendre l'engagement écrit de
+quitter sur le champ l'Egypte et de s'en tenir éloigné pendant
+une période de 10 ans.</i> (<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Je crois qu'il sera possible de faire
+modifier cette dernière prétention qui semble bien peu
+pratique.</i>)</p>
+
+<p><i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Le Baron de Billing se porte garant vis-à-vis de Lord
+Lyons de l'honorabilité des personnes en jeu, et il ajoute que
+vû son expérience de l'Afrique, il croit à de sérieuses chances
+de succés.</i></p>
+
+<p><i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Un permis de séjour en blanc pour l'Egypte sera remis
+au Baron de Billing pour un Musulman à désigner par lui.</i>'</p>
+
+<p>(<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Très important.</i>)</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In spite of Lord Granville's life-long acquaintance
+with the Baron, the proposal (which bears a
+striking resemblance to some of the incidents in
+the Dreyfus case) was declined, and nothing more
+was heard of him in connection with the rescue of
+Gordon.</p>
+
+<p>The French military operations in the Far East
+were terminated temporarily by a Treaty with
+China, concluded in May, under which the Protectorate
+of France over Tonquin and Annam was
+recognized, and there was some uncertainty at first
+as to how the commercial terms would be interpreted.
+When the Prince of Wales, who was then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+in Paris, called upon President Grévy, the latter
+dilated effusively upon the satisfaction which all
+nations must feel at the new opening of trade to
+them in Tonquin and Annam. On the other hand,
+the <cite>Temps</cite>, a newspaper of considerable authority,
+talked of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">ouverture au commerce exclusif de la
+France des Provinces de l'Empire celeste limitrophes
+de nos possessions de l'Indo-Chine</i>. 'I have observed,'
+Lord Lyons wrote sadly, 'no symptoms lately in
+France of anything like a decently liberal commercial
+spirit.' Nor when M. Jules Ferry was congratulated
+upon the Tonquin settlement, did that
+statesman let fall any hint of an intention to open
+to the rest of the world the commercial advantages
+which France had secured for herself. In fact, the
+chief result of the French success in Tonquin seemed
+to be, that, having at all events, got rid temporarily
+of this difficulty, a more unconciliatory line of policy
+than ever would be adopted as far as Egypt was
+concerned.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 27, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You may have observed that, contrary to my usual
+habit, I have been sending you lately a great many extracts
+from French newspapers. My reason is of a very painful
+kind. I have thought it necessary to give you specimens
+of the ill will towards England, the suspicions of her, and
+the irritability respecting her which seem to become more
+and more prevalent here. To these unpleasant symptoms
+I might add that exclusive and illiberal commercial views
+and extreme Protectionist ideas are in the ascendant: and
+that thus the spirited Colonial Policy now in vogue, becomes
+a danger instead of an advantage to foreign commerce,
+which it might be if it opened new areas to the trade of all
+nations.</p>
+
+<p>The Ferry Government is wafted along by the pleasant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+breezes from Tonquin, but they must be on the look out for
+squalls as they near the revision of the Constitution and the
+discussion of the Budget of 1885.</p>
+
+<p>The <cite>Gaulois</cite> is hardly looked upon here as a serious
+paper, but the calumnies upon Sir J. Drummond Hay
+which it professes to have derived from a report made, I
+suppose <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">viva voce</i>, by Ordega<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> to Ferry, are too bad.
+Menabrea says that the Italian Minister at Tangier is a
+man of herculean strength and fierce temper, and that he
+is as likely as not to wring Ordega's neck if he catches him.
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Libre à lui de le faire.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">May 28, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>We must be very clumsy to invite so much indignation
+in France and at the same time to run the risk of being
+turned out next month for being so subservient to her.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington seems in earnest to bring about a good
+understanding, but our press, over which the Government
+has absolutely no control, will be most offensive, until the
+vote of censure against the Conference, which is almost
+sure to be brought on, is decided one way or the other.</p>
+
+<p>It will require all Salisbury's want of caution to try to
+come in upon a quarrel with all Europe upon the Egyptian
+question.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Egyptian policy of the Gladstone Government,
+subsequently to the successful campaign of
+1882, never met with much favour in any quarter
+in England, but it was not surprising, on the whole,
+that Lord Granville should be pained by French
+hostility, since nothing whatever had been done to
+warrant it. Had we behaved ill to France, there
+might have been a chance of returning to favour
+by altering our procedure; as it was, there was
+no reasonable ground of offence whatever, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+therefore the prospect of restoring friendly relations
+appeared to be all the more remote.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Hartington, then a prominent member of
+the Gladstone Government, was in Paris at the
+beginning of June, and Lord Granville seems to
+have been much alarmed as to the language which
+he might use with reference to Egypt in conversation
+with French Ministers. Lord Hartington was
+probably not in the least desirous of conversing
+with French Ministers upon Egypt or upon any other
+subject, and wished to go <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">incognito</i>, 'as he was
+constantly in the habit of doing;' but it was represented
+to him that unless he called upon Jules Ferry
+it would be believed that he was engaged upon a
+secret mission, and Lord Lyons was therefore asked
+to give him some preliminary coaching.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 3, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I sent Lord Hartington your letter yesterday, and I
+had a long visit from him in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>As matters stand, what seems to me most to be dreaded
+with a view to our relations with France is a vote of the
+House of Commons censuring an arrangement made by
+Her Majesty's Government with the French Government.
+Such a vote, and the debate by which it would be preceded,
+would, I cannot but fear, have a truly lamentable effect.</p>
+
+<p>I understand that Jules Ferry is having a memorandum
+on the Finances of Egypt drawn up by Blignières, and that
+it will dispute the accuracy of Mr. Childers's information
+and represent that the Finances were in a flourishing condition,
+and that there were surpluses even during Arabi's
+rebellion, up to the time at which England took the thing
+in hand. The memorandum will probably deny there being
+any necessity for reducing the interest of the debt, if the
+Finances be properly managed.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I do not know whether such a reason will be assigned to
+us, but in fact it seems that the French object to any large
+loans being guaranteed by England, on account of the lien,
+so to speak, which it would give England upon Egypt.
+The French would prefer a simple fresh issue of Unified
+stock.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, the French bondholders are bestirring
+themselves and protesting against any arrangement being
+made without their being consulted.</p>
+
+<p>Jules Ferry, however, himself thinks little of any other
+consideration in comparison with the political success
+which it would be to him to give France again a political
+footing in Egypt, and as a means to this, to get a time fixed
+for the departure of our troops. I do not think he is afraid
+of much disapproval here of his counter-concession&mdash;the
+engagement that French troops shall not enter Egypt,
+either on the departure of the English troops or afterwards.
+Unless the engagement were very formally made and very
+peculiarly and stringently worded, it would be felt here
+that it did not amount to much. For though it would
+preclude the occupation of Egypt by the French to preserve
+order and promote reforms in the same way we occupy the
+country now, it would not be interpreted here as preventing
+France using force to avenge an insult or protect distinct
+French interests in cases which would constitute a <em>casus
+belli</em> as regarded any ordinary country.</p>
+
+<p>I do not quite understand the exact position in which
+stands the suggestion that the Financial question should
+be first settled by England with the several Powers
+separately, and then a conference be held for a day or two
+only to ratify what had already been settled. Does this
+afford an opening for purely financial negotiations, and
+admit of dropping the French political proposals which
+appear to be so unpopular in England? I believe Jules
+Ferry is in some tribulation about the difficulties his proposals
+have met with in England, and is half inclined to be
+sorry he made them so strong, though I doubt whether
+Waddington has made him fully aware of the violence of
+the opposition they encounter in England.</p>
+
+<p>Generally speaking, I am very unhappy about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+growing ill-will between France and England which exists
+on both sides of the Channel. It is not that I suppose that
+France has any deliberate intention of going to war with
+us. But the two nations come into contact in every part
+of the world. In every part of it questions arise which, in
+the present state of feeling, excite mutual suspicion and
+irritation. Who can say, when and where, in this state of
+things, some local events may not produce a serious quarrel,
+or some high-handed proceedings of hot-headed officials
+occasion an actual collision?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The variety and number of questions upon which
+Lord Lyons was requested to pronounce an opinion
+have already been commented upon; now he was
+asked to consider the effect of a hypothetical vote
+of the House of Commons.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Trentham, June 4, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Many thanks for your important and pregnant letter.
+I quite agree that the relations between England and
+France will be disagreeable if the House of Commons rejects
+our proposals; but this, though possible, is not so probable
+as Hartington thinks.</p>
+
+<p>The M.P.'s neither desire a Salisbury administration;
+still less a dissolution.</p>
+
+<p>But how will our relations be, if we previously break
+off with France? and what can you suggest for the settlement
+of the financial difficulties of Egypt, if we obtain no
+sanction for a change of the Law of Liquidation?</p>
+
+<p>Do you think that the House of Commons would allow
+us to take the whole debt upon ourselves, in order to save
+the bondholders? I should be really grateful for your
+suggestions on this last point.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>From the above letter it is plain that Her
+Majesty's Government had no definite Egyptian
+policy, and were merely stumbling along concerned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+only, as frequently happens with British Cabinets,
+with the possible result of a division in the House of
+Commons. The only evidence of policy was a
+strong inclination to evade responsibility; to hand
+it over to a collection of Powers; and to fritter away
+such advantages as had been so hardly won, in the
+hopeless attempt to recover the goodwill of the
+French Government.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons's reply was to the effect that nothing
+would have a worse effect than a bitter debate in
+the House of Commons followed by the censure of
+terms agreed upon by the French and English
+Governments. But as there was no doubt whatever
+that the French Government intended to take
+advantage of the Conference to place France in the
+same position in Egypt as that which she formerly
+held, a firm policy on the part of Her Majesty's
+Government might have a better effect than an
+over-yielding one.</p>
+
+<p>The Egyptian Conference met in London at the
+end of June and continued its sterile discussions
+for upwards of a month before finally breaking up,
+while the tone of the French press grew more and
+more hostile, and anything in the nature of a concession
+on the subject of the interest of the debt
+or on any other matter affecting French material
+interest was denounced in the fiercest terms. Even
+the craven British proposals with regard to the
+limitation of the military occupation were treated
+with contempt, and no person came in for greater
+abuse than M. Waddington, who was now established
+as Ambassador in London, and was constantly
+denounced for subservience to England,
+solely because he owned an English name.</p>
+
+<p>The Conference broke up in August, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+Cabinet, which was now being continually denounced
+on all sides for its feeble and procrastinating policy,
+decided upon despatching Lord Northbrook on a
+special mission to Cairo. Before Lord Northbrook
+started he had a long interview with Lord Lyons,
+who did his best to impress upon him the views,
+interests, and susceptibilities of France, and the
+great importance of not running counter to them if
+possible.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 17, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I opened my first conversation with Ferry, the day after
+my return, with a message from you as to your desire to be
+on good terms, and to avoid unpleasantness in treating
+matters between the two countries all over the world. I
+enlarged upon this theme, and made it as plain to him as I
+could, without letting the conversation degenerate into
+recrimination, that if France were perpetually irritating
+us, we on our side had the means, and should not always
+be able to abstain from using them, of making ourselves
+very disagreeable too. The subject was treated in the
+most friendly way by me, and Ferry was profuse in his
+acknowledgments to you, and in assurances; but I should
+have been glad if I could have brought him to more
+practical advances towards intimacy and good fellowship
+than I was able to do. However, the conversation may
+perhaps have done some good.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the Congo Conference, I came away with
+the impression that there is more or less a tacit, if not very
+explicit, understanding between France and Germany, in
+addition to what appears in the Yellow Book; and that
+this understanding may prove inconvenient to us.</p>
+
+<p>The session has not opened very favourably for the
+Government. The Finance Minister's hocus-pocus expedients
+for balancing the Budget have been unanimously
+rejected by the Budget Committee. The recent 'glories'
+in Tonquin hardly outweigh in public estimation the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>
+growing expenses of the operations there and in China.
+Ferry told me he disliked the protective duties on cattle
+and corn, but that the Government could not altogether
+resist them, though it would endeavour to make them as
+moderate as possible. Rouvier, the new Minister of
+Commerce, is less Protectionist than his predecessor,
+Hérisson; but I have no confidence in the so-called Free
+Trade principles of any Frenchman. Duties on manufactures
+are sure to follow in the wake of duties on food,
+and I can never forget that we hold our Most Favoured
+Nation treatment only at the good pleasure of the French
+Government. The proceedings of the Lyonnais are
+socialist and revolutionary, and a great impetus has been
+given to Socialism by the journeyings during the recess of
+the sub-committees of the General Committee appointed
+by the Chamber of Deputies to inquire into the distress of
+the working classes. Nevertheless the chances still seem
+to be that the Ferry Ministry will weather the storms of the
+autumn session.</p>
+
+<p>Ferry complained bitterly of the English press. He
+said in particular that the irritating lecturing tone of the
+<em>Times</em> goaded the French to madness; though he himself
+observed that it used the same tone towards the Government
+of its own country. I said that the press on both
+sides of the Channel seemed to work as if for the express
+purpose of producing ill-will between the two countries;
+but that certainly the English Government had no power
+to restrain it. A good understanding between the two
+Governments and friendly proceedings on their parts to
+each other, would in time act upon public opinion; and
+saying this, I preached a little more on the text of the
+importance of the French Government's not making itself
+unnecessarily disagreeable.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Her Majesty's Government were at this time
+involved in domestic as well as external difficulties,
+and Lord Granville's reply to the foregoing letter
+contained a renewal of the old importunity to come
+over and vote in the House of Lords on a party<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+question. It is quite obvious that Lord Granville
+was impelled to do so by Gladstone, and the typical
+Gladstonian reasoning is shown in the argument that
+Lord Lyons ought to vote, because being an Ambassador
+he was a non-party man; whereas on previous
+occasions his vote had been applied for, because he
+distinctly ranked as a party man in the Whip's list.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Walmer, Oct. 18, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Gladstone writes to me earnestly, but I think reasonably,
+respecting your vote at the present important crisis.</p>
+
+<p>He says that you must be aware of the estimate we
+hold of your judgment and independence. But to save
+the House of Lords from a tempest which must strain and
+may wreck it, some Tory Lords will be moved to vote for
+the Franchise Bill, and he asks why the same motive should
+not operate upon men like our Ambassadors, who he
+believes are of no party.</p>
+
+<p>I own I think that the same majority, or possibly a
+larger one in the Lords, would be a great disaster.</p>
+
+<p>If the Liberal Party take up hostility to the House of
+Lords itself as its leading question&mdash;whether led by Gladstone
+himself, or not,&mdash;and with a leader of the Lords who is
+personally in favour of getting a larger career of power and
+utility for himself in the Commons, it is difficult not to
+foresee the result.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to immediate politics, supposing Salisbury
+succeeds in forcing a dissolution, and with the help of the
+Irish turns us out, what chance is there of his not being
+turned out in six months by nearly the same process?</p>
+
+<p>The Waddingtons came here to luncheon. I guessed
+that they funked being reported as being here. He was
+very civil, and his talk was not altogether unpromising.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>No one with the slightest practical acquaintance
+with politics could possibly be taken in by the
+Gladstonian phrase about the 'estimate of your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+judgment and independence.' Ministers when urging
+their docile supporters either in the Lords or the
+Commons to support a party measure, are not in
+the habit of boasting that some eminent person,
+whether an Ambassador or not, is going to give a
+silent vote in their favour, and even if they did, it
+would not produce the slightest effect. One peer's
+vote is as good as another's, and in the division list
+an Ambassador counts no higher than the most
+obscure of backwoodsmen.</p>
+
+<p>Anglo-French relations were not improved by
+the occurrences in the Far East, where the French,
+in consequence of the Tonquin expedition, had
+drifted into war with China. The Chinese fleet,
+composed of small obsolete vessels, was destroyed
+at Foochow by the heavily armed French ships in
+August; but as the Chinese Government showed no
+signs of yielding, the French Admiral, Courbet, was
+ordered to seize part of the island of Formosa, where
+valuable coal mines were known to exist. In order
+to effect his object, Admiral Courbet, with a magnificent
+disregard of all neutral Powers, proclaimed
+a paper blockade of Formosa, which naturally provoked
+a protestation on the part of the British
+Government. During the remainder of the year
+hostilities between France and China continued,
+although from time to time recurrence to the
+friendly offices of Her Majesty's Government was
+suggested but found impracticable.</p>
+
+<p>Egypt, however, remained the centre of interest,
+and the prospects of any amicable arrangement
+appeared to recede further into the distance. Upon
+the return of Lord Northbrook, the new proposals
+of Her Majesty's Government were put before the
+French Government.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 26, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I suppose Waddington's private statement to me that
+we must not expect an answer to our Egyptian proposals
+before the end of the year was intended to imply that we
+<em>should</em> get an answer about that time.</p>
+
+<p>I pressed Ferry strongly on the subject the day before
+yesterday. He assured me that he had studied our papers
+and was occupying himself without intermission on the
+subject, but I could not bring him to book as to the exact
+time we might look for an answer, nor could I extract
+from him any hint as to what the answer was to be.</p>
+
+<p>I am afraid that the draft of it has gone, or is going, to
+Berlin, and I augur anything but good from this. It seems
+to me that without being driven to anything of the kind
+by German interests, Bismarck has lately taken a sort of
+malicious pleasure in treating matters in a way calculated
+to embarrass and discredit us.</p>
+
+<p>You may be quite sure that I shall leave no stone unturned
+to get an answer as soon as possible. I don't think
+threats of Tunisifying Egypt, or of bankruptcy, or other
+strong measures, would tell upon the French. They would
+not believe that we should have recourse to such measures,
+in face of the opposition of France, Germany, Austria, and
+Russia, even if we had the thoroughgoing support of Italy.
+I should hesitate to bring matters to a point at which we
+could only execute our threats by a very large display of
+military and naval force, or back out of them. The best
+card in our hand, and it is not a high trump, is the reluctance
+of the French to be thrown irretrievably into the clutches
+of Bismarck by a distinct quarrel with us.</p>
+
+<p>Ferry seemed grateful to you for the way in which you
+sounded him through Waddington about new proposals
+from China, but he appears to think that any eagerness on
+his part to receive new proposals would be looked upon by
+the Chinese as a sign of weakness, and short of absolutely
+giving in on the part of China, an <em>action d'éclat</em> on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
+part of the French forces would answer best for him with
+the Chambers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 30, 1884.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I put your letter myself into Errington's hand this
+morning.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> He starts for Italy this evening.</p>
+
+<p>You will see by the despatch I send with this that Ferry
+promises an answer on the Egyptian Finances on the
+15th of next month, and that he intends to make counter-proposals.
+I cried out at his mentioning so distant a date
+as the 15th, but he would not name a nearer one. If, as I
+cannot but surmise, he is consulting Berlin, I fear that
+neither speed nor conciliation to us will be recommended
+from that quarter. I confess I cannot think of any threat
+which would be likely to mend matters. The French
+would probably rejoice at any crisis which might array
+distinctly against us the three Emperors, as well as this
+Republic. I doubt the Tonquin affair being very much of
+a safeguard. I should feel safer if France were not getting
+into the habit of sending out distant expeditions.</p>
+
+<p>I report officially this evening Ferry's language about
+the new Chinese proposals. The Chambers were all in
+favour of an <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">action d'éclat</i>. I don't think Ferry could
+face them with another doubtful negotiation on his hands
+which would suspend military action. At any rate he does
+not seem to wish to hear anything of Chinese proposals,
+short of actual surrender.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>At the beginning of 1885 Her Majesty's Government
+were confronted with the unpleasant fact,
+that whereas hitherto they had only had French
+opposition to reckon with in respect to Egypt,
+Bismarck had now engineered a European combination
+against them in consequence of dissatisfaction
+at the English attitude towards his colonial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
+policy. The English financial proposals, more
+especially those which suggested that the interest
+on the debt should be reduced, and the Anglo-French
+Administration of the Daira and Domain
+Lands should be abolished, were denounced in unmeasured
+terms in France. Nor did it seem easy
+to devise any efficacious means either of reconciling
+the French to the proposals or of putting pressure
+on them. The time for putting pressure on France
+was past; earlier in the day, a representation that
+a refusal to consent to measures necessary for the
+well being and good administration of Egypt would
+oblige the British Government to take the country
+formally under their protection, after the fashion
+of Tunis, would have met with little opposition; but
+now France might go to any extremities to resist
+such an arrangement, feeling sure that in so doing
+she would have the support of Germany, Austria,
+and Russia. Under these circumstances the prospect
+of a financial crisis, or even of bankruptcy,
+produced little alarm, because it was felt that the
+support of the three Empires would be forthcoming
+in demanding that the Egyptian financial administration
+should be placed under the joint control
+of the Powers; and it was in fact only too probable
+that the intractability of the French Government
+would increase in proportion with the support
+obtained from Germany and the Powers which
+followed the German lead.</p>
+
+<p>It was hardly credible that the patronage of
+Germany was acceptable to the French public or
+entirely satisfactory to the French Government, as
+the danger, not to say the humiliation, of falling
+altogether into the hands of Bismarck, could not
+quite be lost sight of. The French Government<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+no doubt had two objects in view; the first, to make
+use of the support of Germany and the Powers, in
+order to guard French pecuniary interests, and to
+improve as far as possible the political position of
+France in Egypt; the second, to avoid severing
+themselves so entirely from England as to be left
+wholly at the mercy of Germany. Unfortunately
+for England the second object appeared to be the
+one to which the lesser importance was attached.</p>
+
+<p>In short, the probabilities were, that unless we
+succeeded in coming to some arrangement with
+France, we should find arrayed against us all the
+European Powers, except Italy, the position in
+which we were placed at the moment, in consequence
+of the expedition to Khartoum, having been taken
+into account in calculating the means at our disposal
+to withstand such a coalition. It should be mentioned
+that the friendship of Italy had been purchased
+by an arrangement under which she was to
+take possession of Massowah and the adjacent coast.</p>
+
+<p>The French counter-proposals respecting
+Egyptian Finance were communicated in the
+middle of January.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 20, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I earnestly hope that a settlement of the Egyptian
+Financial Question may be the result of the Cabinet to-day.
+That question seems to me to have a disastrous
+effect on our foreign relations everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck and Ferry are <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">jouant au plus fin</i> with each
+other at our expense. Each seems to think that he can
+use the other to help in thwarting us, without risk to
+himself. But Bismarck has the best of the game. He
+occupies the French thoughts, and to some extent their
+forces, at a distance from Europe: he keeps up irritation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+between them and us, and some of the acquisitions he
+encourages them to make (Tonquin for instance) will in
+all probability be a permanent cause of weakness to them.
+At the same time he neutralizes opposition from us to his
+childish colonial schemes, which I cannot help suspecting
+are founded as much on what, for want of a better word,
+I must call spite against us, as on any real expectation of
+advantage to Germany. Ferry hopes, by means of Bismarck
+and the Powers who follow Bismarck's lead, to
+carry his immediate points in regard to Egypt and other
+parts of the world, and so increase his reputation at home
+for the moment; and he trusts to his skill to enable him to
+stop before he has so entirely alienated us as to be quite at
+Bismarck's mercy. It is the natural disposition of almost
+all Europe to side against us, as matters stand, on the
+Egyptian Financial Question, which makes this pretty
+game possible.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 3, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am provoked by Ferry's tardiness in sending Waddington
+the instructions to proceed with the Egyptian Finances
+Question. He has evidently been waiting for the approval
+of Berlin. I am more than ever impatient to get this
+question disposed of. One, and not the least of my reasons,
+is the desire to get rid of this habit of referring every moment
+to Bismarck.</p>
+
+<p>The Tonquin and China affairs seem to get more perplexing
+and more expensive to the French in men and
+money every day. It seems very doubtful that Ferry will
+get the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">action d'éclat</i> he is looking for there, in time for
+the election; and if he do not, it may go hard with him in
+the new Chamber.</p>
+
+<p>The <cite>Gaulois</cite> announces that a great Anglo-French
+meeting is to be held in Paris in the month of March, at
+which a resolution is to be voted that England and France
+must remain united in the interests of liberty in Europe.
+According to the <cite>Gaulois</cite>, 'Mr. Cremer, secrétaire general
+de la Workmen's Peace Association,' is in communication<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+about it with M. Clémenceau, who is to organise the meeting
+in conjunction with Mr. Burns, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Membre de la Chambre des
+Communes</i>, who would come to Paris with a delegation of
+English workmen. If there be any truth in the story, the
+object of the French promoters of this demonstration is
+probably to embarrass the Ferry Government.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Mr. Burns referred to was presumably the
+present President of the Local Government Board,
+but the description of him as an M.P. was premature.</p>
+
+<p>Negotiations between the French and English
+Governments over the financial proposals were
+resumed, and eventually some sort of arrangement
+was arrived at, but in the meanwhile all interest
+had been transferred to the Soudan. The battle
+of Abou Klea took place on January 19, and on
+February 5 there arrived the news of the fall of
+Khartoum and death of Gordon. The French were
+not wanting in appreciation of the gallantry shown
+by the British troops, but were prodigal of gloomy
+forebodings with regard to the future prospects of
+the expeditions. Prominent amongst these prophets
+of evil were Lesseps and Jules Ferry. Lesseps (on
+the strength of having once been on a tour in the
+Soudan with the ex-Khedive) considered that an
+attempt to advance would be madness, and that
+the army was in great danger of being surrounded.
+He thought that the only prudent course would be
+to concentrate the forces and keep them behind
+walls and entrenchments until the autumn. But
+even then he did not see how the army could ever
+get away if it were stoutly opposed by the Arabs,
+as the scarcity of water and other difficulties would
+make the Berber-Suakim route impracticable; and
+in short he was convinced that the only practical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+plan was to come to terms with the Mahdi, and that
+the only means of making terms with the Madhi
+would be to reinstate Ismail as Khedive and utilize
+his influence. This surprising conclusion was due
+to the fact that Lesseps had for a long time been
+exerting himself in every possible way to bring
+about the restoration of Ismail.</p>
+
+<p>M. Jules Ferry was also full of condolences upon
+the British position in the Soudan, but was, at the
+same time, not at all enthusiastic about the French
+position in the Far East. He admitted that the
+troops in Tonquin were sickly and that the climate
+was odious; that neither in Tonquin nor Formosa
+could any blow be struck which China would really
+feel, but that nevertheless 'in the interests of civilization
+as represented in those parts by France and
+England, it was necessary to deal a stunning blow
+(<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup foudroyant</i>) at the huge Empire of China.'
+This might be effected by landing an attacking force
+in China proper, or by blockading the ports, but
+either of these methods would involve great difficulties
+with other Powers, and the only thing that
+remained to be done was to dismember the Empire.
+Once China was broken up into three or four provinces
+she would become comparatively harmless.
+M. Jules Ferry's views were expressed after a dinner
+at the Embassy, and Lord Lyons in reporting the
+conversation remarked that his wine must be more
+heady than he imagined.</p>
+
+<p>Before long, however, a crisis in another part of
+the world temporarily distracted attention from
+Egypt and brought home to every thinking person
+the indefinite and multifarious responsibilities of
+British rule, as well as the singularly inadequate
+military resources available. Prominent British<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
+statesmen had long derided the absurdity of supposing
+that England and Russia could ever become
+involved in disputes in Central Asia, but, profiting
+by our embarrassments in Egypt, the Russian
+Government had adopted so aggressive a policy, that
+even the peace-loving Gladstone Government found
+itself on the brink of a collision before the end of
+February. This critical situation and the possibility
+of a conflict between England and Russia, far
+from giving satisfaction to the French, afforded
+them just cause for anxiety.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 13, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The critical state of things between England and Russia
+has come more home to the French mind during the last
+few days, and is looked upon with increased alarm. Whatever
+may be Bismarck's feelings and plans, the French
+cannot help feeling that it would be a great danger to them
+for him to be without counterpoise in Europe. Those who
+believe that they see far ahead, declare that Bismarck's
+ultimate object is Holland, and that Belgium, or a part of
+Belgium, is to be given to France as a compensation for the
+annexation of Holland to Germany. To this end they
+conceive that Bismarck has aimed at embroiling Russia
+with England, so that the one may paralyse the other; at
+separating England and France, and at setting up an alliance
+between France and Germany. It is to be hoped that
+many Frenchmen would shrink from taking part in an
+iniquity which would be equalled only by the partition of
+Poland. It is to be supposed that none can be so blind as
+not to see that Bismarck will never make a territorial
+arrangement which would increase the relative strength of
+France as compared with that of Germany. It can hardly
+be doubted that Bismarck must be well aware that so far
+from the gift of Belgium reconciling the French to the loss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+of Alsace and Lorraine, any additional power that gift
+might confer upon them would certainly be used, on the
+first opportunity, for the recovery of the two lost
+Provinces.</p>
+
+<p>To people who incline to more simple and obvious
+explanations of political conduct, Bismarck himself seems
+to be rather old to indulge in any hope of executing schemes
+of this kind. Moreover, the character of the Emperor
+would in all probability prevent his sanctioning such proceedings,
+while His Majesty's death would, in all probability,
+greatly diminish, if not put an end to, Bismarck's influence.
+Bismarck may in fact be working in order to attain smaller
+and more immediate objects, and to gratify personal
+feelings.</p>
+
+<p>However all this may be, the French decidedly wish to
+prevent a rupture between England and Russia. They do
+not relish the effect upon the position of Bismarck in
+Europe which would be the consequence of France herself,
+England and Russia, being all hampered by being engaged
+in wars in the extreme East.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 14, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I doubt the Russians going quite to extremes, but the
+risk is great.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck is behaving as ill as possible&mdash;after the mission
+of peace and a complete making up, creating difficulties
+at the last moment about Egyptian finances, concerning
+which he promised that no objections would be raised by
+Germany, if France and England were agreed. It is
+supposed to be with a view to getting a decree against us
+at Cairo before the settlement.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The military preparations for a possible struggle
+with Russia were typical of the manner in which
+British statesmen occasionally prepare for the
+worst. In order to strike terror into a Power which
+could dispose of millions of soldiers, two army corps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+of 25,000 men each were ordered to be mobilized
+in India, and as 'a time of emergency had arrived,'
+it was announced that the first-class army reserve
+and militia reserve would be called out; their
+total numbers amounting to the stupendous figure
+of about 70,000 men. By these steps it was hoped
+that the greatest military Power in the world would
+be overawed.</p>
+
+<p>From one embarrassment Her Majesty's Government
+were fortunately relieved, the basis of an
+arrangement with France having been arrived at
+with regard to Egyptian Finance. Mr. Gladstone,
+with whom Lord Lyons had been requested to communicate
+direct, wrote expressing his relief, but was
+obviously far more concerned to demonstrate the
+turpitude of his political opponents.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Mr. Gladstone to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">10, Downing St., March 21, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>When you so kindly wrote to me about Egyptian
+Finance, I did not reply. Not because I was insensible or
+forgetful, but because the unsatisfactory condition of the
+question made it so difficult. Now, thank God, we are
+through, as far as Foreign Powers are concerned; and we
+have thus far escaped from a position the most hopeless and
+helpless that it is possible to conceive.</p>
+
+<p>It remains a subject of regret, and of some surprise,
+that the Opposition are pressing for time before we take
+the vote, in a manner quite unusual, with almost a certainty
+of bankruptcy and financial chaos in Egypt, and the
+likelihood of consequences more than financial if we
+comply; and all this, as far as we can make out, because
+of the disorganized condition of the Tory party. It seems
+that the mutinous followers have exacted this condition
+from their leaders, as some reparation for the agreement
+about the Seats Bill, and for their other offences.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>To be defeated on the agreement would be <em>most</em> convenient
+for the Government (for me priceless) but somewhat
+ruinous or mischievous, I think, to all the rest of the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>We must of course hold our ground.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The rooted belief of Ministers that their continuance
+in office is absolutely essential to the welfare
+of the universe as well as to that of the British Empire
+is, of course, a well-known phenomenon which has
+manifested itself in more recent times in the case of
+both political parties. In 1885 the difficulties of
+the Gladstone Government continued to grow, and
+it was fortunate for Lord Granville's peace of mind
+that he was an optimist by nature.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 25, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The incorrigible Turk has not yet sent instructions to
+Musurus. We have tried the most serious threats, which
+Musurus believes will be successful.</p>
+
+<p>But if we do not take care, we shall soon be at war with
+the Mahdi, with Turkey, and with the Russians.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know how the latter question will finish.
+Being of a sanguine disposition, I hope for the best. We
+are determined to take a firm stand.</p>
+
+<p>Do you believe that the French have many tricks in
+hand for the Suez Canal Commission?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Early in April there arrived the news of the fight
+at Penjdeh, where, to use Gladstone's own expression,
+the attack of the Russians upon the Afghans
+'bore the appearance of an unprovoked aggression.'
+A financial panic took place, consols fell 3 per
+cent., Russian stocks 9 per cent., and for a short
+time the impression prevailed that war was inevitable.
+In the House of Commons, Mr. Gladstone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
+made one of those eloquent statements which were
+so widely accepted by his followers as a satisfactory
+solution of any outstanding difficulty, but which
+failed to reassure the more intelligent; and even
+the optimistic Lord Granville felt some uncomfortable
+qualms.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>'It is too dreadful,' he wrote on April 10th, 'jumping
+from one nightmare into another.</p>
+
+<p>'Once at war with Russia we shall be obliged to toady
+Germany, France, and Turkey.</p>
+
+<p>'But I cannot believe that it will come to war. It
+cannot be a good move of the Russians to have created a
+blood feud with the Afghans.</p>
+
+<p>'Not having a genius for war, I do not know how we
+are effectively to carry it on against Russia, although it is
+not off the cards that it may break her up.'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Probably Lord Granville was not singular in his
+inability to see how a war on land was to be effectively
+carried on against Russia.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile the French were not without
+their own foreign troubles. M. Jules Ferry had
+spoken of the necessity of inflicting a <em>coup foudroyant</em>.
+The <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coup foudroyant</i> fell in a totally unexpected
+fashion upon his own head, in the shape of
+a defeat of the French forces at Lang-Son. The
+news of the reverse arrived in Paris on March 25,
+and created so absurd a panic and so strong a feeling
+against Spirited Colonial Policy that Jules Ferry
+at once bowed to the storm and resigned on the 31st.
+He had been in office for the unprecedented period
+of two years and one month, which alone was
+sufficient cause for disappearance; nor could it be
+said that his administration had been colourless,
+for he had passed an important Education Bill,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
+established the Protectorate of France in Tunis,
+and annexed Tonquin and Madagascar.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 31, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Ferry was certainly at work quietly with negotiations
+for peace with China, and no doubt he calculated on playing
+it as a high trump at the Elections; and a great card it
+would have been for him, for the war in Tonquin is extremely
+unpopular. The reverse at Lang-Son has changed
+all this; the extreme Right have always had a special
+hatred of Ferry on account of the suppression of the
+religious communities, and Clémenceau and the extreme
+Left have become bitterly hostile to him personally. Not
+many of his own party cared to stick to him when their
+own popularity would have been risked by doing so. And,
+besides, he had been in office for two years; a very unusually
+long period of late, and people were tired of him.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet is now trying to form a Cabinet. It is not
+certain that he will succeed, and if he does succeed, it is
+very doubtful whether his Cabinet will last. His idea
+seems to be to take into it Republicans of all shades, not
+excluding deep Red. The Republicans have been rather
+startled by the progress, far from great though it has been,
+of the Conservatives and Monarchists (Orleanist and
+Imperialist) in the constituencies; and the notion seems
+to be that the importance to them of resisting this, may
+keep them together and prevent them quarrelling with
+each other, at all events until after the Elections. But anyway,
+each change of Ministry produces a further step towards
+the Left, and there is a foundation for the fear that there
+may be socialist legislation against property and proprietors,
+and that the Government may by degrees throw
+away all the means of resisting anarchy.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet's own tendencies would be towards peace.
+Now there is nothing but flame and fury against the
+Chinese, but considering the general unpopularity of the
+war this may to a certain extent subside. He would, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>
+think, desire to be on good terms with all countries. He
+would hardly be so subservient to Bismarck as Ferry had
+lately become. It so happens that personally he and I
+are particularly good friends.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Towards the end of April the British Government
+asked for a credit of eleven millions, and the eloquence
+of Mr. Gladstone worked his faithful followers up
+to a belief in verbiage which is almost pathetic.
+'Gladstone's magnificent speech had a great effect
+here,' wrote Lord Granville. 'It will hasten the
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">dénouement</i> one way or the other in Russia.</p>
+
+<p>'I understand that the Emperor is decidedly
+pacific; but he believes his father lost himself from
+want of firmness, that he himself is determined to
+be firm, and that the particular firmness which
+appeals to him, is not that which goes against the
+wishes of his army.'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 1, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>A war between England and Russia is much dreaded
+by the French. They fear that it would leave Bismarck
+without any counterpoise in Europe. Any influence they
+may have will no doubt be exercised in favour of peace,
+but their influence at this moment does not count very
+much. I do not know that they would have any strong
+sympathy with Russia if hostilities broke out, but such a
+feeling would be produced by anything which irritated
+them with us on account of Egyptian or other matters.
+Anyhow we must be prepared to find them exacting and
+susceptible.</p>
+
+<p>The consequences of the war as regards the money
+market here would be disastrous; but it is believed they
+would be still more disastrous at Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>The dangerous point is considered here to be the notions
+of military honour, of a peculiar kind, which prevail in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+the Russian as much as, or more than, in other Continental
+armies.</p>
+
+<p>These military notions in the armies do not at all
+require that the rulers of the armies should keep their
+words to foreigners, or abide by their international engagements;
+but they do require that, right or wrong, the rulers
+should not allow the <em>amour-propre</em> of the army to be
+wounded. The Emperor of Russia probably shares these
+feelings, and at any rate he would certainly be afraid to
+run counter to them. Those here who profess to understand
+Russia declare that she has no desire to take Herat
+or to annex any part of Afghanistan. They think that the
+ultimate object at which she is really aiming is to extend
+her possessions to the Persian Gulf, and that she would be
+tractable enough about the Afghan frontier, if that question
+were separated from military honour, or rather vanity.</p>
+
+<p>I met Freycinet and Herbette at dinner yesterday.
+They seemed to be much relieved at having got rid of the
+<em>Bosphore Egyptien</em> difficulty, and to be really much
+obliged to you for the help you had given to them.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The <cite>Bosphore Egyptien</cite>, a French newspaper in
+Cairo which continually attacked the British administration
+in Egypt with unparalleled malignity, had
+at length worn out the patience of Sir Evelyn
+Baring, and been temporarily suspended.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Granville.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 15, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The symptoms apparent here indicate that Bismarck
+is busily employed in getting up a European coalition
+against England on the Egyptian question. He has very
+nearly succeeded, if not quite, in isolating us in the Suez
+Canal Commission. He would seem to have put great
+pressure for this purpose upon Italy, who was disposed to
+side with us, and to have frightened or cajoled Holland and
+Spain. With Russia and Austria he seems to have made
+a regular cabal. It has required great tact and firmness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span>
+on Pauncefote's part to have resisted the endeavours to
+turn the Commission into a political conference on the
+whole Egyptian question, and at the same time to have
+avoided breaking it up prematurely. Another circumstance
+which Bismarck is using as a lever against us, is the
+levying by the Egyptian Government of the tax upon the
+coupon, before the Financial Convention has been ratified
+by all the parties to it.</p>
+
+<p>He has sent Courcel here from Berlin to seduce or terrify
+the French Government, and is said to have charged him
+with large offers relative to establishing an international
+administration in Egypt, and assigning to France a preponderant
+influence in such an administration. What the
+real offers may be, of course, I cannot say, but I think the
+French are half afraid of them. Probably, like all Bismarck's
+demonstrations in so-called support of France, they contain
+the essential elements&mdash;the employing a considerable
+number of French troops at a distance from France, and
+the promoting ill-will between France and England.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>These suspicions as to Bismarck's motives were
+confirmed by Lord Rosebery, who at the time
+occupied a minor post in the Gladstone administration,
+and had lately paid a visit to Germany.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Granville to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">May 30, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Rosebery has not yet written out the report (which
+Blowitz saw), but he has given me a full account from his
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>Bismarck acknowledged that he had been thwarting us
+in every way; but at the last conversation (influenced,
+Rosebery thought, by an unsatisfactory conversation with
+Courcel) he was much more conciliatory.</p>
+
+<p>He was exceedingly civil to Rosebery; hostile to
+Gladstone, and especially to Derby.</p>
+
+<p>He is a great man, but he sees through a great many
+millstones.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Emperor is certainly unwell. Rosebery is convinced
+that Bismarck will retire for a time on his death.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Judging from the material available, no statesman
+ever disliked so many persons as Bismarck,
+and the objects of his antipathy were not confined
+to his own sex. Busch's book and the works of
+other authors contain frequent references to the
+grievances which he entertained towards women
+who were alleged to have interfered with his policy,
+and, whether these charges were well founded or not,
+he made no secret of his animosity against even so
+important a personage as the Empress Augusta. In
+fact there can be little doubt that it was owing to
+the despotic influence exercised by the Chancellor
+that the Empress, who had had the misfortune to
+incur his displeasure, was forced to leave Berlin
+and to reside for a considerable period at Coblentz.</p>
+
+<p>Apparently the man who inspired him with the
+greatest aversion was Gortschakoff, but it is easy
+to understand that from the Bismarckian point of
+view, Mr. Gladstone and Lord Derby represented a
+singularly futile type of statesman. Lord Rosebery's
+prophecy with regard to his retirement was
+only partially correct. In private conversation, Bismarck
+is understood to have calculated upon three
+years of office under the present German Emperor;
+whereas he only succeeded in remaining for two, and
+his retirement was compulsory and not voluntary.</p>
+
+<p>One of the notable events in Paris in 1885 was
+the death of Victor Hugo. His funeral was made
+the occasion of a great ceremonial, and Queen
+Victoria, who was always much interested in functions
+of this nature, desired that she should be furnished
+with a special report. Any one who happened to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span>
+have been a witness of the Victor Hugo funeral would
+corroborate the accuracy of the following account,
+which is probably in striking contrast to the word
+pictures of the newspaper correspondents of the
+time.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 4, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons presents his humble duty to Your Majesty
+and in obedience to Your Majesty's commands, proceeds
+to state the impression made upon him by the funeral of
+Victor Hugo.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing striking, splendid or appropriate,
+either in the monstrous catafalque erected under the Arc
+de Triomphe, or in the trappings of the funeral. There
+was nothing mournful or solemn in the demeanour of the
+people. The impressive part of the scene consisted in the
+vast crowds from all parts of France and from many other
+countries. As decorations of the scene, were the innumerable
+wreaths, some conveyed in cars and some carried in
+the hands of those who offered them.</p>
+
+<p>The aspect was that of a vast assemblage of people
+gathered together for some ordinary demonstration, or
+from curiosity. On the other hand, perfect order was preserved.
+Both those who joined in the procession and those
+who lined the streets through which it passed, maintained
+the good humour and civility which are seldom wanting to
+a Paris crowd. At some points attempts were made to
+raise anarchical or socialistic cries, but met with no response.
+The distance from the point of departure to the Arc de
+Triomphe is about three miles by the route taken, which
+was through some of the finest avenues of Paris. The
+procession began at 11 o'clock in the morning and went on
+until after 4 in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>The general impression left upon Lord Lyons by the
+day was one of weariness and unconcern. The orderliness
+of the people was a satisfactory symptom, but the total
+absence of strong feeling was chilling, and the studied
+avoidance of any recognition of religion did away with all
+solemnity.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On June 12, the Gladstone Government, having
+been defeated during a Budget debate, resigned, and
+left to the Conservatives the ungrateful task of
+facing an accumulation of difficulties while in a
+minority in the House of Commons. Lord Salisbury
+took Lord Granville's place at the Foreign Office
+and the transfer was marked by a double compliment
+to Lord Lyons. Lord Granville, who was
+always extremely popular with all those with
+whom he was in any way connected, with habitual
+kindliness and generosity expressed his obligations
+to the Ambassador. 'An ordinary letter of
+farewell and of thanks would very inadequately
+express my feelings to you. I cannot say how
+much I have valued the loyal and important
+assistance you have given me in most difficult
+circumstances.'</p>
+
+<p>Lord Salisbury showed his appreciation by at
+once asking him to come over to England in order
+to discuss the general situation, and upon his return
+to Paris in July, he was able to report that the change
+of Government in England appeared to have had a
+beneficial effect upon Anglo-French relations. 'The
+statement you made in the House of Lords has made
+an excellent impression. Freycinet seems to be
+really disposed to abstain from endeavouring to
+thwart us or to raise difficulties for us with regard
+to Egyptian Finance. He also appears to be inclined
+to come to terms with us about Newfoundland
+and other matters.'</p>
+
+<p>'I think he is sincerely desirous to put the relations
+between the two countries on a good footing,
+but I cannot yet say that he will be willing to make
+sacrifices for this purpose.'</p>
+
+<p>As Freycinet, however, showed few symptoms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span>
+of being willing to retire from the position he had
+taken up with regard to the eventual British evacuation
+of Egypt, and to the resumption by France of
+an influence equal with our own, his professions of
+friendship did not appear to be of much value.
+Some apprehension too was caused by the ostentatious
+announcements in the French press, that the
+numerous military forces in the Far East released
+in consequence of the conclusion of peace with China
+would return by the Suez Canal and would therefore
+be 'available for other purposes in the Mediterranean.'
+What was perhaps more encouraging, was
+the increasing distaste for Spirited Colonial Policy
+combined with renewed distrust of Bismarck's intentions.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 14, 1885.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have been rejoiced by your telegram announcing that
+Germany, Austria, and Italy agree to the issue of the
+Egyptian Loan Decree. It looks as if you were on the eve
+of settling the question most pressing in point of time
+(that of the money for Egypt), and I hope it augurs well
+for the disposition generally of the German Chancellor.
+The National Fête here puts a stop to all business for to-day,
+but I shall see Freycinet about the issue of the Decree
+to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>The debate on the Budget for 1886 elicited some curious
+speeches in the Chamber of Deputies three days ago on the
+'Expéditions lointaines.' There was no difficulty in
+showing that they had all cost more than they were worth.
+They were plainly held by the Deputies to be unpopular in
+the country, and condemnation of them is likely to be one
+of the election cries of the extreme Left. But hardly any
+one seemed to see the way to bring them to an end. In
+fact, it looked as if France had got into the groove which
+by a fatality leads to annexation and conquest by strong<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span>
+and civilized nations when they once begin to establish
+themselves amongst weak and barbarous peoples. All this
+may delight Prince Bismarck, whose avowed object is to
+find an outlet for what he calls French vanity and restlessness,
+and a gulf to swallow up French troops and treasures
+at a distance from Europe. From a certain point of view
+this may not be without its advantages to other nations;
+but it is not without danger to the good relations between
+France and England&mdash;between whom awkward questions
+may arise all over the world. In the present I am uneasy
+about Siam and more so about Burmah. It is not a pleasant
+speculation to consider the change which may be produced in
+no very remote future, in the condition of our Indian
+Empire, if it be in contact with a great European Power
+both on the north and on the east.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In August, 1885, a prodigious outburst of Anglophobia
+occurred in Paris in consequence of mendacious
+statements published by Rochefort in his
+newspaper, charging the British military authorities
+in the Soudan with the assassination of a certain
+Olivier Pain. Olivier Pain was an ex-Communist
+and French journalist who had accompanied the
+Turks in the campaign of 1877, and who was reputed
+to be occasionally employed by the Turkish Government
+as a secret agent. In the spring of 1884, he
+had set off to join the Mahdi, and having completely
+disappeared from view, and being presumably dead,
+Rochefort took the opportunity to announce that
+Lord Wolseley had procured his death by offering
+a reward of fifty pounds for his head. The enterprise
+had been allotted to Major Kitchener<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>: 'un
+sinistre gredin nourri de psaumes et abreuvé de
+whisky qui a eu le premier, l'idée de mettre à prix
+la tête de celui qu'il appelait "l'espion français."'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As, however, it was impossible to reach Lord
+Wolseley and the 'sinistre gredin,' Rochefort urged
+that vengeance should be taken upon 'l'Ambassadeur
+Lyons.' 'A partir d'aujourd'hui il est notre
+ôtage! Sa vieille peau est le gage de la satisfaction
+qui nous est due.' 'L'Ambassadeur Lyons' was,
+however, also beyond reach, as he happened to be
+on leave, and it was, therefore, suggested that the
+few secretaries (of whom I was one), who were then
+in Paris, should be forthwith strung up to the lamp-posts
+in the Rue du Faubourg St. Honoré. The
+astonishing thing was that these ravings were
+actually taken more or less seriously, and that for
+some time the French authorities found it necessary
+to protect the Embassy with numerous police
+detachments.</p>
+
+<p>It has always been one of the inscrutable
+mysteries that Rochefort, ever since the Commune,
+was allowed a toleration accorded to no one else,
+on the ground of his alleged exceptional wit and
+humour, whereas his effusions consisted almost
+entirely of gross personal abuse of the lowest type,
+levelled indiscriminately at prominent individuals of
+any description, and largely directed against England,
+whose hospitality he enjoyed during many years of
+exile.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="bigger">THE LAST YEAR'S WORK</span></p>
+
+<p class="p1">(1886-1887)</p>
+
+
+<p>The sudden and unexpected declaration in September
+of the Union of Bulgaria and Eastern Roumelia
+which caused so much perturbation in Europe, and
+resulted in a war between Servia and Bulgaria, left
+the French quite indifferent; but the imminence
+of hostilities between England and Burmah provoked
+French ill-humour, which was all the more
+inexcusable because no protest had ever been made
+against French proceedings in Tonquin and Madagascar.
+The truth was that the Burmese resistance
+to the Indian Government was largely due to French
+encouragement. As far back as 1883 a Burmese
+Mission had arrived in Paris, and kept studiously
+aloof from the British Embassy; and although
+every opportunity had been taken to impress upon
+the French Government the peculiar relations
+between Burmah and British India, there was not
+the least doubt that the object of the Burmese had
+been to obtain from the French Government such a
+Treaty as would enable them to appeal to France
+in the event of their being involved in difficulties
+with England. How much encouragement they
+actually received is not known, but it was probably
+sufficient to effect their undoing.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The papers are abusing us about Burmah, and being
+quite innocent of any aggression themselves in that part
+of the world, are horrified at our holding our own there.
+Nevertheless, I hope the Indian Government will finish the
+thing out of hand, for an ugly state of feeling about it is
+growing up here.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The rapidity with which the operations against
+Burmah were conducted left nothing to be desired.
+The campaign was over within a few weeks; on
+January 1, 1886, the annexation of Burmah was
+proclaimed, and the affairs of that country ceased
+to be of any further interest to the French Government.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Salisbury's tenure of the Foreign Office,
+which had been marked by so successful a policy
+that even Mr. Gladstone had expressed satisfaction,
+came to an end early in 1886, and he was succeeded
+by Lord Rosebery. 'The irony of events,' wrote
+the latter to Lord Lyons, 'has sent me to the Foreign
+Office, and one of the incidents of this which is most
+agreeable to me, is that it brings me into close
+relations with yourself.'</p>
+
+<p>Although the Paris press had circulated a
+ridiculous fiction that Lord Rosebery (presumably
+because he was personally acquainted with Bismarck)
+was anti-French by inclination, the change
+of Government in England was received in France
+with perfect equanimity, as had been the case in
+the previous autumn.</p>
+
+<p>The new Foreign Secretary, however, could not
+fail to be painfully impressed by the unsatisfactory
+feeling which obviously existed in France towards
+England, and found it difficult of explanation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Rosebery to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 3, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am rather anxious about the attitude of the French.
+In my short tenure of office they have brought up three
+or four questions, all in the highest degree distasteful
+to us.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>1. The Consul at Suakim: as to which they say, with
+accuracy which is disputed, that they had gone too far and
+could not withdraw the appointment.</p>
+
+<p>2. Arbitration on the Somali coast troubles: as to
+which they declare that Salisbury promised it, which
+Salisbury, I understand, denies.</p>
+
+<p>3. The revival of the Suez Canal Commission.</p>
+
+<p>4. The announcement made to me by Waddington
+yesterday that they should be obliged shortly to send a
+cargo of recidivists to the Isle of Pines. I remonstrated
+strongly with him, and indeed I cannot foresee all the consequences,
+should they carry their intention into effect.
+One, however, I do clearly perceive, which is that we should
+have to denounce the Postal Convention of 1856, which
+gives the Messageries privileges in Australian ports, which
+could not be sustained, and which the colonists would not
+for a moment, under such circumstances, respect.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>But these are details. What I want to point out is the
+apparent animus displayed in these different proceedings.
+I shall not mention them to my colleagues until I hear your
+view of them, and anything you may be able to collect on
+the subject.</p>
+
+<p>What does it all mean? These things did not occur
+during the late Government? Are they directed against
+the new Administration? I cannot view them as a chapter
+of accidents.</p>
+
+<p>As for myself, I have entered upon this office with the
+most sincere wish to be friendly with France. There can
+be no earthly reason why we should not be so. It is a pity,
+therefore, that our cordiality should be poisoned at its
+source.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you would let me know what you think of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span>
+this. You can pick up much directly, and perhaps even
+more indirectly, on these points. Pray forgive the length
+of this letter.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 5, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have naturally been on the watch since you came into
+office for indications of the feelings of the French Government
+respecting the change. In answer to your letter of
+the day before yesterday, asking my opinion, I can only
+say that I think the French are quite as well disposed
+towards the new Government as they were to the late one&mdash;indeed,
+of the two, I should say better. We come so much
+into contact with the French all over the globe that questions
+more or less unpleasant are always arising in smaller
+or greater numbers, according to circumstances; and
+French feeling is in a chronic state of irritability about
+Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>The four subjects you mention are certainly annoying,
+but I do not believe that the French proceedings respecting
+them have been actuated by any animus against the
+present English Ministry.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be somewhat staggered in this opinion, however,
+if the French Government proposes to substitute arbitration
+by any third Power for the understanding that the
+Somali coast questions shall be treated by friendly negotiations
+between the two Governments, and that meanwhile
+the <em>status quo</em> shall not be disturbed. With a view to
+proceeding with the negotiation, M. Waddington proposed
+to Lord Salisbury on Jan. 20th, and by a written note the
+next day, that an inquiry should be made on the spot by
+two Commissioners, one English and one French. Lord
+Salisbury received the verbal proposal favourably, but did
+not at the moment give a definitive answer.</p>
+
+<p>The proposal to reassemble the Suez Canal Commission
+is simply the renewal of a proposal made by M. Waddington
+to Lord Salisbury at the beginning of January.</p>
+
+<p>The most serious of the affairs you mention appears to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span>
+me to be the imminent despatch of a cargo of <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">récidivistes</i>
+to the Isle of Pines. I have seen from the beginning the
+importance of this <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">récidiviste</i> question as regards public
+feeling in Australia, and there is hardly any question about
+which I have taken so much trouble. I have attacked
+successive French Ministers upon it in season and out of
+season, but I have never succeeded in obtaining any
+promise that <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">récidivistes</i> should not be sent to the Pacific.
+As I reported to you, I remonstrated with Freycinet about
+the intention actually to send off a batch, as soon as I
+became aware of it. I did not perceive any difference in
+his manner or language from what they had been when
+some other Ministers had been in office in England, but
+my remonstrances were equally ineffectual. I am glad
+you had an opportunity of speaking strongly to Waddington.
+I see troubles ahead, for the Australians have before now
+threatened to pass Dominion laws against French ships
+found to have escaped convicts on board, which seem to
+go a good deal beyond international usage, not to say law.</p>
+
+<p>It is time, however, for me to wind up this long story.
+My answer to your question is that I am far from thinking
+that there is any <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">malus animus</i> against Her Majesty's present
+Government on the part of Freycinet and his Cabinet.
+Nor do I know that there is more than the usual irritability
+towards England among the French public; but still I
+feel strongly that it behoves us to tread cautiously as well
+as firmly, when we are coming upon French ground.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The spring of 1886 was noticeable for another
+Government onslaught upon such members of ex-reigning
+families as were then residing in France.
+Of these the most conspicuous were the Orleans
+Princes. There was nothing in their conduct to cause
+alarm to the Republic, as they confined themselves
+to taking part in social functions, at which they
+maintained a kind of semi-state, being always
+attended by ladies and gentlemen-in-waiting after
+the manner of recognized Royal personages. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span>
+innocent procedure was sufficient excuse to work up
+an agitation against them, and to introduce an
+Expulsion Bill.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 25, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The question of the day is the expulsion of the Princes.
+The measure, if taken, will be quite unjustifiable, discreditable
+to the Government, and, I should say, not at all
+injurious to the cause of the victims. Considering the
+people and the institutions with which they had to deal,
+the partisans of the Orleans Princes have not been so
+prudent and correct as the Princes themselves. They have
+gone about twitting the Republicans with weakness for
+permitting the very mild demonstration made by the
+Royalists, and declaring that such want of vigour was
+simply a sign of the decay of the Republic.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p>The general opinion is that the Expulsion Bill will pass
+in its present, or even in an aggravated form, and that if it
+does, the Government will proceed to expel the Comte de
+Paris at least, if not the Duc de Chartres, and some others.
+On the other hand, it is not expected that the Bill confiscating
+the property, real and personal, of the Orleans
+and Bonapartes will be adopted.</p>
+
+<p>Much anxiety is felt respecting Boulanger's goings on
+with respect to the army. He seems to think of nothing
+but currying favour with the lowest ranks in the service,
+and with the mob outside. It is believed by many people
+that he would not act vigorously, as Minister of War,
+against any disturbances, but would try to turn them to
+account and set up for himself as dictator or what not.</p>
+
+<p>The financial situation is very bad, and if common
+scandal is to be listened to, the very short duration of
+French Ministries is having the effect of making most of
+the individual Ministers very unscrupulous and very
+impatient to make hay during the very short time that the
+sun shines.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The above letter contains one of the first allusions
+to the enterprising impostor Boulanger, who very
+nearly succeeded in making history, and of whom
+much was to be heard for some considerable space
+of time. His popularity was due in great measure
+to the vague discontent which was then prevalent in
+France. People thought that they saw the same
+inefficiency in the Government, the same relaxation
+of authority, the same financial difficulties, and
+the same venality which marked the last days of
+the Second Empire. There seemed to be no individual,
+in or out of the Royal or Imperial Dynasties,
+capable of exciting any enthusiasm or of inspiring
+any confidence, and public feeling was in that state
+of lassitude and dissatisfaction which might give a
+reasonable chance for a bold stroke for power.</p>
+
+<p>The scandalous Expulsion Bill passed both
+Chambers, and the Princes took their departure.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, June 25, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The departure of the Comte de Paris from Eu has been
+accompanied by many very sad circumstances, but I
+cannot help thinking that his political position is improved
+by his expulsion. His own partisans are much pleased at
+its having elicited from him a distinct assertion of a claim
+to the throne, and of a determination to work for the
+restoration of monarchy.</p>
+
+<p>It is less easy to give an opinion on the position of the
+Princes who have remained in France. It seems to be
+hardly compatible with dignity and comfort, considering
+the unabated hostility to them of the Reds, who seem
+generally to end in overpowering all generous and conservative
+feelings in the Chambers and in the Government.</p>
+
+<p>Prince Napoleon and his son Prince Victor went off in
+opposite directions, one to Geneva, the other to Brussels.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span>
+The departure of neither seems to have made much
+apparent sensation in Paris when it took place, but I am
+far from certain that Prince Victor is not really a more
+formidable opponent to the Republic than is the Comte de
+Paris.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 2, 1886.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The topic of the day here is the conduct of the Minister
+of War, General Boulanger. He was supposed to be an
+Orleanist. Then he went round to Clémençeau, and was
+put into Freycinet's Cabinet as a representative of the
+Clémençeau party, which though not the most Red in the
+Chamber, is more Red than the Freycinet section. Since
+he has been in office Boulanger has lost no opportunity of
+ingratiating himself with the Radicals, and he has been
+travelling about the country making speeches, the object
+of which has evidently been to gain personal popularity for
+himself without regard to his colleagues.</p>
+
+<p>He has also by degrees put creatures of his own into
+the great military commands. A crisis was produced,
+during the last few days, by his quarrelling with General
+Saussier, the military Governor of Paris, and provoking
+him into resigning. He is also said to have used strange
+language in the Council of Ministers. At any rate, President
+Grévy and the Ministers seem to have thought they would
+be more comfortable at Paris without having a satellite of
+Boulanger as Governor, and they have insisted upon
+declining Saussier's resignation. From the way people
+talk, one would think that the questions were whether
+Boulanger is aiming at being a Cromwell or a Monk, and if
+a Monk, which dynasty he will take up.</p>
+
+<p>There is a good deal of alarm here about foreign affairs.
+The reports of a large concentration of Russian troops in
+Bessarabia are supposed to confirm other indications that
+Russia is meditating a revenge for the check she has
+sustained with regard to Bulgaria. This, it is supposed,
+must bring Austria into the field. Moreover, Bismarck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span>
+does not seem to be in an amiable mood towards France;
+and with or without instigation from him, Germans talk
+as if war was inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Republic here has lasted sixteen years, and
+that is about the time which it takes to make the French
+tired of a form of Government. The Republic has not
+been successful financially, and trade and agriculture are
+not prosperous, nor is the reputation of the Republican
+administration high for purity or efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>So there is plenty to croak about for those who are
+inclined to croak.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 13, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The regular session of the French Chambers is to be
+closed the day after to-morrow, and the Chambers are to
+spend to-morrow at the Review at Longchamps, and I
+suppose to take part in the other nuisances which makes
+Paris insupportable on a National Fête day. I conclude
+the Chambers will come back in October for an extra
+session as usual. In fact, they have not yet voted the
+Budget; or, I had almost said, any useful measure. In
+Commercial matters and indeed in everything relating to
+intercourse with other countries, they have shown the
+narrowest and most exclusive spirit. Their great feat
+has been the law for the persecution of the Princes, which
+seems to be carried out as harshly as possible. I should
+not have said that the literal wording of the law necessitated
+or even justified the dismissal from the army of Princes
+who already belonged to it, but I suppose that was the
+intention of the legislators. The Duc d'Aumale's letter to
+the President is a powerful document, but was sure to lead
+to his expulsion, and was perhaps intended to have that
+effect.</p>
+
+<p>Among people who ought to have good information
+from abroad, the alarm as to a war this autumn seems
+stronger than among the French politicians who confine
+themselves more closely to considering French feeling at
+home. Certainly it comes round to one in various ways<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span>
+from Germany that war is very generally expected, or at
+all events talked of there. The accounts current in
+Germany of supposed French provocations look as if there
+was a party there trying to work up hostile feeling against
+France. An alliance between France and Russia seems to
+be the bugbear. I don't see symptoms at present of any
+war spirit in this country; but of course a quarrel between
+Russia and Germany would be a great temptation to
+French Chauvinism.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The abhorred annual fête of July 14, 1886,
+possessed an interest which had been wanting
+previously, and has never since been renewed. This
+was due to the presence of a number of troops at the
+Longchamps Review who had just returned from
+Tonquin, and to the excitement caused by the first
+appearance of Boulanger at a big military display
+in Paris. Notwithstanding the inflated rubbish
+which was published the next day in the French
+press, there could not be the least doubt that the
+Tonquin troops were received without the slightest
+enthusiasm. In Paris the very word 'Tonquin' was
+hated; the country was associated with loss of
+life, and with heavy taxation, and nothing could
+have expressed more eloquently the disenchantment
+produced by a Spirited Colonial Policy, than
+the chilling reception accorded to these returned
+soldiers. The enthusiasm which should have been
+bestowed upon these humble instruments was
+lavished upon the charlatan who at that moment
+was the most prominent and popular figure in the
+eye of the French public.</p>
+
+<p>The military mountebank (aptly christened by
+Jules Ferry, 'a music hall St. Arnaud') had, with
+some foresight, provided himself with a high-actioned
+black circus horse, and those who were present on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span>
+the occasion will never forget the moment when he
+advanced to salute the President, and other notabilities
+established in the official Tribune. Only a
+few days before, it was currently believed, he had
+terrified his ministerial colleagues by appearing at
+a Cabinet Council in uniform, and now as he pranced
+backwards or forwards on the circus horse and the
+public yelled their acclamations, President Grévy
+and the uninteresting crowd of bourgeois ministers
+and deputies who surrounded him, seemed visibly
+to quiver and flinch as shuddering memories of
+December 2 and other <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coups d'état</i> obtruded themselves
+upon their recollections.</p>
+
+<p>From that day Boulanger became a dangerous
+man; the circus horse had done the trick; the
+general embodied in the public fancy the <em>clinquant</em>,
+for which the French had so long been sighing in
+secret; <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">l'homme qui monte à cheval</i> in place of
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">l'homme qui monte à la tribune</i>, and for a long time
+he survived even that ridicule which in France is
+supposed to kill more effectively than elsewhere.
+Even when he engaged in a duel with an elderly
+and short-sighted civilian, M. Floquet, and was
+decisively worsted, he continued to remain a popular
+hero.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Rosebery, upon whom the unreasonable ill-feeling
+then constantly shown by the French towards
+England had made a painful impression, had realized
+in May that the Gladstone Government was doomed,
+and had wisely decided in consequence that a
+process of marking time was preferable to embarking
+upon anything in the nature of a heroic policy.
+Upon his retirement and the formation of a new
+administration, Lord Lyons experienced what was
+probably the greatest surprise of his life in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span>
+shape of the following letter from Lord Salisbury.
+In order to reinforce its arguments the late Lord
+Currie, then Permanent Under-Secretary of State
+at the Foreign Office, was sent over with it to Paris.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
+<img src="images/i_370.png" width="350" height="500" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><p><em>General Boulanger.</em></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">london: edward arnold.</span></p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="p1">Confidential. July 26, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I accepted yesterday the Queen's commission to form
+a Government. It is a task full of difficulties; and I would
+have gladly seen Lord Hartington undertake it. This,
+however, he could not be induced to do; and the duty
+falls upon me. One of my first thoughts is to provide a
+Foreign Secretary for the new Government: for I could
+not, with any hope of carrying it through successfully,
+repeat the experiment of last summer by uniting the
+Foreign Secretaryship with the Premiership.</p>
+
+<p>There is no one possessing the experience and knowledge
+of Foreign Affairs which you have, and no one whose
+appointment would exercise so great a moral authority in
+Europe. And we certainly have not in our political ranks
+any one who could claim a tithe of the fitness for the office
+which every one would acknowledge in your case. I
+earnestly hope the proposal may be not unacceptable to
+you. If that should happily be the case, a great difficulty
+in our way will have been most successfully removed.</p>
+
+<p>As there is much to be said on the matter which it
+would be too long to write, Currie has very kindly undertaken
+to take this letter over and discuss the matter with
+you. We have talked it over very fully.</p>
+
+<p>If you should be in need of any interval of repose, I
+could easily take the seals for a few weeks.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris. July 27, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Currie brought me your letter early this morning. In
+answer to it I sent you at 11.30 a.m. the following
+telegram:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>'I am very much gratified, and I am very grateful
+for the kind consideration with which your proposal is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span>
+accompanied, but my age and the state of my health
+make it quite impossible for me to undertake the office.'</p>
+
+<p>I hope I need not assure you that I am fully sensible of
+the kindness of your letter, and that if I cannot feel that I
+merit all you say of me, I am at least grateful for your good
+opinion.</p>
+
+<p>The truth is, that I could not now undertake new and
+laborious duties with any confidence that I could discharge
+them efficiently. I feel the need of rest, and I am not equal
+to beginning a new life of hard work. I could not conscientiously
+assume the great responsibility which would
+be thrown upon me.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>If the post of Foreign Secretary has ever
+been offered during the last hundred years to
+any other person outside the ranks of orthodox
+party politicians the secret has been well kept,
+and it might perhaps be suggested that few people
+would be found with sufficient strength of mind
+to decline so glittering a prize. Lord Lyons,
+however, as is sufficiently evident, found no difficulty
+in at once deciding upon the refusal of an offer
+which the ordinary mediocrity would have accepted
+with avidity. In the above letter he founded his
+refusal upon grounds of age and ill-health, and in
+private he used to express the opinion that after the
+age of forty a man's faculties began and continued
+to deteriorate. But it is not in the least likely that
+he would have accepted the honour which it was
+proposed to bestow upon him, at any period of his
+life. His extreme modesty and diffidence have
+already been dwelt upon, but a more valuable
+quality than these is a man's realization of his own
+limitations, and it is probable that Lord Lyons, by
+the exercise of his exceptionally impartial judgment,
+was able to form a more correct opinion as to his
+own potentialities than Lord Salisbury. A thorough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span>
+and profound knowledge of foreign politics is not
+the sole necessary qualification of an English Foreign
+Secretary; had such been the case, Lord Lyons
+would have been an ideal occupant of the post; but
+in England, where the value of Ministers is gauged
+chiefly by the fallacious test of oratorical capacity,
+the Foreign Secretary is constantly obliged to make
+speeches in defence of or in explanation of his policy,
+and although the House of Lords is the most long-suffering
+and good-natured assembly in the world,
+it would have been no easy task for a man of sixty-nine,
+who had never put two sentences together
+in public, to suddenly appear in Parliament as the
+representative of one of the most important departments,
+to say nothing of public meetings,
+deputations, banquets, etc. It may also be doubted
+whether, in spite of his many admirable qualities,
+he was really adapted for the post. All his life, he
+had been merely an instrument&mdash;a highly efficient
+instrument&mdash;of the existing Government, and had
+received instructions, which had invariably been
+carried out with singular skill and intelligence. But
+the responsibility had not been his, and as Foreign
+Secretary the initiative as well as the responsibility
+which would have rested upon him might have
+imposed too formidable a strain upon one of so
+cautious a temperament. Taking into consideration
+these doubts, his advanced age, failing health,
+and the effect of depression caused by the recent
+death of his much loved sister, the Dowager Duchess
+of Norfolk, the refusal of the Foreign Office by Lord
+Lyons was only an additional instance of that robust
+common sense which was one of his most pronounced
+characteristics. Lord Rosebery, at all events,
+thought that he had decided wisely.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Rosebery to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Dalmeny, Aug. 10, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>As my Foreign Office episode is at an end, I write a line
+of good-bye, not as a Minister, but on the footing of what I
+hope I may call friendship.</p>
+
+<p>My six months' experience has led me to the conviction
+that our relations with France are really more troublesome
+than with any other Power. She is always wanting something
+of us which it is impossible to give her, and she then
+says plaintively, 'You never do anything for me.' She is
+quite oblivious of the fact that she never loses the opportunity
+of playing us a trick. Witness the secret expedition
+to the New Hebrides. Nothing would have induced me to
+go on with any one of the negotiations with Waddington
+until they had removed their troops from those islands.
+Whenever he asked for an answer about anything, I always
+turned the conversation round to that interesting spot.</p>
+
+<p>With this conviction, therefore, it has been a great
+comfort to feel that you were at Paris.</p>
+
+<p>I am not surprised that you did not care about my
+succession! It is a weary post.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Heron's Ghyll, Uckfield, Aug. 17, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Your friendly letter has followed me here and has much
+gratified me.</p>
+
+<p>I think you must look back with great satisfaction to
+your time at the Foreign Office. You have certainly won
+golden opinions from your subordinates and from the
+world at large, which is perhaps a less competent judge.
+My own official intercourse with you was certainly both
+very pleasant to me and very satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>I attribute the difficulties with France more to the
+inevitable consequences of our coming into contact with
+the French in all parts of the world, than to any ill-will on
+either side, although I do not pretend to say that the state
+of feeling is what I could wish it to be.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Independently of any other considerations, I felt
+altogether too old to undertake the Foreign Office. I was
+so convinced of this, that I regarded it as what the French
+call an objection <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">préjudicielle</i> to entertaining the question
+at all.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The post which Lord Lyons had declined was
+accepted by Lord Iddesleigh, who had just been
+removed from the House of Commons, and, as was
+only natural, it is evident that he was in the habit
+of consulting Lord Salisbury before taking any
+step of importance. In October, 1886, with the
+concurrence of Lord Salisbury, Lord Lyons was
+instructed to approach the French Government on
+the question of Egypt, and to explain the conditions
+under which it would be possible to terminate
+the British military occupation. There seems to be
+absolutely no doubt that Her Majesty's Government
+were perfectly sincere and honestly desirous
+of carrying out the promises that had been made
+at various times, and as subsequent history showed,
+it was the misguided opposition of France and
+Russia which was as much responsible as anything
+else for the permanent British occupation of
+Egypt.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 22, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>In my previous letter of to-day I have told you what
+M. de Freycinet said to me about the Suez Canal Convention.
+I had a long interview with him, but though I gave
+him plenty of opportunities, he did not say one other word
+about Egypt. This being the case, I thought it prudent to
+abstain, at all events at this first interview, from saying
+anything on my side. So far then I have not made
+known to him any part of the contents of your letter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span>
+to Lord Salisbury of the 18th or of his telegraphic
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>The fact is, that from what I have made out since I
+came back here, I am led to think that the French Government
+have now good reason to doubt whether they would
+get Bismarck's support if they raised the Egyptian question
+with a view to embarrass us. This being the case, they are
+very much hesitating to do so, and are on the look-out for
+signs of our impressions on the subject, and would interpret
+any appearance of unusual anxiety on our part, or any
+fresh offers of concessions from us, simply as indications
+that we still thought Germany might join against us. If
+the French Government are not pretty sure of help and
+sympathy from abroad, they will probably not stir in the
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, however, the press has been strongly
+excited, probably by d'Aunay and Charmes. There is a
+very nasty article, principally about the financial part of
+the Egyptian question, in the <cite>Débuts</cite> this morning.</p>
+
+<p>I shall perhaps be able to see my way more clearly
+in a day or two. In the meantime I am disposed
+to think the most prudent plan will be to be reserved
+and firm about Egypt, but not to display anxiety on
+the subject.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The idea of Lord Salisbury, speaking generally,
+was that a somewhat distant date of evacuation
+should be foreshadowed; that if evacuation, as was
+fully intended, should be carried out, some return
+should be expected for the expenditure of British
+blood and treasure, and that the Suez Canal difficulty
+should be settled without further delay. He
+considered that the negotiations should be carried
+on with the Porte (Sir Henry Drummond Wolff had
+already been despatched on this mission), and that
+confidential communications should be made to
+France and Germany.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Oct. 26, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I shall be very anxious to know what line Waddington
+took on his return to his post, and particularly what, if
+anything, he said about Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet is the man chiefly responsible for the refusal
+of France to join in our expedition to Egypt, and this no
+doubt makes him very anxious to gain for himself the
+credit of some striking success in getting England out of
+that country. So far as I can make out here, the attempts
+that have been made to get the Powers to unite in calling
+for a general Conference upon Egyptian affairs have not
+met with much success. If Bismarck decidedly opposes
+attempts of this kind, they will no doubt be abandoned.
+The Press continue to urge strong measures against our
+continuing in Egypt, and is not measured in its language.</p>
+
+<p>The autumn session is often fatal to French Ministers.
+I recollect Gambetta's saying to me not long before his
+own fall: '<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">En automne les feuilles tombent et les porte-feuilles
+aussi.</i>'</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is more than likely that the instructions which
+M. Waddington received about this period were of
+a disagreeable nature. A well-known French Ambassador
+once remarked to me some years later, that
+the London Embassy was no very desirable post
+from the French diplomatist's point of view. 'We
+are sent there with the mission of getting the English
+out of Egypt, and the thing cannot be done!'</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Nov. 23, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Freycinet's aim seems to be to improve his own position
+in the Chambers and in the country by obtaining our
+withdrawal from Egypt, and of course the object cannot be
+attained unless he can make it appear that the withdrawal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span>
+is his doing. Hence his strong desire that we should
+negotiate with him and his dislike to our negotiating with
+Turkey or any other Power.</p>
+
+<p>The crushing defeat of the Right in the elections in the
+Department of the Nord is another proof of their blindness
+in misusing the chance they had after the general election.
+They might possibly have led gradually up to a restoration
+by giving strength to Conservative principles and measures.
+They could only discredit themselves by joining the
+extreme Radicals and attempting to produce mischief
+and confusion.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans are either very dilatory, or they have some
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">arrière pensée</i> about the Zanzibar affair. Yesterday
+afternoon Münster was still without any instructions to
+make the joint invitation to the French.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 3, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>You will see by my despatch that Freycinet has again
+attacked me about Egypt. He wants the negotiation to
+go through him, and if possible to be made with him,
+independently of the Turks, or at least virtually in conjunction
+with us. I have not yet seen any symptoms of
+his being anxious really to help us in Egyptian matters; and
+I am not generally favourable to carrying on parallel
+negotiations, or the same negotiation in different places.
+The danger of informal conversations between Freycinet
+and me is that, however cautious I may be, he may somehow
+or other find occasion to quote me, as being more
+<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">coulant</i> than you. At any rate, if I had to talk to him
+it would be very necessary for you to tell me very exactly
+how far I could go: and above all, that I should be guarded
+from holding any language which might by any possibility
+be embarrassing to the line circumstances might make it
+advisable for Her Majesty's Government to take in
+Parliament afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>I was long enough at Constantinople to see that no
+dependence whatever was to be placed upon what the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
+Porte told an Ambassador about his colleagues. Still I
+cannot say that the Turkish revelation about the communications
+the Porte affects to receive from the French
+and Russian Ambassadors about Egypt and about us, are,
+in the face of them, improbable. At any rate, our views
+must be much nearer than those we now have to the
+French ideas, before we shall get any real help from France
+at the Porte.</p>
+
+<p>I write, as you know, in ignorance of Wolff's opinion, as
+he did not stop here on his way home.</p>
+
+<p>Freycinet's defeat in the Chamber this afternoon is
+serious because it followed a strong speech from himself
+against the <cite>Sous-Préfet</cite> abolition, but he has wonderful
+skill in patching things up.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Freycinet in December was defeated by one of
+those combinations of Royalist and Radicals which
+were not uncommon in French politics, and although
+the absurdity of the situation was obvious to every
+one, insisted on placing his resignation and that of
+the Cabinet in President Grévy's hands. A change
+of Government was so useless that even those who
+had combined to overthrow Freycinet endeavoured
+to persuade him to reconsider his determination.
+He remained obdurate, however, and the President,
+casting about for a successor, pitched at first upon
+M. Floquet, a strong Radical who was particularly
+obnoxious to the Russian Government.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 7, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The chances seem to be in favour of Floquet being
+Prime Minister. He is of the section of the Chamber
+called 'Gauche radical,' that is to say, he falls just short of
+the most extreme Left. Who would be his Minister for
+Foreign Affairs and what would be his foreign policy I do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span>
+not pretend to say. The incident in his life most talked
+about is his having cried out, '<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Vive la Pologne!</i>' and used
+some expressions taken as disrespectful to the late Emperor
+of Russia, when His Majesty was at the Palais de Justice,
+on his visit to Paris during the Exhibition of 1867. The
+Russian Ambassadors have, I believe, declined or avoided
+exchanging courtesies with him when he has since been in
+situations, such as that of <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Préfet de la Seine</i>, and President
+of the Chamber of Deputies, which have brought him into
+communication with the rest of the diplomatic body.
+Russia at this moment is paying so much court to France
+that she might perhaps get over this.</p>
+
+<p>The Left of the Chamber have hitherto been opposed
+to the Tonquin and Madagascar Expeditions and to an
+adventurous and Chauvin policy altogether; but if in
+power they would probably go in for pleasing the Chamber
+and the bulk of the people out of doors even more unreservedly
+than Freycinet did.</p>
+
+<p>I should have regretted Freycinet's fall more, if he had
+not taken up the Egyptian question in the way he did.
+Our communications with him on that subject were becoming
+very uncomfortable. I am not very sanguine, however,
+about their being more satisfactory with his successor.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The notion, however, of having M. Floquet as
+Prime Minister frightened every one except the
+extreme Radicals so much that that gentleman was
+unable to form an administration, and the choice
+of the President ultimately fell upon a M. Goblet,
+who was Radical enough for most people and not
+much hampered by pledges and declarations. The
+office of Foreign Minister remained vacant, but, much
+to the relief of Lord Lyons, it was definitely refused
+by M. Duclerc. Lord Lyons had, by this time, had
+no less than twenty-one different French Foreign
+Ministers to deal with, and of these Duclerc was the
+one he liked least. No suitable person seemed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span>
+be available, and it was in vain that, one after the
+other French diplomatists were solicited to accept
+the office. At length a Foreign Minister was found
+in M. Flourens, a brother of the well-known Communist
+who was killed in 1871. M. Flourens was
+completely ignorant of everything concerning foreign
+affairs, and his appointment was perhaps an unconscious
+tribute to the English practice of putting
+civilians at the head of our naval and military
+administrations.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Dec. 21, 1886.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have not yet had the means of improving my acquaintance
+with Flourens, but I expect to have some conversation
+with him to-morrow. He had not a word to say
+about Bulgaria when I saw him on Friday. He did not
+seem to have known anything about foreign affairs before
+he took office, nor to expect to stay long enough in office
+to become acquainted with them. Some people suppose
+that he is to make way for the return of Freycinet as soon
+as the Budget is passed. Anyway, the Goblet Ministry
+is only the Freycinet Ministry over again without the
+strongest man, who was undoubtedly Freycinet himself.
+When Parliament meets, things will be just as they were.
+There will still be in the Chamber 180 Deputies on the
+Right, ready to vote any way in order to make mischief
+and discredit the Republic; about 100 Deputies on the
+extreme Left, intimidating the Government and forcing
+it into extreme Radical measures, they being able to count
+in all emergencies upon getting the vote of the Right to
+turn out a Ministry; and lastly there will be 300 remaining
+deputies, who cannot agree enough amongst themselves
+to form a majority that can be relied upon, who do not at
+all like violent radical measures, but who are too nervously
+afraid of unpopularity to show resolution in opposing the
+extreme Left.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>So far the Comte de Paris's declaration seems simply
+to have made the ultra-Monarchists furiously angry, and
+not to have induced any great part of the Right to think
+of taking the wise course it recommends.</p>
+
+<p>I do not see any outward signs here of the strained
+relations between France and Germany and the imminent
+war between the two countries which the <cite>Standard</cite> announces.
+But it is true that among the French themselves
+some suspicion and distrust of Boulanger's aims are becoming
+more apparent.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The hackneyed saying: <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Plus cela change, plus
+c'est la même chose</i>, was never more appropriate than
+in the case of the change from a Freycinet to a
+Goblet Government; one section of uninspiring
+ministers had merely given place to another, and
+no one in France seemed in any way the better for it.</p>
+
+<p>On New Year's Dav, 1887, President Grévy
+broke out into Latin in congratulating the Diplomatic
+Corps on the already long continuance of
+peace, but a more accurate view of the situation
+was expressed by a French newspaper in the sentence:
+'Jamais année nouvelle ne s'est ouverte au
+milieu d'autant de promesses de paix et de préparatifs
+de guerre que l'année 1887.' 'I do not
+know,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'which is the nation
+which wishes for war. France certainly does not,
+she is, on the contrary, very much afraid of it. But
+one would feel more confidence in peace if there
+appeared less necessity in all countries to be perpetually
+giving pacific assurances. There are
+rumours of a defensive alliance between Russia and
+France. The bond of union between the two countries,
+if it exists, must be simply a common hatred
+of Germany.'</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of the year 1887, the Germans<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+professed to be in dread of an attack from France,
+while the French complained that they were
+threatened by Germany. In France it was believed
+that in August, 1886, preparations had been actually
+made to mobilize the German army, and the language
+held by Boulanger was to the effect that the military
+power of France would be found to be very different
+to what it was in 1870. Meanwhile an unsuccessful
+attempt had been made by those two old Parliamentary
+hands, Freycinet and Ferry, to get rid of
+Boulanger, who was now becoming to be considered
+as equally dangerous both in France and Germany.</p>
+
+<p>It was probably the apprehension caused by the
+presence of this adventurer, whose incapacity was
+as yet imperfectly realized, that was responsible
+for the state of tension and alarm which prevailed
+in France during January and February, 1887.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em><a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Jan. 18, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I saw M. Grévy this morning, and found him, as it
+seemed to me, really alarmed at the possibility of France
+being attacked by Germany. The only overt act he spoke
+of, on the part of Germany, was the increase of the strength
+of the German garrisons in the neighbourhood of the
+French frontier. Grévy himself is most peaceful, and
+quite sincerely so. His natural character and temperament,
+and his interest too, tend that way. He would
+hardly be able to hold his own as President in case of war,
+and there is very little chance of France going to war as
+long as he is the head of the State. Flourens also spoke
+to me of danger to France and Germany when I saw him
+this afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>I think the alarm of Grévy and Flourens was sincere,
+though I do not share it myself at this moment.</p></blockquote>
+<blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In France there is no desire to go to war, and I doubt
+whether she is able, or at all events fancies herself able,
+to cope with Germany.</p>
+
+<p>It is perhaps more difficult to keep her on good terms
+with us. Egypt is a sore which will not heal. There was
+a nasty discussion about Newfoundland Fisheries in the
+Senate yesterday. I send you a full report officially.
+Happily, so far, it has not had much echo in the
+public.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Alarm with respect to Germany continued to
+grow, and was fed by private communications from
+Bismarck, who sent by unofficial agents messages
+to the effect that 'he was all for peace, but that it
+was impossible for him to stand the way that France
+was going on.' These messages came through
+Bleichröder and members of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">haute finance</i> in
+Paris, who expressed the opinion that if Boulanger
+remained in office, war with Germany was certain.
+The <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">haute finance</i> is by no means invariably correct
+in its political judgment, but it seems highly probable
+that the war scares prevalent in 1887 were
+promulgated with the object of getting rid of the
+troublesome firebrand upon whom so much public
+attention was concentrated. The position of
+Boulanger, however, was a strong one, and to dislodge
+him was a work of no slight difficulty. Ever
+since the day when he had been taken into Freycinet's
+Cabinet he had contrived by adroit advertising
+to keep himself before the public, and to distinguish
+himself from his colleagues as exercising a
+separate and commanding influence in the Chambers
+and with the public. In the army he had managed
+to make himself feared by the higher officers and
+assiduously courted popularity with the rank and
+file. In the political world he had at first been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span>
+regarded as being ultra democratic, but now excited
+suspicion by paying court to the Conservatives, and
+by endeavouring, not entirely without success, to
+obtain their good will.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, there was a very general impression
+that he was ambitious, self-seeking, and thoroughly
+unscrupulous; but there were few means of forming
+an opinion as to what his special plans really were,
+if indeed he had formed any. Still he successfully
+flattered the belief of the French that they were
+fast emerging from the eclipse in which their military
+power and reputation were involved in 1870,
+and there were not wanting those who asserted that
+he was inclined to seek a war, in the hope of conducting
+it with success, and so establishing himself
+as a military dictator. Others, influenced by their
+wishes, indulged in the hope that he might be
+meditating a Monarchist restoration under an
+Orleanist or Bonapartist Dynasty. Unsubstantial
+and improbable as these suppositions may have been,
+it was plain that in the army and among the public
+at large there prevailed a vague notion that he might
+be the man of the future, a notion fostered by the
+absence of any one recognized in France as possessing
+conspicuous and commanding abilities, and by the
+craving for a real personality after a long succession
+of second-class politicians.</p>
+
+<p>The embarrassment with regard to Germany
+created by the presence of so disturbing an element
+in the Government as Boulanger did not, contrary
+to what might have been expected, tend to improve
+Anglo-French relations, and a letter from Lord
+Salisbury expresses in forcible terms his dissatisfaction
+at difficulties which seemed to have been
+gratuitously created.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 5, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The French are inexplicable. One would have thought
+that under existing circumstances it was not necessary to
+<em>make</em> enemies&mdash;that there were enough provided for France
+by nature just now. But she seems bent upon aggravating
+the patient beast of burden that lives here by every insult
+and worry her ingenuity can devise. In Newfoundland
+she has issued orders which, if faithfully executed, must
+bring the French and English fleets into collision. At the
+New Hebrides, in spite of repeated promises, she will not
+stir. In Egypt she baulks a philanthropic change out of
+pure 'cussedness.' In Morocco she is engaged in appropriating
+the territory by instalments, threatening to reach
+Tangier at no distant date. And now, just as we are
+entering on pacific negotiations, the French Government
+sent orders to do precisely that which, a month ago,
+Waddington promised they should not do, namely run up
+the French flag at Dongorita.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> It is very difficult to
+prevent oneself from wishing for another Franco-German
+war to put a stop to this incessant vexation.</p>
+
+<p>We have protested earnestly about Dongorita, which
+has more the air of a studied insult than any of the others.
+As to the Newfoundland Fisheries, if they execute their
+threats, they render the passage of a Bait Bill next year
+a matter of certainty. We have strained the good will
+of the colonists very far in refusing to allow it this year.
+The other matters will, I suppose, be the subject of slow
+negotiations.</p>
+
+<p>D'Herbette has made at Berlin more practical suggestions
+as to naming a date for the annexation of Egypt
+than we have yet had from the French Government. I
+hope the large majorities will persuade the French that
+the national feeling is in this instance not in favour of
+scuttle.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>All that Lord Lyons, who was always most
+anxious to make the best case he could for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
+French, was able to say in their defence, was that
+he hoped that it was an exceptionally dark moment,
+and that there must be a change shortly for the
+better.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 18, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The French seem to be more confident of peace and
+altogether in better spirits than they were a few days ago,
+but I do not know that they have any positive facts or
+distinct information to go upon. The hopes of a certain
+number of them rest upon the belief that the Goblet
+Ministry is likely to be upset as soon as the Budget is
+finally disposed of, and that thus Boulanger will be got
+rid of.</p>
+
+<p>The newspaper accounts of Wolff's mission to Constantinople
+have brought Egypt on the tapis again, and as
+anxiety about Germany falls into the background, irritation
+against England comes prominently forward. There
+are, however, some symptoms of a return among wiser
+men to more prudent and reasonable views respecting
+the relations of France towards England. These men
+are alarmed especially respecting the hostility towards
+France which is apparent in Italy, and they see the folly
+of making enemies on all sides. If there should be a new
+Ministry it might possibly pursue a policy more friendly
+towards England with regard to Egypt and other matters.
+The Egyptian question would no doubt become less difficult
+if a change should remove M. Charmes from the Foreign
+Office and put into his place, as Political Director there,
+a man less prejudiced about Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime much amusement has been caused by
+an escapade of Madame Flourens. On Saturday last she
+called upon Countess Marie Münster, and found with her
+Count Hoyos, the Austrian Ambassador. Madame
+Flourens announced loudly that her husband had resigned
+the Foreign Office, because Boulanger had attempted,
+without his knowledge, to send a letter direct to the
+Emperor of Russia by the French Military Attaché, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>
+was to start for St. Petersburg. Hoyos fetched Münster
+himself out of an adjoining room, to hear the story.
+Madame Flourens, it appeared, supposed that Flourens
+was on the point of announcing his resignation to the
+Chamber of Deputies. It turned out, however, that
+Flourens had made a scene with Boulanger at the Council
+of Ministers, had gone away in a huff, but had been subsequently
+calmed by M. Grévy and M. Goblet; no letter to
+the Emperor had been sent, and the resignation had been
+withdrawn. The story had of course spread all over the
+town. In defiance of truth, a <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">communiqué</i> contradicting
+it was inserted in the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Agence Havas</i>, with no other effect
+than that of discrediting the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">communiqués</i> which the
+Government is apt to put into the Havas.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There is so little mention of women in Lord
+Lyons's correspondence that Madame Flourens's
+indiscretion comes as a welcome relief, although
+in all probability it got the unfortunate Count
+Münster into trouble with Bismarck, and afforded
+an excuse for fresh bullying. Count Münster, who
+had been for many years Ambassador in London,
+where he had been extremely popular, found the
+transfer to Paris singularly unpleasant, more especially
+as in order to make things thoroughly uncomfortable
+for him, Bismarck had provided an entirely
+new Embassy Staff.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 19, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *</p>
+
+<p>We are thinking of renewing our negotiations with
+respect to the Suez Canal in a serious spirit. But before
+we sign anything we shall want some satisfaction about
+Dongorita and the New Hebrides, and possibly about the
+Corvée.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I think it was very shabby of the French to open the
+Dongorita affair upon us, just after we had made so material
+a concession upon the subject of the bait in Newfoundland.</p>
+
+<p>Waddington is gloomy and rather ill-tempered&mdash;either
+from the fogs or the crisis. I have not had any further
+talk with him about Egypt lately. I think he avoids the
+subject. Wolff tells me that the French Chargé d'Affaires
+at Constantinople is a mere creature of Nelidoff's. Our
+negotiations are dragging on with little prospect of success.
+We are willing to fix a distant date for our leaving, if we
+receive a treaty power to go back whenever internal or
+external security are threatened. The tone in which both
+France and Turkey have received this proposal may be
+best expressed by the colloquial phrase 'Damn their impudence!'
+I do not expect to carry what I want at
+present, but before modifying these terms, I should like
+to know what is going to happen in Europe.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Sir Henry Drummond Wolff was at this time at
+Constantinople endeavouring to negotiate the Convention
+with regard to the evacuation of Egypt,
+and the French and Russian Embassies were
+actively engaged in the senseless opposition which
+eventually prevented the ratification of the Convention.
+The above letter from Lord Salisbury is
+an additional proof of the honest desire of the
+British Government to carry out the rash undertakings
+which had been given in the past.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, Feb. 25, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The general feeling here seems to be that war has been
+escaped, but still there is a good deal of discontent against
+the foreign policy of the Goblet Cabinet. It seems to be
+considered that the understanding between Italy, Austria,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span>
+and Germany is as good as made, and that the result of
+it will be to put an end to any fear of war between Russia
+and Austria. On the other hand, it is thought that Russia
+will feel it too necessary to watch Germany for it to be
+prudent of her to make an alliance with France, while
+without the alliance of Russia, France of course cannot
+face Germany, particularly as she has almost hostility to
+expect from Italy and no great sympathy to look for from
+England. The policy which has thus isolated France
+from the other Powers is seen to have been a mistake,
+and there seems to be a disposition to throw the blame
+on the Goblet Ministry. If the Goblet Ministry should fall,
+it is not improbable that the new Government might take
+the line of being conciliatory to the neighbouring countries
+and to Italy and England in particular. I am not very
+sanguine about this, but if in the meantime no irritating
+questions come to excite public opinion against us, there
+may possibly be a chance that a change of Ministry here
+would make our relations with France smoother.</p>
+
+<p>My hopes that a change towards England may be in
+contemplation have perhaps been strengthened by a visit
+which I have just had from a person wholly unconnected
+with the French Ministry who evidently came to ascertain
+what were the particular points with regard to which the
+relations between France and England might be improved.
+I said that instead of thwarting us in our endeavours to
+improve the condition of Egypt and put it in a state to
+stand alone, the French might help us; and they could
+not expect comfortable relations with us if they endeavoured
+to stir up other Powers to make difficulties with us about
+Egypt. I mentioned also the New Hebrides question,
+which most certainly ought and might be settled at once.
+I alluded also to those various matters all over the
+world which might be treated in a cordial and not in an
+antagonistic spirit.</p>
+
+<p>P.S.&mdash;I have strong reasons for thinking it very important
+that Waddington should not have the least inkling
+of my having had the above interview, or any communication
+of the kind.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Feb. 26, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I will not mention to Waddington the interview which
+you have had as to English grounds of complaint. I have
+not seen him for ten days: he must have taken huff at
+something.</p>
+
+<p>I think, as the French are coming to their senses, it
+might be well to mention unofficially to Flourens that I
+am quite ready to resume the negotiations about the Suez
+Canal; and that I have good hope of bringing it to a
+successful issue, but that I am hindered by the flag that
+is floating at Dongorita, and by the delay of the French
+in performing their promises as regards the New Hebrides.
+We are being a good deal reproached here, on account of
+our apparent submission to this breach of faith. If these
+two matters are corrected, I shall find it possible, and shall
+be very glad to renew the Suez Canal discussion either
+at Paris or here.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen Karolyi to-day&mdash;an unusual occurrence&mdash;and
+for the first time have had the admission from him
+that a war with Russia was not an impossible contingency.</p>
+
+<p>The Russians are very quiet; and the negotiations
+about Bulgaria do not really advance a bit.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Flourens, in spite of his complete inexperience,
+seems to have realized the simple fact that it
+was not advisable to quarrel with England just at
+the moment when relations with Germany were
+in a critical condition; but unhappily the public
+did not appear to be in an accommodating mood.
+The statements published in the English press respecting
+the Drummond Wolff mission had caused
+great irritation, and what was perhaps more serious,
+had alarmed the French again about the security of
+the coupons. As long as they felt sure that the
+coupons would be paid regularly, and that there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span>
+was no fear of future reduction, they were reasonably
+patient, unless some specially severe blow, such as
+a reduction of the numbers and salaries of French
+officials, as compared with English, was struck at
+their <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">amour propre</i>. Now, however, they were
+beset with the fear that, under what they considered
+to be English mismanagement, they were about to
+lose their money as well as their influence.</p>
+
+<p>In March the Goblet Ministry was already in
+difficulties, and it was believed that Freycinet was
+likely to return to power, although what the precise
+advantages were of these continual changes, no one
+was capable of explaining.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 8, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>By taking credit to himself at the expense of his predecessors,
+in the interpellation yesterday, Goblet has
+stirred up the bile of a large party in the Chamber, and the
+determination to turn his Cabinet out, if possible, has
+revived with fresh vigour. It is supposed that the attempts
+will be made as soon as the Corn Duties Bill is disposed of.
+It seems to be thought that, if it succeeds, Freycinet must
+be Prime Minister; but there appears to be a strong
+feeling against his having the Foreign Office again. He is
+thought to have got France into uncomfortable relations
+with many of his neighbours. In the treatment of the
+Egyptian question he is believed to have sacrificed cordiality
+with England to a desire to regain the popularity
+he had lost by the policy which led to England's occupying
+her present position in Egypt; while his attempt to get
+up an opposition to England on the part of the European
+Powers and his worrying way of dealing himself with the
+British Government about Egypt, are thought simply to
+have excited public opinion on both sides of the Channel
+and to have provoked ill will, without in the least improving
+the position of France. There can be no doubt that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span>
+Freycinet looked upon a success with regard to Egypt as a
+personal necessity for himself, and was much influenced
+in his policy towards England by this feeling.</p>
+
+<p>It is apprehended that unless the <em>prestige</em> of Boulanger
+is put on high again by strong language from Germany,
+there will be no difficulty in obtaining, as a matter of course,
+his fall, with the rest of the Cabinet of which he is a part.
+M. Grévy is believed to be very anxious to be rid of him.</p>
+
+<p>I hear on good authority that the Russians have been
+trying again, though without success, to come to a special
+understanding with the French Government.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>To say that M. Grévy was very anxious to be
+rid of Boulanger was probably an understatement,
+for he could not conceivably have desired anything
+so ardently. But the 'Music Hall St. Arnaud' was
+by no means at the end of his tether, and had contrived
+to advertise himself by egregious conduct
+with regard to the Army Committee of the Chamber
+of Deputies. That Committee had drawn up a
+military Bill, based upon three years' service, and
+Boulanger, on the pretext that it was 'not sufficiently
+faithful to democratic principles,' had, without
+consulting any of his colleagues, written a letter
+condemning the provisions of the bill and proposing
+something quite different. This letter was thoughtfully
+communicated to the press before it reached
+the Committee, and the outraged members of the
+Committee as well as his colleagues were at last
+goaded into resistance. The Chamber condemned
+the attitude of the General towards the sacrosanct
+representatives of the nation; the General himself
+beat a hasty and prudent retreat under cover of an
+apology; the Moderate Republicans denounced him
+as a would-be dictator, and the Ultra-Radicals
+accused him of cowardice in consequence of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span>
+apology. Most men under the circumstances would
+have felt disposed to resign office, but in the case of
+Boulanger it was probably immaterial to him
+whether he was blamed or praised, so long as he
+could keep his name before the public.</p>
+
+<p>It was, and probably is still, a regulation in the
+British Diplomatic Service, that its members should
+retire at the age of seventy, and, as a rule, an Ambassador
+who had attained that age, usually considered
+himself fit to discharge his duties for a
+further period. Lord Lyons, however, was an exception.
+His seventieth birthday fell due in April,
+and a month beforehand he wrote to announce
+that he wished to resign.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 22, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Towards the end of the next month, the time will come
+when I shall be superannuated, and I feel very strongly
+that it will not come too soon. It will not be without a
+pang that I shall find myself no longer a diplomatic servant
+of the Queen, who has ever received my endeavours to
+obtain her approval with the most generous indulgence.
+But the labour and responsibility of this post are becoming
+too much for me, and I shall be anxious to be relieved
+from them when the time fixed by the regulations arrives.</p>
+
+<p>I need not assure you that I shall much regret the
+termination of the official connexion with you from which
+I have derived so much satisfaction.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It may not unfairly be presumed that resignations
+of important official posts are habitually welcomed
+by Governments, as they not only remedy stagnation
+in the public service, but frequently provide
+opportunities for political patronage. It is plain,
+however, that the prospect of losing Lord Lyons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span>
+was looked upon by Lord Salisbury as a genuine
+misfortune, and he did his best to induce him to
+reconsider his decision.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">March 26, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have considered your letter of the 22nd, stating that
+you felt very strongly that the time of your superannuation
+would not come too soon; and though it was a matter
+of very deep regret to me to receive such an announcement
+from you, it was not altogether a matter of surprise; for
+I remembered the language you had used to me when I
+tried to induce you to join us as Foreign Secretary last
+July.</p>
+
+<p>The loss which the Diplomatic Service will suffer by
+your retirement will be profound, and, for the time, hardly
+possible to repair. Your presence at Paris gave to the
+public mind a sense of security which was the result of a
+long experience of your powers, and which no one else is
+in a position to inspire.</p>
+
+<p>In face of the expressions in your letter I feel as if I
+were almost presuming in suggesting any alternative
+course of action. But it struck me that possibly you might
+be willing to make your official career terminate with the
+end of your current appointment, rather than with the
+precise date of superannuation. The effect of this would
+be to prolong your stay at Paris till next December.</p>
+
+<p>My reasons from a public point of view will, I hope,
+strike you at once. We are passing through a very anxious
+European crisis. If any fateful decisions are taken this
+year, it will be within the next three or four months. It
+will add very much to our anxiety to know that the reins
+at Paris are in new hands, which have never held them
+before. This mere fact may even be an element of danger.
+The avalanche hangs so loosely, that any additional sensation
+or uneasiness may displace it. If we could avoid
+a change till the winter it would be a great public advantage,
+even if the change should be inevitable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I hope you will forgive me for having pressed this on
+you in the interests of the public service. Whatever your
+decision may be, I give you the warmest thanks for the
+kind and loyal support which you have always given to
+the policy which it has been my duty to carry out.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>An appeal of this kind from an official chief
+could not well be disregarded, setting aside the fact
+that but few officials can have experienced the
+compliment of being assured that their continued
+service was essential to the peace of Europe. With
+well justified misgivings, Lord Lyons therefore consented
+to remain on until the end of the year,
+knowing perfectly well that his physical energies
+were on the point of exhaustion.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 29, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am deeply touched by your letter of the 26th, and I
+feel that, after what you say in it, I should be extremely
+ungrateful if I were not ready to sacrifice a great deal to
+meet your views.</p>
+
+<p>For my own part I feel that the work and responsibility
+here are an increasing strain both upon my mind and upon
+my bodily health, and I am beset with misgivings lest,
+even in ordinary times, I may be unable to discharge my
+duties with energy and efficiency, and lest, in an emergency
+calling for much labour, I may break down altogether. This
+being the case, it would undoubtedly be a great relief and
+comfort to me to retire on becoming superannuated towards
+the end of next month.</p>
+
+<p>Begging you to take the misgivings into full consideration,
+and to be sure that they have not been conceived
+without good reason, and that they are strongly and very
+seriously felt by me, I place myself in your hands. If
+after giving full weight to them, you still think that it
+would be a satisfaction to you that I should continue to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span>
+hold this post till the winter, and that it would be a great
+public advantage to avoid a change till that time, I am
+ready to stay on, and trusting to your indulgence to do
+my best.</p>
+
+<p>I should, of course, look upon it as quite settled that in
+any case I should retire at latest when my current appointment
+comes to an end at the close of the present year.</p>
+
+<p>If you wish me to hold on, I must ask you what, if
+any, announcement respecting my retirement should be
+made. Up to this time I have simply stated to people
+who have questioned me, that nothing was definitely
+settled. I did not mention to any one my intention to
+write my letter of the 22nd expressing to you my wish to
+retire, nor have I made any one acquainted with my
+having written it, except of course Sheffield, who, as my
+private secretary, made a copy of it for me to keep. The
+question, therefore, as to announcing my retirement remains
+intact.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot conclude without once more saying how much
+I am gratified by the appreciation of my services expressed
+in your letter, and how truly I feel the kindness shown
+by it.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The offer was accepted by Lord Salisbury in
+singularly flattering terms, Queen Victoria also
+expressing much satisfaction at the consent of the
+Ambassador to remain at his post. From Lord
+Salisbury's language, it might be inferred that he
+was in some doubt as to whether his own tenure of
+office was likely to be prolonged.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have had no hesitation in availing myself of your
+kind consent&mdash;though you seemed to doubt whether on
+reflection I should do so. Of course I fully understand
+that you do not feel equal to the amount of exertion which
+you would take in a more favourable condition of health.
+But this circumstance will not detract from the great value
+of your counsel and judgment, nor from the authority
+which by so many years of experience you have acquired.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I quite understand that towards the close of the
+session of Parliament you will require the holiday you have
+been accustomed to take in recent years. I hope also to
+get to a bath at that time&mdash;whether I am in office or not.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Why Lord Salisbury should have spoken so
+doubtfully is not clear, unless instinct warned him
+of Miss Cass, who was the first to strike a blow at
+the Unionist administration. At the end of March
+there reappeared the mysterious emissary who has
+been already mentioned. There are no means of
+actually establishing his identity, but there can be
+little doubt that it was M. de Chaudordy, who represented
+the French Foreign Office at Tours and
+Bordeaux during the war. M. de Chaudordy had made
+friends with Lord Salisbury at the time of the Constantinople
+Conference in 1876, and he was, therefore,
+a suitable person to utilize for the purpose of
+making advances towards a better understanding
+between the two Governments.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, March 29, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>In a private letter which I wrote to you on the 25th of
+last month, I mentioned that I had received a visit from
+a person wholly unconnected officially with the French
+Government, who appeared to have come to ascertain what
+were the particular points with regard to which the relations
+between the English and French Governments might be
+improved. The same person has been to me again to-day,
+and has only just left me. This time he did not conceal
+that it was after being in communication with Flourens
+that he came. He enlarged on the embarrassing and
+indeed dangerous position in which France was placed by
+the adherence of Italy to the Austro-German Alliance, and
+said that M. Flourens was ready to make almost any sacrifice
+to secure the good will of England. I said that there could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span>
+be no great difficulty in this, if only France would abstain
+from irritating opposition to us, and would settle promptly
+and satisfactorily outstanding questions. My visitor answered
+that Flourens conceived that he had sent conciliatory
+instructions to Waddington which would settle these
+questions, and that both Waddington and Florian<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> (who
+had come on leave) reported that there was decidedly a
+<em>détente</em> in the strain which had existed in the Anglo-French
+relations. I said that I was delighted to hear
+it, and that it showed how ready you were to welcome
+all conciliatory overtures. My friend seemed on this
+occasion, as on the last, to wish me to tell him some special
+thing which Flourens might do to please you. I said that
+I should at any rate mention a thing which he might do
+to avoid displeasing you. He might prevent the French
+setting up an opposition to financial proposals in Egypt
+in cases in which all the other Powers were ready to agree.
+My friend spoke of Flourens's readiness to give to Russia
+on the Bulgarian question advice which you might suggest,
+and he mentioned various things which he thought M.
+Flourens might be ready to do to please England. These
+things appeared to me to be rather too grand and too
+vague in character to be very practical. I said, however,
+that I would always bear in mind what he had told me of
+M. Flourens's good dispositions, and would speak frankly
+and unreservedly to the Minister whenever I could make a
+suggestion as to the means of acting upon those dispositions
+in a manner to be satisfactory to England.</p>
+
+<p>The conclusions I drew from the conversation of
+Flourens's friend were that the French are horribly afraid
+of our being led to join the Italo-Austro-German Alliance,
+and that they have been urged by Russia to exert themselves
+to prevent this. I do not conceive that the French
+expect to induce us to join them against the Germans
+and the German Alliance. What they want is to feel sure
+that we shall not join the others against France and Russia.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is somewhat curious that M. Flourens, who
+was evidently desirous of establishing better relations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span>
+with England, should have selected an unofficial
+person for communication, rather than approach
+the Ambassador himself; but perhaps, being quite
+ignorant of diplomatic usage, he considered it
+necessary to shroud his action in mystery. The
+Triple Alliance dated in reality from 1882, Italy
+having joined the Austro-German Alliance in that
+year; but a new Treaty had been signed in the
+month of February, 1887, and caused the French to
+feel a well-justified alarm. In fact, their position
+was anything but a happy one, for it was generally
+believed that the Emperor Alexander III. had
+resolved, since the abortive attempt on his life, that
+he would never ally himself with Revolutionists,
+and that he considered the French to be arch-Revolutionists.
+Perhaps this belief may have
+accounted in some measure for Flourens's amiable
+professions towards England.</p>
+
+<p>In the month of April there occurred one of those
+incidents which are the despair of peaceably minded
+politicians and the delight of sensational journalism
+and of adventurers of the Boulanger type. A certain
+M. Schnaebelé, a French Commissaire de Police, was
+induced to cross the German frontier, and thereupon
+was arrested and imprisoned. The act had the
+appearance of provocation and naturally caused a prodigious
+uproar in France; Flourens endeavouring to
+settle the matter diplomatically and Boulanger seizing
+the opportunity to display patriotic truculence.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, April 26, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>So far as one can judge at present the French are
+irritated beyond measure by the arrest at Pagny, but
+generally they still shrink from war. It will not, I conceive,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span>
+be difficult for Bismarck to keep at peace with them,
+if he really wishes to do so. The danger is that they are
+persuaded that he is only looking out for a pretext, and
+that however much they may now give way, he will be
+bent upon humiliating them till they <em>must</em> resent and resist.
+I don't see that so far the German Government have treated
+the Pagny affair as if they wished to make a quarrel of it.
+The German <cite>Chargé d'Affaires</cite> has taken many messages
+from Berlin to Flourens in the sense that if Schnaebelé shall
+prove to have been arrested on German soil, all satisfaction
+shall be given. But, then, in the Press of the two countries
+a controversy is raging as to which side of the frontier he
+was arrested on, and as to whether or no he was inveigled
+over the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>The French undoubtedly shrink from war, but they
+do not shrink from it as much as they did ten years ago;
+and if the press should get up a loud popular cry, there
+is no Government strength to resist it. I conceive that
+at this moment the Government is pacific, and that it
+does not believe the army to be yet ready. But if, as is
+no doubt the case, the Germans also believe that the
+French army is not as ready now as it will be two or three
+years hence, they may be impatient to begin. In the
+mean time, so far as I can make out, the Pagny affair is
+being treated by the two Governments with each other,
+in correct form diplomatically, and without any apparent
+willingness to embitter matters. I cannot say as much
+for the press on either side, though there are symptoms
+of prudence and caution in the moderate French papers.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Schnaebelé incident was disposed of by his
+release from prison and transfer to another post at
+Lyons; but the agitation did not subside readily,
+and a bill brought in by Boulanger to mobilize an
+army corps caused much disquietude at the German
+Embassy. It was now generally known that Bismarck
+considered Boulanger a danger and desired
+his removal from the War Office; but the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span>
+knowledge of this feeling and the support accorded to
+him by the League of Patriots and other noisy
+organizations rendered this step all the more
+difficult.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 13, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I have not heard of any new incident between France
+and Germany, but the suspicion and susceptibility with
+which the two nations, and indeed the two Governments,
+regard each other, are certainly not diminishing.</p>
+
+<p>In France home politics are in so peculiar a state as
+to be positively disquieting. The Budget Committee and
+the Ministry have come to an open breach, and the Committee
+intend to propose to the Chamber a resolution
+which apparently must, if carried, turn out the Goblet
+Cabinet. This the Chamber would be willing enough to
+do, if it could see its way to forming another Government.
+The plan would be to form a Ministry with Freycinet as
+Prime Minister, but not as Minister for Foreign Affairs,
+and without Boulanger. But then they are afraid to try
+and upset Boulanger, while they feel that to form a new
+Government and put Boulanger in it would be, or might
+be, taken in Germany as a plain indication that they are
+warlike at heart. It is an emergency in which the Chief
+of the State should exert himself; but Grévy's caution
+has become something very like lethargy. In the mean
+time they are letting Boulanger grow up into a personage
+whose position may be a danger to the Republic at home,
+even if it does not embroil the country in a foreign war.
+The redeeming point in all this is that the Government
+does seem to feel that it would not do to be upon bad
+terms with England, and that it would be wise to be conciliatory
+toward us.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Goblet Ministry soon found itself in hopeless
+difficulty over the Budget, and it was plain that
+another aimless change of men was inevitable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span>
+Goblet's Government had lasted for five months
+(inclusive of a prolonged recess), and the real question
+of interest was whether Boulanger was to be a
+member of the new Government or not. If he was
+included in it, it was apprehended that the
+suspicions of Germany would be aggravated; and
+on the other hand, it was doubtful whether any
+Government could be formed without him. An
+ultra-patriotic demonstration in Paris against German
+music, in the shape of Wagner's operas, was
+eloquent of the state of feeling between the two
+nations at the time, and the Government found
+that the only course open to them was to close the
+theatre where the obnoxious productions were to
+have appeared.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 20, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Freycinet appears to have agreed with Grévy to try
+and form a Cabinet and to be hard at work at the task.
+Of course the question is whether Boulanger is or is not
+to be in the new Cabinet? It was believed this morning
+that Grévy and Freycinet had decided upon offering to keep
+him as Minister of War. As the day has gone on, however,
+the belief has gained ground that Freycinet has not found
+colleagues willing to run the risk of war which the maintenance
+of Boulanger would produce, and that he is to
+propose to Grévy a Cabinet from which Boulanger is to
+be excluded. He is, however, to make it an essential condition
+with Grévy that he is to have the power to dissolve
+the Chamber of Deputies in his hands, as without this
+power he does not feel able to form a Cabinet without
+Boulanger, or indeed any Cabinet at all. In the mean time
+the Reds are getting up in all directions addresses and
+petitions in favour of Boulanger, with a view to forcing
+Grévy's and Freycinet's hands and working on their fears.
+If Boulanger is got rid of, the immediate danger of war will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span>
+probably be escaped for the moment. Boulanger's own
+character, and the position in which he has placed himself,
+make him threatening to peace; and the opinion held of
+him in Germany and the irritation felt against him there
+make him still more dangerous.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, May 24, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The last news is supposed to be that Floquet, the
+President of the Chamber, has undertaken the task of
+forming a Ministry, and that he will keep many of the
+outgoing Ministers, Boulanger included. The goings and
+comings at the Elysée; the singular selections of men to
+be Prime Ministers, or quasi Prime Ministers, and the
+apparent want of firmness and inability to exercise any
+influence on the part of the President of the Republic,
+have certainly not increased the reputation of M. Grévy.
+Floquet will, I suppose, be unacceptable to Russia, for
+the Russians have always ostentatiously kept up the show
+of resentment against him for the cry, offensive to the
+Emperor Alexander II., which he raised when that monarch
+visited the Palais de Justice during the Exhibition of
+1867. Boulanger has lately declared that he does not
+want to continue to be Minister, but that if he is Minister,
+he will, whatever Germany may say, continue his mobilization
+scheme, and not relax in his preparations to resist
+an attack from Germany, and to avert the necessity of
+submitting to humiliation.</p>
+
+<p>I think, in fact, that things look very bad for France both
+at home and abroad. I can only hope that as the phases
+of the Ministerial crisis change from hour to hour, you may
+receive by telegraph some more satisfactory news before
+you get this letter.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In course of time a new Ministry was formed
+under M. Rouvier, and the important fact attaching
+to it was that Boulanger had been got rid of. Otherwise
+there was nothing much to distinguish the new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span>
+Ministers from the old, and they seemed disposed
+to angle for popularity in the country much in the
+same way as Freycinet and Goblet.</p>
+
+<p>The object of removing Boulanger had been to
+reassure and placate Germany, but no sooner had
+this been done, than the Government appeared to
+feel alarmed at the danger of incurring unpopularity
+in the country, and hastily announced that the new
+Minister of War would continue to follow in the
+footsteps of his predecessor.</p>
+
+<p>Again, it had been understood that one of the
+objects of the new Government would be to put
+an end to the isolation of France by placing itself
+on more cordial terms with the neighbouring nations
+and especially with England; but what it appeared
+anxious to profess, was the intention of stoutly
+refusing to accept or even acquiesce in the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention respecting Egypt. All this, as
+Lord Lyons observed, might proceed in great
+measure from ignorance and inexperience, and
+might be mitigated by the knowledge of affairs and
+sense of responsibility which accompany office, but
+still it was disquieting: all the more disquieting,
+because the French Foreign Minister never failed
+to intimate that France would never be a party to
+an arrangement which would confer upon England
+an international right to re-occupy Egypt under
+certain circumstances after evacuation, whilst France
+was to be formally excluded from enjoying an equal
+right.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 12, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>Baron Alphonse de Rothschild came to see me this
+afternoon, and told me that the last accounts he had
+received from Berlin caused him to feel more than usual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span>
+alarm as to the feelings of Prince Bismarck and of the
+Germans in general towards France. They did not indeed
+imply that Germany was actually contemplating any
+immediate declaration of war, but they did show that in
+Germany war with France was regarded as a contingency
+that could not be long postponed, and of which the postponement
+was not desirable for German interests. The
+Germans did not seem to be prepared to incur the opprobrium
+of Europe by attacking France without having the
+appearance of a good reason for doing so, but they
+did seem to be looking out impatiently for a plausible pretext
+for a rupture; far from being sorry, they would be very
+glad if France would furnish them with such a pretext.
+Prince Bismarck was evidently not disposed to facilitate
+the task of M. Rouvier's Government, notwithstanding
+the pledges it had given of its desire for peace abroad, and
+the efforts it was making to promote moderation at home.</p>
+
+<p>Baron de Rothschild had, he told me, seen M. Rouvier
+to-day and made all this known to him. He had pointed
+out to him the danger which arose from the sort of coalition
+against France of the Powers of Europe, had dwelt on the
+importance of making almost any sacrifice to break up
+this coalition, and had especially urged the imprudence
+of allowing coldness, if not ill-will, to subsist between
+France and England.</p>
+
+<p>M. Rouvier had expressed an anxious desire to establish
+cordial relations with England.</p>
+
+<p>Baron de Rothschild had answered that the time had
+come to show this by acts, and had strongly pressed M.
+Rouvier to settle without any delay the outstanding questions
+which produced irritation between the two countries.
+M. Rouvier had expressed his intention to do so, and Baron
+de Rothschild had reason to believe that this was also
+the desire and intention of M. Flourens.</p>
+
+<p>I said that I heard this with great pleasure, and that I
+had received with much satisfaction assurances to the
+same effect respecting M. Flourens's sentiments, which had
+come to me indirectly through various channels. I must,
+however, confess that I had not found in M. Flourens
+himself any disposition to push assurance to this effect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span>
+beyond generalities. I had not seen any strong practical
+instances of a desire on his part to give a speedy and
+satisfactory solution to outstanding questions.</p>
+
+<p>Baron de Rothschild observed that what he had said
+on this point to M. Rouvier had appeared to make a
+considerable impression on him.</p>
+
+<p>I said that it so happened that I should in all probability
+have the means of testing this almost immediately. I had
+in fact only yesterday strongly urged M. Flourens to close
+a question, that of the New Hebrides, which was creating
+suspicion and annoyance to England and causing great
+inconvenience in consequence of the very strong feeling
+about it which prevailed in the colonies. The two Governments
+were entirely in accord in principle upon it, and in
+fact it was only kept open by the pertinacity with which
+the French Government delayed to take the formal step
+necessary for closing it.</p>
+
+<p>Baron de Rothschild went on to tell me that in speaking
+of the relations with England, M. Rouvier alluded to the
+convention negotiated by Sir Drummond Wolff at Constantinople,
+and said that he did not see why it should
+produce any lasting disagreement between France and
+England. Whether it was ratified or not, France might
+be as conciliatory as possible towards England in dealing
+with the matter in future. In answer I suppose to a
+remark from Baron de Rothschild, M. Rouvier would seem
+to have said that the Comte de Montebello<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> appeared to
+have gone far beyond his instructions in the language
+he had used to the Porte.</p>
+
+<p>I asked Baron de Rothschild whether M. Rouvier had
+also said that the Comte de Montebello had received any
+check or discouragement from the Government at Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Passing on from this, Baron de Rothschild told me that
+before concluding the conversation, he had pointed out
+to M. Rouvier that the great addition of strength which
+the Ministry had received from the vote of the Chamber
+yesterday, would enable them to act with more independence
+and vigour, and that they might now settle questions
+with England, and establish good relations with her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span>
+without being under the constant fear of a check in the
+Chamber of Deputies.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt that, in fact, the position of the
+Rouvier Ministry has been immensely strengthened by
+the large vote they obtained yesterday on the interpellation
+put forward against them on the subject of Monarchical
+and Clerical intrigues. It is earnestly to be hoped, for
+their own sakes, and for the sake of France, that they
+will turn it to account in order to pursue a more reasonable
+and conciliatory policy towards England, and to take
+stronger and more effectual means of preserving order in
+Paris. The riot at the Lyons railway station seems to
+have done Boulangism harm even among the ultra-Radicals,
+and to have been the main cause of Boulanger's having
+been thrown over by Radical speakers in the Chamber
+yesterday. But it is a very dangerous thing to give the
+Paris mob its head.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Rouvier's friendly assurances with regard to
+England had, of course, been imparted to the Baron
+in order that they might be communicated to the
+British Embassy, but the action of the French
+Government appeared to have very little in common
+with them; nor was there any reason to assume
+that Montebello was exceeding his instructions in
+opposing at Constantinople the ratification of the
+Anglo-Turkish Convention with regard to Egypt.
+The egregious action which forced the Sultan to
+withhold his consent to the Convention, and thereby
+perpetuated the British occupation of Egypt, was
+not the result of the unauthorized proceedings of
+the French Ambassador, but the consequence of
+the deliberately considered joint policy of the French
+and Russian Governments. Incidentally, it may be
+pointed out that the fruitless attempt to negotiate
+the Convention was yet another convincing proof
+of the absolute honesty of British policy with regard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span>
+to Egypt, and the following letter from Lord Salisbury
+shows no satisfaction at the frustration of Sir
+H. Drummond Wolff's mission.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">July 20, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>I am afraid the temper of the French will not make the
+settlement of the Egyptian question more easy. I do not
+now see how we are to devise any middle terms that will
+satisfy them. We cannot leave the Khedive to take his
+chance of foreign attack, or native riot. The French refuse
+to let us exercise the necessary powers of defence unless we
+do it by continuing our military occupation. I see nothing
+for it but to sit still and drift awhile: a little further on
+in the history of Europe the conditions may be changed,
+and we may be able to get some agreement arrived at
+which will justify evacuation. Till then we must simply
+refuse to evacuate. Our relations with France are not
+pleasant at present. There are five or six different places
+where we are at odds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>1. She has destroyed the Convention at Constantinople.</p>
+
+<p>2. She will allow no Press Law to pass.</p>
+
+<p>3. She is trying to back out of the arrangement on the
+Somali coast.</p>
+
+<p>4. She still occupies the New Hebrides.</p>
+
+<p>5. She destroys our fishing tackle, etc.</p>
+
+<p>6. She is trying to elbow us out of at least two unpronounceable
+places on the West Coast of Africa.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Can you wonder that there is, to my eyes, a silver
+lining even to the great black cloud of a Franco-German
+War?</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On account of the tension existing between
+France and Germany, and of the agitation produced
+by the transfer of Boulanger to a command at
+Clermont-Ferrand, it was feared that the National
+Fête of July 14 would be marked by serious disturbances;
+these fears were happily not realized,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span>
+although Boulanger's departure from Paris a few
+days earlier had formed the pretext for a display
+of embarrassing Jingoism. The French Government
+were so apprehensive of an anti-German demonstration,
+that, although Count Münster received the
+usual invitation to attend the Longchamps Review,
+M. Flourens privately begged him to absent himself,
+and the two German military attachés, instead of
+joining the War Minister's Staff in uniform, went
+to the Diplomatic Tribune in plain clothes.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h5><em>Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury.</em></h5>
+
+<p class="p1">Paris, July 15, 1887.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The National Fête of yesterday passed off quietly
+enough. There are said to have been cries in various places
+of 'Vive Boulanger,' and 'À bas Grévy,' but nowhere
+was there anything which assumed anything like the
+proportions of a demonstration. There do not appear
+to have been any cries at all in the army.</p>
+
+<p>The low French papers keep up a constant fire of
+scurrilous language against the Germans and even against
+the Germany Embassy. This sort of thing seems to be
+taken more seriously and to cause more irritation in
+Germany than it would in most countries. Count Münster
+naturally enough did not come to the President's stand,
+to which he and the other Ambassadors were as usual
+invited to see the Review. The German military attachés
+did not go in uniform with the staff of the Minister of War,
+but saw the Review from the Diplomatic Tribune in plain
+clothes. In fact, ill will between France and Germany
+seems to be on the increase. It looks as if the Germans
+would really be glad to find a fair pretext for going to war
+with France. On the other hand, Boulangism, which is
+now the French term for Jingoism, spreads, especially
+amongst the reckless Radicals and enemies of the present
+Ministry. And even among the better classes, warlike
+language and, to some degree, a warlike spirit grows up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span>
+with a new generation, which has had no practical acquaintance
+with war. Abject fear of the German armies
+is being succeeded by overweening confidence in themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The present Ministry seem to have been afraid of
+unpopularity if they abandoned altogether Boulanger's
+absurd mobilization scheme. The Germans seem to be
+taking this quietly. Perhaps they look on with satisfaction
+at the French incurring an immense expenditure
+for an experiment apparently without any practical use
+from a military point of view. Perhaps they believe, as
+many people do here, that the Chambers will never really
+vote the money.</p>
+
+<p>It is supposed that the session will be over next week,
+and I trust that then you will be disposed to receive an
+application from me for leave. I am getting quite knocked
+up by the Paris summer, and am in urgent need of rest
+and country air.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The foregoing letter was one of the last communications
+received from Lord Lyons at Paris,
+and his official career practically terminated a few
+days later, when he left on leave, destined never to
+return to the post which he had so long occupied,
+for the unfavourable view which he held with regard
+to his physical condition was only too completely
+justified.</p>
+
+<p>He appears to have passed the months of August
+and September quietly with his near relatives in
+Sussex. Towards the end of October he must have
+learnt with some surprise that, whereas in March
+he had been most urgently begged by Lord Salisbury
+to remain at his post until the end of the year,
+a successor to him, in the person of Lord Lytton,
+had been appointed, and that there was no necessity
+for him to return to Paris. If he, as would have
+been the case with most people, really felt aggrieved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span>
+at this change of circumstances, there is no trace of
+resentment shown in his correspondence. On the
+contrary, he warmly welcomed the new appointment,
+and at once set about making arrangements for his
+successor's convenience. On November 1, he made
+a formal application to be permitted to resign
+his appointment, was created an Earl, and the
+few remaining letters (the latest bearing the date
+of November 20) deal with business details, and
+unostentatious acts of kindness to various persons
+who had been in his service or otherwise connected
+with him. The very last of all was a characteristic
+communication to Sir Edwin Egerton, the Chargé
+d'Affaires at Paris, respecting the payment of the
+fire insurance premium on the Embassy.</p>
+
+<p>The close of his life was destined to coincide
+dramatically with the close of his official career.
+Intellectually there were no signs of decay; but
+physically he was even more worn out than he
+realized himself. On November 28, whilst staying
+at Norfolk House, he was stricken with paralysis,
+and a week later he was dead, without having in
+the meanwhile recovered consciousness. Thus the
+end came at a moment singularly appropriate to
+his well ordered existence, and to no one could the
+time-honoured Latin epitaph have been applied with
+greater accuracy.</p>
+
+<p>In an earlier portion of this work some attempt
+has been made to portray Lord Lyons's personality
+and to explain the causes of his success as a diplomatist,
+but the best criterion of the man is to be
+found in his letters, which have been reproduced
+verbatim, and may be said to constitute a condensed
+record of the most interesting episodes in English
+diplomatic history during a space of nearly thirty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a></span>
+years. Throughout this long series there is hardly
+to be found an unnecessary sentence or even a
+redundant epithet; there is a total absence of any
+straining after effect, of exaggeration, of personal
+animosity or predilection, or of any desire to gain
+his ends by intrigue or trickery. On the other hand,
+they are marked by profound mastery of detail,
+sound judgment, inexhaustible patience, an almost
+inhuman impartiality, and an obviously single-minded
+desire to do his best for his country as one
+of its most responsible representatives. Such, then,
+was the character of the man, and the general public
+is probably quite unconscious of the inestimable
+value to the country of officials of this particular
+type.</p>
+
+<p>It was Lord Lyons's fate twice to represent this
+country at most critical periods during wars, in the
+course of which, England, while desiring to observe
+the strictest neutrality, aroused the bitterest
+hostility on the part of the belligerents. In spite
+of untiring efforts he had the mortification of seeing
+the relations of England, first with the United States
+and then with France, gradually deteriorate, and
+never experienced the satisfaction, which no one
+would have appreciated more highly than himself,
+of seeing those unfriendly relations converted into
+the condition which now happily prevails; but it
+may be fairly said of him that no one ever laboured
+more assiduously and efficiently to promote peace
+and good will between England and her neighbours;
+that he never made either an enemy or apparently
+a mistake, and that no other diplomatist of his day
+enjoyed to an equal degree the confidence of his chiefs,
+and the regard of his subordinates. Overshadowed
+by more brilliant and interesting personalities, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a></span>
+unobtrusive services of Lord Lyons are unknown
+to the rising generation, and probably forgotten by
+many of those who have reached middle age;
+but in the opinion of the statesman who
+amongst living Englishmen is the most competent
+to judge, he was the greatest Ambassador who has
+represented this country in modern times, and by
+those whose privilege it was to serve under him, his
+memory will ever be held in affectionate remembrance.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX</a></h2>
+
+<p class="p1">LORD LYONS IN PRIVATE LIFE.</p>
+
+<p class="p1"><span class="smcap">By Mrs. Wilfrid Ward.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>It is not uncommon to find a seeming contradiction
+between the official and the private characters of the same
+individual. Extreme reserve, for instance, even an
+astonishing power of silence in conducting official work,
+may not indicate the same power of silence in private
+life, or the same reserve in the life of the affections. In
+Lord Lyons there was no such contrast, and no attempt
+to depict him could pretend to penetrate his extreme
+reserve as to his deeper feelings. This reticence on his
+part must severely limit any account of his <em>vie intime</em>.
+Moreover, curiously enough there is another difficulty in
+describing him which lies in quite an opposite direction.
+Lord Lyons had a keen sense of the ridiculous, and he loved
+the absolute relaxation of talking pure nonsense which,
+however amusing at the moment, would hardly bear the
+strain of repetition. Indeed, very little can be added to
+the history of the public life of a man so absolutely reticent
+as to his feelings, his thoughts, and his opinions, which he
+further concealed rather than revealed by an almost
+burlesque habit of talking nonsense among his intimates.</p>
+
+<p>It would be easy to give many instances of his gift for
+silence when he did not wish to be 'drawn' by his interlocutor.
+A little story told to me by the late Sir Edward
+Blount is a case in point.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Edward, waiting to see Lord Lyons at the Embassy,
+heard talking in the next room which lasted some time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span>
+and soon distinguished the voice of M. Blowitz. As soon
+as he was alone with Lord Lyons he said that he felt
+obliged to warn him that, if he had liked, he could have
+overheard his conversation with the journalist.</p>
+
+<p>'You might,' was the answer, 'have overheard what
+was said by M. Blowitz, but you could not have heard
+anything said by me for the good reason that I said nothing
+at all!'</p>
+
+<p>It was never known to anybody, as far as it is possible
+to ascertain, whether Lord Lyons had ever even contemplated
+marriage, though he certainly did not recommend
+celibacy. 'Matrimony,' he constantly used to repeat&mdash;slightly
+varying the phrase in his favourite <em>Rasselas</em>&mdash;'may
+have thorns, but celibacy has no roses.'</p>
+
+<p>There was at one moment, while he was attached to the
+Embassy at Rome, a rumour that he was engaged to be
+married. Hearing something of it he inquired of a lady
+friend whether she could tell him to whom he was supposed
+to be attached, and later on he discovered that she was
+herself the person in question!</p>
+
+<p>His nature was certainly lonely, and I believe from
+quite early in life he was conscious of suffering from loneliness.
+I have been told of a letter of his written from
+school in which this was quite clearly set forth. In later
+life he would never have expressed so much. What he
+felt and thought on any intimate question can, I think,
+only be inferred by his comments on life in general, or on
+the sorrows and joys of others. Once only I believe did
+he take any part in directly influencing the lives of young
+people in the critical question of marriage. The daughter
+of an old friend, with a courage in her confidence which
+seems to me almost phenomenal, told him the story of a
+mutual affection existing between her and a young man
+who did not seem to her parents to be a sufficiently good
+match. Lord Lyons listened with the utmost attention,
+and eventually interceded with his old friend, speaking
+of the terrible danger of causing irremediable pain to two
+young hearts, and was the means of making these young
+people happy. Was there, perhaps, in this action some
+reminiscence of a possible past happiness lost by himself?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span>
+No one can even make the faintest surmise as to whether
+this was the case. He made no allusion to his own past
+when telling the story.</p>
+
+<p>Of his childhood I know little, but there is a toy preserved
+in the family that gives a curious and characteristic
+foretaste of what he was to become. It is a miniature
+escritoire fitted with pen and paper and seals, and also soap
+and towels, etc. All this was supposed to belong to the
+children's dog, who was promoted in their games to the
+position of an Ambassador, and described as 'His Excellency.'
+There are still existing despatches written to and
+by 'His Excellency' in the handwriting of the four children.</p>
+
+<p>I think he must have been too old to have joined in his
+sister Minna's bit of naughtiness when at Malta she put
+snuff in the guitar of a young exquisite who had provoked
+their mirth, and whose name was Benjamin Disraeli.</p>
+
+<p>He used to say that among his most vivid recollections
+of his boyhood while at Malta, was the unexpected return
+of his father and the fleet. The children had been deeply
+engaged in preparing theatricals which were postponed
+on account of their father's arrival. He remembered his
+guilty feeling that he ought to be glad, and that he was
+not glad at all!</p>
+
+<p>It was not at first intended that Bickerton Lyons should
+enter the diplomatic service; he began life in the navy.
+But Bickerton, unlike his brother Edmund, had no vocation
+for the sea. The sorrow of Edmund's loss, who died
+at Therapia, from a wound received when commanding
+his ship in the Sea of Azoph during the Crimean war, was
+a shadow that never passed from the lives of the other
+three. Bickerton was deeply attached to both his sisters
+and their families. Annie married Baron Wurtzburg, and
+Minna married Lord Fitzalan, afterwards Duke of Norfolk.
+Other relations with whom he was in close intimacy all
+his life were his aunt, Mrs. Pearson and her children,
+especially her daughters, Mrs. Lister Venables and Mrs.
+Little, who both survived him.</p>
+
+<p>All his life Lord Lyons was devoted to children, and
+especially so to the large family of the Duchess of Norfolk,
+with whom he was able to indulge his domestic tastes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</a></span>
+and his love of fun. He spent with them the greater part
+of every holiday, and in the last twenty-five years of his
+life they were frequently with him in Paris. My mother,
+Lady Victoria, the eldest of the family, married very
+young, and my aunt Minna, the second daughter, became
+a Carmelite nun. Mary, the eldest of the sisters who
+remained at home, was Lord Lyons's constant companion
+and secretary. I think she was the only person who did
+not experience the strong sense of his reserve which so
+impressed those who had to do with him even in everyday
+intercourse. In a very serious state of health which
+followed his work at Washington he depended greatly
+on the companionship of his nieces. I have been told that
+for months he could not raise his head, and the only thing
+he could do by himself was to play with glass balls on a
+solitaire board. During this interval in his career, before
+he accepted the Embassy at Constantinople, he had more
+leisure than usual for the society of his sister's family, but
+he had always been devoted to them when they were quite
+little children, and was once described as 'an excellent
+nursery governess.' He said to his sister: 'I could never
+have married; it would not have been right, as I could
+never have loved my own children as much as I love yours.'</p>
+
+<p>Into this near association with him my sisters and I
+were more closely drawn after the death of our parents.
+We had lost our mother in the winter of 1870, and my
+father, James Hope-Scott, died in the spring of 1873. It
+was then that my grandmother took us to live with her at
+Arundel, and we were added to the large family party who
+had often stayed with him in Paris. My own earliest
+recollections of my great-uncle are tinged with an awe
+which no amount of time spent with him ever quite overcame;
+but it did not prevent great enjoyment of all the
+fun we had with him. He was certainly very indulgent
+to the younger members of the family circle, particularly
+my brother, who was some years younger than the rest of
+us, and this was especially the case when we were his
+guests.</p>
+
+<p>I think that what inspired awe was the immense
+strength of character, the reserved force, the severely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span>
+controlled natural irritability. He had, too, a humorous
+vehemence of expression which seemed at times to be a
+safety valve to the forces he had under control, and was
+a reminder of their existence.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose that nothing could be imagined more stately
+and more regular than life at the Embassy in those days.
+The Ambassador himself lived in a routine of absolute
+regularity and extremely hard work. He got up at seven,
+had breakfast at eight, and was, I think, at work by nine
+o'clock. His very small leisure, when he was alone, was
+mostly spent in reading. And this was carefully classified
+in three divisions. In the morning he read history or
+science, in the evening, between tea and dinner, biography;
+while, for an hour before he went to bed he read novels.
+While in France he never left the Embassy. Once a year
+he did leave it for his annual holiday&mdash;generally spent in
+England. He used to boast how many nights in succession&mdash;I
+think in one year it amounted to over 300&mdash;he had
+slept in the same bed. Every afternoon when we were
+with him, he drove with my grandmother, generally in
+the Bois de Boulogne, and in the warm weather we always
+stopped at some <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">café</i> for us children to have ices. He also
+took us to the circus once during each visit until, in later
+life, he became afraid of catching cold. He still occasionally
+went to the theatre, to which he had been much
+devoted as a younger man. We all dined downstairs, and
+he used to like my youngest sister and my brother to sit
+at a little table near the big one and have dessert. He
+insisted on this, and was rather pleased than otherwise at
+the scolding he received from an English friend for keeping
+them up so late. In later life he used to speak of the pretty
+picture the two children had made.</p>
+
+<p>I recollect the extraordinary general sense of importance
+as to his movements in those days, partly on
+account of their phenomenal regularity. I could not
+imagine him ever acting on impulse, even in the matter
+of going up or downstairs. I cannot picture him strolling
+into his own garden except at the fixed hour. This without
+intention added to the dignity of his life which seemed to
+move like a rather dreary state procession.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I wonder if the servants who never saw him break
+through his routine, or lose one jot of his dignity, ever
+guessed at how shy he was of them, or suspected the rather
+wistful curiosity he felt about their lives. I think it was
+Pierre, the butler, who lived with his family in the <em>entresol</em>
+between the two floors of reception rooms in the Embassy.
+Lord Lyons was much interested in their family life, and
+liked to speculate as to what went on there. One inconvenient
+result of his extreme shyness was that when he
+really wished to alter any detail as to the daily routine,
+he could not bring himself to impart his wishes to any of
+the servants. I have often heard him say how tired he
+was of the same breakfast which never varied in the least,
+and he would add that his Italian valet Giuseppe was so
+convinced that it was the only breakfast he liked that when
+he travelled, the man took incredible pains that the coffee,
+the eggs, the rolls, the marmalade, the two tangerine
+oranges in winter and the tiny basket of strawberries in
+summer, should not differ an iota from those served up
+every morning at the Embassy. But Lord Lyons could
+never summon up courage to speak to him on the subject.
+On certain days Pierre undertook Giuseppe's duties, and for
+many years Lord Lyons wished that Pierre would arrange
+his things as they were arranged by Giuseppe, but he never
+told him so. While he grumbled, he was amused at the
+situation and at himself. Indeed, his keen sense of the
+ridiculous and his endless enjoyment of nonsense explain
+a good deal of his life. He used to say that as he was too
+shy to look at the servants' faces, he had learnt to know
+them by their silk stockinged calves. When he dined
+alone he made an amusement of identifying the six or
+seven pairs of calves, and was proud of his success in this
+odd game of skill.</p>
+
+<p>I recall one ludicrous instance of his shyness with
+servants. It was his custom annually when he came to
+stay with us to shake hands with the old family nurse,
+and on one occasion, meeting her on the stairs, he leant
+across the banisters to perform the ceremony with such
+<em>empressement</em> and effort that he broke one of the supports.
+He always afterwards alluded to the extraordinary emotion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span>
+he had shown in this greeting. Nothing is so unaccountable
+as shyness, but it was curious that a man who had seen
+so much of public life and of society should have so much
+of it as he had. I remember once helping him to escape
+with, for him, astonishing speed across the garden of a
+country house, when a very agreeable woman, whom I
+believe he really liked, had come to call; he was as full
+of glee as if he were a boy running away from a school-master.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/i_420.png" width="500" height="292" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">The British Embassy, Paris.</span></p>
+
+<p><em>F. Contet, Paris. Phot.</em></p></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>I don't think that in Paris he ever gave way to such
+impulses; they were the relaxation of a shy nature in the
+holidays.</p>
+
+<p>To return for one moment to Paris. He occasionally
+gave a big official dinner which I don't think he at
+all enjoyed, and of which we knew nothing. But he
+certainly enjoyed small gatherings, especially if they
+included old friends who were passing through Paris,
+although not one word of ordinary sentiment would
+probably pass his lips, nor would one of the day's arrangements
+be changed. He certainly enjoyed the society of
+his women friends, and I liked to watch him talking to
+Mrs. Augustus Craven, the author of the <em>Récit d'une S&#339;ur</em>.
+Two characteristic sayings of his about the Cravens I
+remember. He was always pleased at showing his knowledge
+of the most orthodox and strict views of Roman
+affairs. He used to say that Mrs. Craven could never
+make amends for her conduct at the time of the Vatican
+Council&mdash;when her <em>salon</em> was a centre for 'inopportunist'
+Bishops&mdash;unless she went back to Rome and gave 'Infallibilist
+tea-parties.'</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Augustus Craven, her husband, was intensely
+mysterious in manner, and Lord Lyons used to call him
+'the General of the Jesuits.' Once, on meeting him in
+London, he asked him if his wife were with him. Mrs.
+Craven was staying with Lady Cowper, and Mr. Craven
+answered with solemn, slow and mysterious tones: 'She
+is at Wrest,' and my uncle said 'Requiescat in Pace,' with
+equal solemnity.</p>
+
+<p>I think that with all his natural British prejudices he
+liked French people and their ways. He used to maintain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span>
+that Frenchwomen were more domestic and kept earlier
+hours than Englishwomen. He certainly liked French
+cooking. He spoke once in tones of horror of an Englishman
+who had committed the monstrosity of putting pepper
+on young green peas&mdash;a crime of which a Frenchman was
+incapable.</p>
+
+<p>Many of his opinions, however, like Dr. Johnson's, were
+evoked by the spirit of contradiction, and it was chiefly
+with English people that I heard him talk about the
+French.</p>
+
+<p>In the holidays in England reading aloud was one of
+his chief pleasures. He read much poetry to us at one
+time, but later I think he had to give this up as it tired
+him. At Arundel he wrote his letters in the dressing-room
+opening out of his bedroom. We used to sit there
+waiting for him before the appointed time, making drawings
+in red ink, of which there was always a large supply, when
+he would make a mock solemn entrance, as of a stiff professor.
+We were allowed to scribble during the reading,
+but, woe betide us! if we showed any inattention. He
+read 'Marmion,' Southey's 'Thalaba,' and, I think, 'The
+Curse of Kehama,' also much of Byron, the 'Siege of
+Corinth,' with especial enjoyment. He knew many pages
+of Byron by heart, and we used to get him to repeat any
+amount while out walking. 'Rejected Addresses,' 'Bombastes
+Furioso,' 'The Rape of the Lock' were also among
+the many things he liked to recite. I wish I could remember
+half the things he read or repeated to us. I am
+sure there was no Tennyson, and certainly no Browning.
+He used to jeer at the obscurity of both the Brownings,
+and to mutter such phrases as the 'thundering white
+silence' of Mrs. Browning with intense scorn. I think he
+may have met the Brownings when he was in Rome.
+He saw a good deal of Fanny and Adelaide Kemble at
+that time. He liked Adelaide much the best of the two,
+and used to quote with delight a saying of hers as to the
+Brownings. When she was told of the birth of their son
+she exclaimed: 'There are now then not one incomprehensible,
+or two incomprehensibles, but three incomprehensibles!'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He was always amused at the Kemble grand manner.
+He used to imitate the dramatic utterance with which
+Fanny Kemble frightened a young waiter who had brought
+her some beer. 'I asked for <em>water</em>, boy; you bring me
+<em>beer</em>!'</p>
+
+<p>At that same time he knew Sir Frederick Leighton, and
+they once had a pillow fight! Who could imagine that
+pillow fight who only knew him as Ambassador in Paris?
+He always spoke as if he had enjoyed life in Rome; he
+was devoted to the theatre, and he had much congenial
+society. He used to say, too, that Pius IX. was the most
+agreeable sovereign with whom he ever had diplomatic
+relations.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons's literary tastes were not those of the present
+generation. He declared that he only liked verse that
+rhymed and music with a tune. He loved the sonorous
+sound of Byron as he loved the solemn cadence of Latin
+verse. All the time the love of absurdity was never far
+off. He would suddenly imitate the action of a schoolboy
+repeating Latin verse, first with his arms and then with his
+feet! A stout, very dignified elderly man, in some path
+in the garden, punctuating the verse with the action of his
+feet, is sufficiently surprising. Occasionally he would
+have the oddest freaks of this kind, and I remember an
+afternoon when he took a whim of pretending to be
+imbecile; he made the most extraordinary faces, and not
+a word of sense could be got from him.</p>
+
+<p>Once in a steamer on the lake of Lucerne he insisted on
+his nieces joining him in impersonating a typical family
+of English tourists out for their holiday. He was the
+<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">paterfamilias</i>, one niece was his wife, another the German
+governess, a third his child. In the middle of the performance
+he found that he was being regarded with surprise
+and curiosity by some English society friends whose
+acquaintance with him had hitherto been exclusively in
+the character of a very dignified ambassador.</p>
+
+<p>My aunt, Mary Howard, used to read aloud to him
+by the hour, and we all enjoyed these times immensely.
+It would be difficult to say how often we had 'Pickwick,'
+'Cranford,' 'Rasselas,' 'The Rose and the Ring,' and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span>
+'Mrs. Boss's Niece.' I have never met anybody outside
+that circle who ever even heard of 'Mrs. Boss's Niece;' it
+is a serious loss. To quote at all appropriately from any
+of his favourites was to be exceedingly in his good books
+for the rest of the day. Like the late Lord Salisbury he
+delighted in Miss Yonge; he could not have too many
+pairs of twins, or too large a family circle to read about.
+He loved the analysis of domestic life, and would have been
+ready to canonise any really and genuinely unselfish
+character. Detective stories were a great joy. 'The
+House on the Marsh,' and 'Called Back,' were among the
+most successful. He used to prolong discussion as to the
+solution of the mystery, and would even knock at our
+doors very late at night if he thought he had identified
+the murderer, and mutter in dramatic undertones, 'So-an-so
+was the man who did it.' But the detective story
+was never read before dinner, and to look into the book
+meanwhile was a crime. Anybody who peeped to see the
+end of a novel 'deserved to be dragged to death by wild
+horses.' And there must be no skipping. Only descriptions
+of scenery&mdash;to which he had the strongest objection&mdash;might
+be left out.</p>
+
+<p>The annual holiday was, for the most part, spent
+with the Duchess of Norfolk at Arundel, and later at
+Heron's Ghyll. Sometimes he went to Germany to take
+the waters, in company with his eldest sister, Baroness
+Wurtzburg. When in England he always paid a certain
+number of country house visits. These generally included
+Knowsley and Woburn. The visits that were paid every
+year, I think without exception, were those to Lord Stratford
+de Redcliffe, and to an old schoolfellow&mdash;Major
+Trower, who had been with him at Winchester. Major
+Trower was one of four old Wykehamists who remained
+close friends. The other two had died some time before.
+I think the visit to Raby was annual. He specially
+enjoyed the society of the Duchess of Cleveland and of
+Lady Mary Hope. He was at Raby in the September
+before he died, and I believe that was the last visit he
+ever paid. The famous visitors' book there always amused
+him, and he was fond of quoting from it. One of his own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span>
+contributions I remember was written with mock modesty.
+He took from Lockhart's Spanish ballads the lines:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i0">''Twere better to be silent before such a crowd of folk,</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Than utter words as meaningless as he did when he spoke.'</span><br />
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>His recollections of the society of his youth in these houses
+had some amusing details. I think it was at the Duchess
+of Bedford's that there was a Christmas tree, off which
+each young man visitor was given a piece of flowered silk
+for a waistcoat. Early next morning, at Mr. Lyons's
+suggestion, one of the young men, provided with a list
+of the names and addresses of the tailors employed by
+the others, went up to London and brought back all the
+waistcoats made up in time to be worn at dinner that
+evening. He used to speak with some amusement of
+the ungraciousness of Rogers, the poet, whom he met at
+the Derbys'. On one occasion Rogers had lost his
+spectacles, and Mr. Lyons went a long way in the big
+house to find them. Rogers who was drinking tea took
+the spectacles, but did not thank him, and, a moment
+later, when he heard Mr. Lyons refusing sugar, he observed
+to the company: 'That young man, having nothing else
+to be proud of, is proud of not having sugar with his
+tea!'</p>
+
+<p>I don't suppose that he talked much as a young man,
+and probably he followed the rule he always preached,
+that young men should speak 'little but often.'</p>
+
+<p>Among the few serious sayings to be quoted from him
+was that the great axiom in diplomacy was 'Never do
+anything to-day that can be put off till to-morrow.'</p>
+
+<p>In speaking of Leo XIII. and his successful policy with
+Bismarck, he said: 'Those very clever men succeed by
+doing what no one expects. My success has been made
+by always doing what was expected of me. I always did
+the safe thing.'</p>
+
+<p>In conversation he enjoyed a Johnsonian style of
+repartee. One retort of his had an excellent practical
+result. He acted as a special constable in London during
+the Chartist Riots. Hearing a woman in the dense crowd
+cry out, 'Let me faint, let me faint,' he turned to her at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</a></span>
+once, and said: 'Pray do, madam,' whereupon she recovered
+immediately.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the Berlin Conference when the Disraeli
+party were making the most of the accession of Crete, a
+visitor at the Embassy, gushing over its charms concluded
+with the assertion that Crete was the loveliest island in
+the world. Whereupon Mr. William Barrington (now Sir
+William Barrington) said drily: 'Have you seen all the
+others?' This amused Lord Lyons immensely, and some
+years afterwards when a young lady who was and is still
+famous for her powers of conversation had talked at him
+for some time, he adopted the same method. After a good
+many other sweeping assertions she said of some work that
+had just come out: 'It is the best written book that has
+appeared this century.' 'Ah,' he said, 'have you read all
+the others?' Being alone with her soon afterwards I was
+not surprised at her inquiring of me dubiously whether I
+liked my great-uncle.</p>
+
+<p class="p5">It need hardly be said that, in the matter of his personal
+religion, Lord Lyons was very reticent. He was absolutely
+regular in his attendance at the Sunday service in
+Paris and in England. He was very fond of the singing
+of English hymns.</p>
+
+<p>He never had any sympathy with the ritualist party
+in the Church of England, and was inclined to be sarcastic
+as to those whom he designated 'Puseyites,' as was then
+the custom.</p>
+
+<p>One who knew him very well told me that for a time
+he was somewhat unsettled in the matter of definite
+religious belief. There is also evidence that in middle
+life the idea of joining the Catholic Church had been
+present to him as a possibility. As far as can be known
+it was during the last summer of his life that he began to
+consider the question practically. It is not surprising
+that Lord Lyons, when he took the matter up, showed
+the same characteristics in its regard that he had shown
+in any serious question throughout his life, namely, the
+greatest thoroughness and care in studying the Catholic
+religion and in carrying out its practical side, reserve as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</a></span>
+deep sentiment, not without humorous touches which
+were intensely characteristic. Newman's works formed
+the chief part of his study during those summer months.
+A letter written in that August says of him, 'He is always
+reading Newman.' It was not until shortly before his
+death that he spoke on the matter to any of the family.
+A note in the writing of his secretary and intimate friend&mdash;Mr.
+George Sheffield&mdash;says that he spoke of it six weeks
+before his death. Lord Lyons had known Bishop Butt
+for many years when he was parish priest at Arundel, and
+it was to him that he applied for advice. He studied the
+Penny Catechism most carefully, learning the answers by
+heart, like a child. He began to fulfil the practices of a
+Catholic with great regularity. He went to Mass daily at ten
+o'clock, and adopted little habits of self-denial and showed
+greater liberality in almsgiving. The last honour he ever
+received was the offer of an earldom on his retiring from
+the Paris Embassy. He suggested to Dr. Butt that it
+would be a good act of mortification to refuse this honour,
+but the Bishop would not advise him to do so. He began,
+against his usual custom, to give money to crossing-sweepers
+or beggars in the streets, and I am told by my
+aunt, Lady Phillippa Stewart, that, after returning from
+my wedding, he said to her: 'Is it not customary after
+an event of this kind to give money in alms?' He then
+suggested that he should make some offering to the
+hospitals and asked her to write out the names of
+those she thought would be the most suitable. It was
+about ten days before my marriage in November, 1887, that
+I first heard of his intentions. I learnt it in a fashion
+very characteristic of him. I was not staying in the
+house, but I had been dining with him when he remarked
+casually: 'Really, my austerities are becoming alarming.
+I have given up soup for dinner and jam for breakfast.'
+This struck me as a novel proceeding, as I knew his fondness
+for jam and that the ordinary routine of dinner beginning
+with a clear soup was a fixed ceremonial with him.
+That night I questioned my aunt, who told me that he had
+been for some weeks preparing to join the Church. It was
+at this time that he said to one of the family: 'I am now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</a></span>
+ready to be received as soon as the Bishop likes.' He also
+characteristically consulted his nephew, the Duke of Norfolk,
+as to whether he ought to inform Lord Salisbury of
+his intention of becoming a Catholic. He did not, during
+these weeks, know that he was in any danger. The last
+time I saw my great uncle was at my wedding. He had
+a stroke about ten days afterwards, and to all appearance
+became unconscious. Dr. Butt, knowing what his intentions
+had been, had no hesitation in giving him conditional
+Baptism and Extreme Unction. I was at the funeral at
+Arundel, and saw the coffin lowered into the vault in the
+Fitzalan Chapel, where his sister Minna had been placed
+two and a half years earlier.</p>
+
+<p class="p5">I feel most strongly as I conclude these very imperfect
+notes, how entirely Lord Lyons belonged to a generation
+of Englishmen now long passed away. The force of will,
+the power of self-devotion, the dignity, the reticence, the
+minute regularity, the sense of order, the degree of submission
+to authority and the undoubting assertion of his
+own authority towards others&mdash;all were elements in a
+strong personality. There are, no doubt, strong men
+now, but their strength is of a different kind. Englishmen
+to-day are obliged to be more expansive and unreserved.
+No fixed routine can be followed now as then;
+no man can so guard his own life and his own personality
+from the public eye. Lord Lyons was not of the type that
+makes the successful servant of the democracy. Fidelity,
+reticence, self-effacement, are not the characteristics that
+are prominent in the popular idea of the strong man
+to-day. But no one who knew Lord Lyons can doubt
+that those qualities were in him a great part of his strength.
+He was and must always be to those who knew him very
+much of an enigma, and it certainly would not have been
+his own wish that any great effort should be made to
+interpret his inner life to the world at large.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>INDEX</h2>
+
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Aali Pasha, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_150">150,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_151">151,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_172">172;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Paris Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abdul Aziz, Sultan of Turkey, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_151">151,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_175">175;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">effort for Navy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_152">152;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">dismisses Fuad Pasha, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">unpopularity of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_169">169,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_170">170;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to England, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_171">171,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_173">173.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abdul Hamid, ii. <a href="#Page_108">108,</a> <a href="#Page_208">208;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy of, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reported conspiracy against, ii. <a href="#Page_167">167;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suzerainty in Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_246">246;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">overthrow of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aberdeen, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_11">11.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abolition proclamation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_93">93.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abou Klea, battle of, ii. <a href="#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Adams, Mr., U.S. Minister in London, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_38">38,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_43">43,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_59">59,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_63">63,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_71">71,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_72">72,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_98">98,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_99">99.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Adams, Sir Francis, chargé d'affaires at Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_72">72;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">telegram on Anglo-French sympathies, ii. <a href="#Page_136">136;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Minister at Berne, ii. <a href="#Page_220">220.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Adrianople, railway to Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_176">176.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aehrenthal, Count, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Afghanistan, Lytton's policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_209">209;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">attacked by Russia, ii. <a href="#Page_348">348,</a> <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Africa, west coast, ii. <a href="#Page_409">409.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Alabama</em> incident, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_97">97,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_98">98,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_99">99,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_105">105,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_300">300;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">question revived, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_162">162,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_189">189.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alaska, bought by America, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Albanian league, ii. <a href="#Page_228">228.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alderson, Capt., sent to report on army of the Potomac, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_128">128,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_129">129.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alexander, Emperor of Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_255">255,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_273">273,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_333">333,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_354">354,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_52">52,</a> <a href="#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="#Page_404">404;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Berlin, ii. <a href="#Page_76">76;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendliness to England, ii. <a href="#Page_80">80;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">attempt on life of, ii. <a href="#Page_207">207.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alexandretta, ii. <a href="#Page_150">150,</a> <a href="#Page_151">151.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alexandria, ii. <a href="#Page_172">172,</a> <a href="#Page_188">188,</a> <a href="#Page_273">273;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Anglo-French Naval Demonstration at, ii. <a href="#Page_283">283;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">massacre at, ii. <a href="#Page_285">285;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">bombardment of, ii. <a href="#Page_288">288.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Algeria, position of French in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_199">199,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_271">271,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_159">159,</a> <a href="#Page_249">249.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alsace and Lorraine, question of cession, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_321">321,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_332">332,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_334">334,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_369">369;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French hopes of recovery of, ii. <a href="#Page_103">103,</a> <a href="#Page_135">135,</a> <a href="#Page_195">195,</a> <a href="#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="#Page_346">346;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">trade of, ii. <a href="#Page_14">14.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">America, army, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_45">45,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_47">47,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_48">48,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_79">79,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">methods of recruiting, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_110">110,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_116">116;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">finance, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_57">57;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">slave trade, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_20">20;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">affairs in central, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations between North and South, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_20">20,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_31">31;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with England, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_12">12,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_15">15,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_16">16,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_45">45,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_46">46,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_79">79,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_129">129,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_189">189.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_343">343;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Blockade question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_33">33,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_36">36,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_37">37;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">privateering, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_42">42;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Confederate Government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_53">53;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Southern Confederacy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_31">31,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_33">33,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_36">36;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of Consuls, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_83">83,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Southern activity, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_82">82,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_83">83;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Revolutionary Party, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_80">80;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed foreign intervention, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_91">91,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_96">96;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">rising prices, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_94">94;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">vessel building in England, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_101">101,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_102">102;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of foreigners during, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_106">106</a>-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">seizure of British vessels, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_104">104,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_105">105;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Irish in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_114">114,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Germans in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">British officers sent to follow operations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_128">128;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">M. Mercier on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_85">85.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anarchical plots, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ancona district, Austrian troops in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_3">3.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anderson, at Fort Sumter, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anderson, Mr., attaché at Washington, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Andrassy, Count, ii. <a href="#Page_85">85;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Eastern Question, ii. <a href="#Page_127">127,</a> <a href="#Page_134">134,</a> <a href="#Page_138">138;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. <a href="#Page_194">194.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Andrassy Note, ii. <a href="#Page_95">95.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anglo-Russian Agreement, ii. <a href="#Page_143">143,</a> <a href="#Page_160">160.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. <a href="#Page_140">140-142;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">disclosed to Waddington, ii. <a href="#Page_148">148;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">made public, ii. <a href="#Page_151">151;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">irritation in France, ii. <a href="#Page_152">152,</a> <a href="#Page_159">159,</a> <a href="#Page_163">163.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Annam, French in, ii. <a href="#Page_103">103,</a> <a href="#Page_307">307,</a> <a href="#Page_327">327.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anti-Slavery party in England, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_118">118.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Antonelli, Cardinal, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_4">4,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_184">184.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anzin, ii. <a href="#Page_323">323.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arabi Bey, rebellion of, ii. <a href="#Page_258">258,</a> <a href="#Page_273">273,</a> <a href="#Page_278">278;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Minister of War, ii. <a href="#Page_279">279,</a> <a href="#Page_283">283;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">campaign against, ii. <a href="#Page_295">295,</a> <a href="#Page_296">296.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arago, Emmanuel, succeeds Gambetta as Minister of War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Archibald, Consul, on the kidnapping of recruits, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_112">112.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arcolay pamphlet, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_220">220.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Argyll, Duke and Duchess of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_41">41.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Armenia, ii. <a href="#Page_131">131,</a> <a href="#Page_137">137;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">patriarch question, ii. <a href="#Page_55">55.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Army Purchase Bill, ii. <a href="#Page_9">9,</a> <a href="#Page_12">12.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arnim, Count, Minister at Rome, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Ambassador at Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_14">14,</a> <a href="#Page_16">16,</a> <a href="#Page_27">27,</a> <a href="#Page_30">30,</a> <a href="#Page_60">60,</a> <a href="#Page_68">68,</a> <a href="#Page_140">140;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Thiers, ii. <a href="#Page_31">31;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on French policy, ii. <a href="#Page_45">45;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's dislike of, ii. <a href="#Page_46">46.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arundel, Lyons at, i. 139, ii. <a href="#Page_222">222,</a> <a href="#Page_418">418,</a> <a href="#Page_422">422,</a> <a href="#Page_428">428.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ashman, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Asia Minor, Russian policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_133">133,</a> <a href="#Page_137">137.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Athens, i. 149; Lyons attaché at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_1">1.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Atlantic, coast defence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Augusta, Empress, Bismarck's dislike of, ii. <a href="#Page_80">80,</a> <a href="#Page_354">354.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aumale Duc d', ii. <a href="#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="#Page_7">7,</a> <a href="#Page_16">16,</a> <a href="#Page_44">44,</a> <a href="#Page_48">48,</a> <a href="#Page_51">51,</a> <a href="#Page_56">56,</a> <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="#Page_311">311,</a> <a href="#Page_368">368.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">d'Aunay, M., ii. <a href="#Page_300">300,</a> <a href="#Page_376">376.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austria, relations with Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_202">202;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with France, ii. <a href="#Page_35">35;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military power of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Eastern Question, ii.<a href="#Page_85"> 85,</a> <a href="#Page_127">127;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the Ancona district, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_3">3.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austro-German Alliance, ii. <a href="#Page_194">194,</a> <a href="#Page_199">199,</a> <a href="#Page_205">205,</a> <a href="#Page_398">398.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austro-Prussian War, failure of French policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Azoph, Sea of, ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Bac-ninh, ii. <a href="#Page_324">324.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baden, Grand Duchy of, and Confederation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_276">276,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_190">190,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_36">36;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed neutrality, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bagdad railway, ii. <a href="#Page_151">151.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bahamas, the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_130">130.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baker Pasha, defeat of, ii. <a href="#Page_323">323.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Balkan Peninsula, ii. <a href="#Page_223">223.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bapaume, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bardo, Treaty of the, ii. <a href="#Page_243">243.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baring, Major (Earl of Cromer) in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_189">189,</a> <a href="#Page_322">322,</a> <a href="#Page_352">352;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, ii. <a href="#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and "Modern Egypt," ii. <a href="#Page_295">295.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Barracouta</em>, H.M.S., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barrère, M., ii. <a href="#Page_322">322.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barrington, Mr. (Sir William), ii. <a href="#Page_128">128,</a> <a href="#Page_426">426.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bateman, Sir Alfred, ii. <a href="#Page_253">253.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Batoum, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_138">138,</a> <a href="#Page_143">143.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baucel, M., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_228">228.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bavaria, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Confederation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed neutrality, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bayazid, ii. <a href="#Page_142">142.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baynes, Admiral, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_23">23.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bazaine, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_320">320;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">capitulation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">329.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beaconsfield, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_144">144.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beatrice, Princess, ii. <a href="#Page_162">162.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beauregard, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beaury, plot against Napoleon III., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bedford, Duchess of, ii. <a href="#Page_425">425.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belfort, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_370">370,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_374">374.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belgium, Prince Napoleon on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">trade relations with France, ii. <a href="#Page_25">25;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">neutrality of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_298">298,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy towards, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_113">113,</a> <a href="#Page_124">124,</a> <a href="#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">secret Treaty, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_320">320,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_340">340;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Constantinople Conference, ii.<a href="#Page_109"> 109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="#Page_83">83,</a> <a href="#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belgium, King of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_212">212,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_216">216.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belgrade, Fortress of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">evacuated by the Turks, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belligerent Rights, Exposition of French Jurists on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_44">44,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_46">46,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Benedetti, French Ambassador at Berlin, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Franco-Prussian situation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">affront to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_300">300,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">despatch from, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_304">304;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">meeting with King of Prussia at Ems, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Benjamin, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berlin, Congress at, ii. <a href="#Page_147">147.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Berlin Post</em>, "Is War in Sight" article, ii. <a href="#Page_72">72.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berlin, Treaty of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_227">227;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Layard on, ii. <a href="#Page_160">160.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bermuda, <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_130">i. 130.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berne, ii. <a href="#Page_256">256.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bernstorff, Count, Prussian Ambassador in London, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_196">196,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_256">256,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_259">259,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_260">260,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_304">304,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_309">309,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_323">323,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Belgian affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter from Bismarck, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_261">261.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bert, M. Paul, ii. <a href="#Page_323">323.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berthaut, General, Minister of War, ii. <a href="#Page_115">115.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bessarabia, ii. <a href="#Page_142">142,</a> <a href="#Page_367">367.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bessborough, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_11">11.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beust, Count, Austrian Minister, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_162">162,</a><a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_272"> 272,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_314">314,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_320">320;</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_202">202,</a> <a href="#Page_231">231;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Belgian question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_229">229;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Metternich, ii. <a href="#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beyens, Baron, Belgian Minister, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_213">213.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Biarritz, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Biggar, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_234">234.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Billing, Baron de, plan to relieve Gordon, ii. <a href="#Page_326">326.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Billot, General, ii. <a href="#Page_311">311.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bisaccia, Duc de, French Ambassador in London, ii. <a href="#Page_57">57.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bismarck, Prince, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_162">162,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_192">192,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Luxemburg railway affair, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_213">213;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and German Confederation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_251">251,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_276">276;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Ems, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Vatican, ii. <a href="#Page_30">30,</a> <a href="#Page_68">68;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Emperor, ii. <a href="#Page_62">62,</a> <a href="#Page_120">120;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and disarmament negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_260">260-5,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_270">270-3,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_275">275,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_278">278,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_179">179,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211,</a><a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_214"> 214,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_314">314,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_14">14,</a> <a href="#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="#Page_49">49,</a> <a href="#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="#Page_70">70,</a> <a href="#Page_72">72,</a> <a href="#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="#Page_77">77,</a> <a href="#Page_82">82,</a> <a href="#Page_124">124,</a> <a href="#Page_205">205,</a> <a href="#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">with regard to Austria, ii. <a href="#Page_42">42;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. <a href="#Page_194">194;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Belgium, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Eastern Question, ii. <a href="#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="#Page_97">97,</a> <a href="#Page_231">231;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_150">150,</a> <a href="#Page_297">297,</a> <a href="#Page_325">325,</a> <a href="#Page_338">338,</a> <a href="#Page_339">339,</a> <a href="#Page_352">352;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and France, ii. <a href="#Page_16">16,</a> <a href="#Page_60">60,</a> <a href="#Page_136">136,</a> <a href="#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="#Page_286">286,</a> <a href="#Page_384">384;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">during war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_314">314;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">peace negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_357">357,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_365">365,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_370">370,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_374">374,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_380">380,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_20">20,</a> <a href="#Page_30">30,</a> <a href="#Page_82">82;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and payment of indemnity, ii. <a href="#Page_3">3;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">colonial policy, ii. <a href="#Page_60">60;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and French colonial schemes, ii. <a href="#Page_244">244-5,</a> <a href="#Page_251">251,</a> <a href="#Page_259">259,</a> <a href="#Page_264">264,</a> <a href="#Page_268">268,</a> <a href="#Page_342">342;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russo-Turkish War, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Suez Canal transaction, ii. <a href="#Page_94">94;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and claims of Prussia in Tunis, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_200">200;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Favre, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_316">316,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_318">318,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_321">321,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_323">323,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_324">324,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_352">352;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interviews with Malet, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_319">319;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">with Thiers, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">329,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_331">331,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_353">353,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French views of policy, ii. <a href="#Page_107">107;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Arnim, ii. <a href="#Page_46">46;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Boulanger, ii. <a href="#Page_401">401;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_250">250,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_279">279;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Gramont, <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">i. 307;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Count Münster, ii. <a href="#Page_388">388;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Napoleon III., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_333">333;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Odo Russell, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Waddington, ii. <a href="#Page_168">168;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on himself, ii. <a href="#Page_61">61;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on French Press, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_271">271-2;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the German Press, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">power of, ii. <a href="#Page_53">53,</a> <a href="#Page_73">73;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">illness of, ii.<a href="#Page_290">290.</a></li>
+
+ <li class="isub1">"Bismarck, his Reflections and Reminiscences," quoted, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bizerta, ii. <a href="#Page_243">243.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Black Sea Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_341">341,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_350">350,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_366">366;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">clauses in Treaty of Paris, concerning, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_339">339;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russia policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_127">127.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blairgowrie, Lord Russell at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blanqui, revolutionary leader, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_385">385.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bleichröder, ii. <a href="#Page_384">384.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blignières, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_171">171,</a> <a href="#Page_204">204;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_189">189,</a> <a href="#Page_238">238,</a> <a href="#Page_261">261,</a> <a href="#Page_278">278;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, ii. <a href="#Page_279">279;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Egyptian finances, ii. <a href="#Page_330">330.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blockade, international law concerning, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_97">97.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blount, Sir Edward, ii. <a href="#Page_415">415.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blowitz, M., <em>Times</em> correspondent, ii. <a href="#Page_70">70,</a> <a href="#Page_241">241,</a> <a href="#Page_308">308,</a> <a href="#Page_416">416.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blue Books, publication of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_101">101,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_102">102,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_300">300.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boer War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_49">49;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">pay of men in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_110">110.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bonaparte, Prince Pierre, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_224">244.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bonapartist Party, policy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_364">364,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="#Page_17">17,</a> <a href="#Page_66">66,</a> <a href="#Page_106">106,</a> <a href="#Page_191">191.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bordeaux, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bosnia, ii. <a href="#Page_127">127,</a> <a href="#Page_134">134,</a> <a href="#Page_141">141,</a> <a href="#Page_143">143;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">annexation of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">insurrection in, ii. <a href="#Page_84">84.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx"><em>Bosphore Egyptien</em>, suspended, ii. <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boston, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_73">73,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_75">75;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">harbour, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boulanger, General, ii. <a href="#Page_121">121;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy, ii. <a href="#Page_367">367,</a> <a href="#Page_384">384,</a> <a href="#Page_385">385,</a> <a href="#Page_393">393,</a> <a href="#Page_403">403;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the army, ii. <a href="#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="#Page_383">383;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">popularity of, ii. <a href="#Page_366">366;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Longchamps, ii. <a href="#Page_369">369;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">mobilization scheme, ii. <a href="#Page_401">401,</a> <a href="#Page_411">411;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">transferred to Clermont-Ferrand, ii. <a href="#Page_409">409.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bourbaki, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_354">354;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the military situation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Bourges, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">defeated, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">army not included in armistice, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_360">360.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bourges, Bourbaki at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brassey, Mr., application for railway concession, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_176">176.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bray, Bavarian Minister, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brodie, attaché at Washington, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Broglie, Duc de, at Black Sea Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_341">341;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French Ambassador in London, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22,</a> <a href="#Page_23">23,</a> <a href="#Page_24">24;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in French politics, ii. <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="#Page_67">67,</a> <a href="#Page_100">100;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">becomes Prime Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_111">111;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">unpopularity of, ii. <a href="#Page_113">113.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Browning, Mr. and Mrs., ii. <a href="#Page_422">422.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bruce, Sir Frederick, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_141">141.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brünnow, Baron, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_38">38.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buchanan, President (U.S.A.), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_12">12,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_19">19,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_23">23,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">invitation to Prince of Wales, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_25">25;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter from Queen Victoria, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_26">26.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bucharest, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buffet, M., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_282">282.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bulgaria, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166-8,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_142">142,</a> <a href="#Page_143">143;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed limits of, ii. <a href="#Page_130">130;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Union with Eastern Roumelia, ii. <a href="#Page_360">360;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russia in, ii. <a href="#Page_367">367,</a> <a href="#Page_391">391,</a> <a href="#Page_399">399.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bull's Run, Fight of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_110">110.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bülow, Count von, ii. <a href="#Page_53">53,</a> <a href="#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="#Page_87">87.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bulwer, Sir Henry, at the Constantinople Embassy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_145">145,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">opinion on a Turkish Navy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_152">152.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bulwer, Lady, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bunch, Mr., British Consul at Charleston, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_51">51-53,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_72">72,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_94">94.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burmah, ii. <a href="#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">English in, ii. <a href="#Page_360">360;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">annexation of, ii. <a href="#Page_361">361.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burnley, Mr., Chargé d'Affaires in Washington, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_134">134,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_136">136.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burns, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Busch, M., ii. <a href="#Page_130">130;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">quoted, ii. <a href="#Page_82">82,</a> <a href="#Page_344">344,</a> <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Butt, Bishop, ii. <a href="#Page_427">427.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buyak Dere, ii. <a href="#Page_138">138.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst"><em>Cagliari</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8-11.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cairo, intrigues at, ii. <a href="#Page_87">87,</a> <a href="#Page_258">258;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">British troops enter, ii. <a href="#Page_285">285;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Northbrook mission to, ii. <a href="#Page_332">332.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Calais, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Calcutta, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_223">223.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Calice, Baron, ii. <a href="#Page_130">130.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cambridge, Duke of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_379">379.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">defences of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_43">43,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_49">49,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_72">72,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_80">80,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_132">132,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_134">134,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_291">291;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">despatch of troops to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Reciprocity Treaties, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_123">123.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Caradoc</em>, the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Carafa, Signor, Neapolitan Foreign Minister, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Carey, Capt., ii. <a href="#Page_194">194.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Carnarvon, Lord, resigns office, ii. <a href="#Page_123">123.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cass, Miss, ii. <a href="#Page_398">398.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cass, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_12">12.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cayenne, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_243">243.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ceylon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_223">223.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chalons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_204">204;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French army at i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chambord, Comte de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_364">364;</a> ii. <a href="#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="#Page_9">9,</a> <a href="#Page_18">18,</a> <a href="#Page_21">21,</a> <a href="#Page_25">25,</a> <a href="#Page_56">56,</a> <a href="#Page_57">57,</a> <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="#Page_66">66;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proclamation of, ii. <a href="#Page_7">7;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">White Flag manifesto, ii. <a href="#Page_47">47.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chanzy, General, at Le Mans, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_354">354,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggested President, ii. <a href="#Page_118">118,</a> <a href="#Page_197">197;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, ii. <a href="#Page_305">305.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charles X. of France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charleston, fighting at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_51">51;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">prices in, during war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_94">94.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charmes, M., ii. <a href="#Page_376">376,</a> <a href="#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chartres, Duc de, ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_365">365.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chase, Mr., Secretary of Treasury, U.S., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_43">43,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chasseurs d'Afrique, ii. <a href="#Page_118">118.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chatsworth, Lyons at, ii. <a href="#Page_222">222.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chattanooga, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_120">120.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chaudordy, Comte de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_325">325;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the elections, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy at Tours, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_339">339;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the recognition of the Government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_357">357,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_362">362;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on cession of territory, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">329;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Black Sea Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_366">366,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_371">371;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Constantinople Conference, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="#Page_398">398.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cherbourg, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cherif Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_174">174,</a> <a href="#Page_204">204.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Childers, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_330">330.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">China, French Treaty with, ii. <a href="#Page_327">327;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French war with, ii. <a href="#Page_337">337.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chios, ii. <a href="#Page_159">159.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Chislehurst, Empress Eugénie at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reported review by Napoleon at, ii. <a href="#Page_21">21;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of Napoleon at, ii. <a href="#Page_36">36.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Choiseul, ii. <a href="#Page_231">231.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Christ Church, Oxford, Lord Lyons at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_1">1.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Christiania, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Christians in Turkey, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_160">160,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Civita Vecchia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_180">180,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_55">55.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Claremont, Colonel, British military attaché in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_194">194,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_196">196,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245">245,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_351">351,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on French army, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_281">281.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Clarendon, Lord, interest in Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_6">6,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_174">174;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the <em>Cagliari</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeds Lord Russell as Foreign Secretary, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Roumanian affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Franco-Prussian relations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Napoleon III., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">return to office, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_205">205;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and proposed Turco-Greek Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_210">210;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on foreign affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_214">214,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_216">216;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on French politics, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_231">231,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_237">237,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_251">251,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_256">256,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">views on the plébiscite, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_287">287;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on North American colonies, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_292">292;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and party voting, ii. <a href="#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's tribute to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_279">279;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his private correspondence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_215">215,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_217">217,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_225">225,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_234">234,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_236">236,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_259">259,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_260">260,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_276">276,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_282">282,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_287">287,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Loftus, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_267">267,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_251">251.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Clémenceau, M., ii. <a href="#Page_201">201,</a> <a href="#Page_350">350;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">open letter from de Blignières to, ii. <a href="#Page_279">279.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Clermont-Ferrand, ii. <a href="#Page_409">409.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cleveland, Duchess of, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Coasting trade with U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cobden, on intervention in American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cochin China, ii. <a href="#Page_103">103.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cologne, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Commercial Treaties, Anglo-French negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_239">239,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_243">243,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245">245,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_284">284,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_372">372;</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_7">7,</a> <a href="#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="#Page_14">14,</a> <a href="#Page_33">33,</a> <a href="#Page_43">43,</a> <a href="#Page_163">163,</a> <a href="#Page_165">165,</a> <a href="#Page_206">206,</a> <a href="#Page_252">252,</a>
+<a href="#Page_261">261,</a> <a href="#Page_265">265,</a> <a href="#Page_269">269,</a> <a href="#Page_315">315.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Commune, termination of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_388">388.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Compiègne, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Congo Conference, ii. <a href="#Page_334">334.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Connecticut, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_113">113.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Conolly, General, ii. <a href="#Page_102">102.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Conscription Act, in U.S., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Constantinople i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_5">5;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Embassy at, offered to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position of British ambassador at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_147">147;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">intrigues, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_151">151;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">discontent among Mussulmans, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">railway scheme, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_176">176;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russian policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_52">52,</a> <a href="#Page_124">124;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Moustier's policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Conference at, ii. <a href="#Page_106">106,</a> <a href="#Page_107">107,</a> <a href="#Page_108">108,</a> <a href="#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="#Page_398">398.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Corfu, ii. <a href="#Page_224">224.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cotton trade with America, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_31">31,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_88">88,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_89">89;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">during the war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_118">118,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Courbet, Admiral, ii. <a href="#Page_322">322;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Chinese war, ii. <a href="#Page_337">337.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Courbevoie, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_381">381.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Courcel, overtures from Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_353">353.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Coutouly, M., ii. <a href="#Page_182">182.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Couza, Prince, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_150">150,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_157">157;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">deposed, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cowley, Lord, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_70">70,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_225">225;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Eastern question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_170">170;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Ambassadors' votes, ii. <a href="#Page_9">9;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Napoleon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lord Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cowper, Lady, ii. <a href="#Page_421">421.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Crampton, Sir John, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_41">41,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_42">42.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Craven, Mr. and Mrs. Augustus, ii. <a href="#Page_421">421.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cremer, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_342">342.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Crete, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_148">148,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_300">300,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_159">159,</a> <a href="#Page_426">426;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">insurrection in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_160">160,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed cession to Greece, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Omar Pasha sent to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">settlement in Turco-Greek Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_210">210.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cridland, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Crimean war, allusions to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_4">4,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_49">49,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_129">129,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_170">170,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_229">229,</a> <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cromer, Earl of. <em>See</em> Baring.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Crowe, Sir Joseph, ii. <a href="#Page_196">196,</a> <a href="#Page_253">253,</a> <a href="#Page_323">323.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cuba, United States and, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_15">15.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Curaçoa</em>, H.M.S., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_12">12.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Currie, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_371">371.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Cuvier</em>, the, French gunboat, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Cygnet</em>, H.M.S., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cyprus, ii. <a href="#Page_143">143,</a> <a href="#Page_150">150,</a> <a href="#Page_151">151.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Czacki, Mgr., ii. <a href="#Page_233">233.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Czarewitch, ill-will to Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_255">255,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_260">260.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst"><em>Daily Telegraph</em>, letter on Lyons' opinions, ii. <a href="#Page_129">129.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Daira Land, administration of the, ii. <a href="#Page_340">340.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dallas, Mr., U.S. Minister in London, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_18">18,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_38">38.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Damietta, ii. <a href="#Page_188">188.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Danube, Russian policy, ii. <a href="#Page_145">145.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dardanelles, the, i. 350, ii. <a href="#Page_123">123,</a> <a href="#Page_224">224.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Daru, Count, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_243">243,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_251">251,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_256">256,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_261">261,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_282">282;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_258">258,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_265">265,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_274">274,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on political situation in France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_244">244;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Bismarck's policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_257">257;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the plébiscite, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_289">289.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Davies, Jefferson, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_89">89,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_123">123.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dayton, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_46">46.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Débuts,</em> anti-English articles in, ii. <a href="#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="#Page_376">376.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Décazes, Duc, ii. <a href="#Page_50">50;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French Foreign Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_56">56;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the suzerainty of Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_60">60;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and ministerial crisis, ii. <a href="#Page_67">67;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on foreign affairs, ii. <a href="#Page_68">68;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the war scare, ii. <a href="#Page_71">71,</a> <a href="#Page_83">83;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in Russo-Turkish war, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">internal policy, ii. <a href="#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="#Page_112">112;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggests secret treaty to England, ii. <a href="#Page_113">113.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Declaration of Paris, allusions to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_38">38,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_42">42.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Denmark, Bismarck and, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_272">272,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_278">278;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Danish War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position before Franco-Prussian War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Derby, Earl of. <em>See</em> Stanley.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dervish Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_284">284.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Des Michels, M., ii. <a href="#Page_231">231.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dilke, Sir Charles, ii. <a href="#Page_197">197;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Anglo-French commercial negotiations, ii. <a href="#Page_253">253,</a> <a href="#Page_263">263,</a> <a href="#Page_269">269;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his Cherbourg speech, ii. <a href="#Page_244">244.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Disarmament negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_246">246</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Disraeli, Benjamin (Lord Beaconsfield), ii. <a href="#Page_61">61;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">quoted, ii. <a href="#Page_138">138,</a> <a href="#Page_417">417;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Franco-Prussian relations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Anglo-French relations, ii. <a href="#Page_73">73.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dix, Maj.-General John A., Report to, on recruiting system, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_112">112-3,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_131">131;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and raid of St. Albans, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_135">135.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Döllinger movement, ii. <a href="#Page_31">31.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Domain Land, administration in, ii. <a href="#Page_340">340.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dongorita, ii. <a href="#Page_386">386,</a> <a href="#Page_388">388.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Douglas, Governor, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_19">19,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_43">43.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dragoman system, Lyons dislike of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_150">150,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_175">175.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dresden, Lyons attaché at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Duclerc, M., ii. <a href="#Page_154">154;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">forms a Ministry, ii. <a href="#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">refuses office of Foreign Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_380">380.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ducrot, General, ii. <a href="#Page_111">111,</a> <a href="#Page_115">115.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dufaure, M., in the National Assembly, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_365">365;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">President of the Council, ii. <a href="#Page_119">119;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resigns office, ii. <a href="#Page_167">167.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dufferin, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_284">284,</a> <a href="#Page_287">287;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_297">297,</a> <a href="#Page_299">299,</a> <a href="#Page_317">317.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dulcigno, ii. <a href="#Page_274">274;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">demonstration at, ii. <a href="#Page_228">228;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">surrender of, ii. <a href="#Page_232">232.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dundas, Admiral, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_5">5.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dunkirk, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dupanloup, Mgr., Bishop of Orleans, ii. <a href="#Page_114">114.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Eastern Question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">reopened, ii. <a href="#Page_84">84,</a> <a href="#Page_89">89,</a> <a href="#Page_95">95;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Salisbury's circular on, ii. <a href="#Page_132">132.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Edinburgh, Duke of, offer of throne of Spain to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_200">200.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Egerton, Sir Edwin, ii. <a href="#Page_412">412.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Egypt, affairs of, ii. <a href="#Page_128">128,</a> <a href="#Page_154">154,</a> <a href="#Page_163">163,</a> <a href="#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">crisis in, ii. <a href="#Page_171">171;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">controllers appointed, ii. <a href="#Page_189">189;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">question of independence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_240">240;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Dual Note presented, ii. <a href="#Page_270">270;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed Foreign Commission, ii. <a href="#Page_273">273;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Turkish Commission in, ii. <a href="#Page_284">284;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Conference on situation, ii. <a href="#Page_285">285,</a> <a href="#Page_333">333;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Italy refuses to join England in, ii. <a href="#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Loan Decree, ii. <a href="#Page_357">357;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">question of evacuation, ii. <a href="#Page_389">389;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. <a href="#Page_405">405,</a> <a href="#Page_409">409;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">financial affairs, ii. <a href="#Page_330">330;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed Conference on, ii. <a href="#Page_325">325;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French counter-proposals, ii. <a href="#Page_341">341;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">settlement of, ii. <a href="#Page_347">347;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">English policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_89">89,</a> <a href="#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="#Page_123">123,</a> <a href="#Page_133">133,</a> <a href="#Page_139">139,</a> <a href="#Page_153">153,</a> <a href="#Page_187">187-9;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Anglo-French action in, ii. <a href="#Page_182">182;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Anglo-French relations in, ii. <a href="#Page_246">246,</a> <a href="#Page_258">258,</a> <a href="#Page_296">296,</a> <a href="#Page_302">302,</a> <a href="#Page_304">304,</a> <a href="#Page_375">375;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_103">103,</a> <a href="#Page_386">386;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">fears of English annexation, ii. <a href="#Page_135">135;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French retirement from, ii. <a href="#Page_291">291,</a> <a href="#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">National Party in, ii. <a href="#Page_273">273;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign interests in, ii. <a href="#Page_104">104;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Derby's policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elliot, Sir Henry, ii. <a href="#Page_216">216.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elysée, the, New Year's reception at, ii. <a href="#Page_305">305.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Emancipation of Slaves, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_95">95.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Emly, Lord, letter to Czacki, ii. <a href="#Page_234">234.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ems, interviews at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit of Emperor of Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Enfida estate dispute, ii. <a href="#Page_238">238.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">England, relations with the Papal Government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_4">4;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Neapolitan Government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and with U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_12">12;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Belgian independence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_212">212;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">commercial relations with France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_239">239,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_25">25.</a></li>
+<li class="isub2">(<em>See</em> Commercial Treaties);</li>
+ <li class="isub1">expenditure on armament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_278">278;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position in Franco-Prussian question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_205">205,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_314">314,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peace negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_334">334;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military forces of, ii. <a href="#Page_288">288;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military preparations in Central Asia, ii. <a href="#Page_346">346;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">press in, ii. <a href="#Page_335">335.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Erlanger, Baron Emile d', ii. <a href="#Page_93">93.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Errington, M.P., Mr. G., ii. <a href="#Page_236">236;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">secret mission to the Vatican, ii. <a href="#Page_39">339.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Erskine, Mr., British Minister at Athens, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eugénie, Empress, on foreign affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_179">179,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_191">191;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to the East, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_236">236,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_239">239;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed visit to India, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_222">222;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Queen Victoria's postponed visit, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Spanish affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_205">205,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_308">308,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_309">309,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_316">316;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on home affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_235">235,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245">245;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">withdrawal from politics, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">press attacks on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_244">244;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">a fugitive, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_310">310;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Chislehurst, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_22">22;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_271">271.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">European Conference at Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_85">85,</a> <a href="#Page_106">106;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Berlin, ii. <a href="#Page_125">125,</a> <a href="#Page_126">126,</a> <a href="#Page_147">147.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Exclusion Bill, ii. <a href="#Page_309">309,</a> <a href="#Page_311">311.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Expulsion Bill, ii. <a href="#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="#Page_366">366.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Fabrice, General von, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_3">3.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Faidherbe, General, defeat at St. Quentin, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fair Trade League, ii. <a href="#Page_255">255.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fallières, M., ii. <a href="#Page_309">309,</a> <a href="#Page_312">312.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Faon</em>, the, French gunboat, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fashoda, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_71">71.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Favre, Jules, Minister for Foreign Affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_313">313,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_315">315,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_332">332,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_341">341,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_381">381,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_386">386,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_16">16;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">war policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_310">310;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">meeting with Bismarck, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_316">316</a>-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_324">324;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">advises diplomatists to leave Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_322">322;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Black Sea Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_350">350;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck refuses safe conduct to London, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_353">353;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peace negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_360">360;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy attacked, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_362">362;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the National Assembly, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons appreciation of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fazyl Pasha, and the Young Turk Party, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ferrières, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_321">321.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ferry, M. Jules, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Prime Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_230">230;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_240">240;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Gambetta, ii. <a href="#Page_249">249;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">forms a Ministry, ii. <a href="#Page_312">312;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Foreign Office, ii. <a href="#Page_320">320;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian policy, ii. <a href="#Page_330">330,</a> <a href="#Page_338">338;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in China, ii. <a href="#Page_339">339;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, ii. <a href="#Page_349">349;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Soudan affairs, ii. <a href="#Page_344">344.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fielding, Hon. Percy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fire Island, kidnapped recruits at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_112">112.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fitzmaurice, Lord, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_316">316;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">"Life of Granville," quoted, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Flahault, M. de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fleury, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_217">217;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed Minister at Florence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_230">230;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russo-French Alliance, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_273">273;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lord Clarendon on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_231">231.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Floquet, M., ii. <a href="#Page_404">404;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">duel with Boulanger, ii. <a href="#Page_370">370;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">fails to form an administration, ii. <a href="#Page_380">380.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Florence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons appointed secretary of legation at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_6">6;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons appointed Minister at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Fleury's mission to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_230">230.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Florian, Count, ii. <a href="#Page_399">399.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Flourens, M. Gustave, organizes riot in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_330">330.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Flourens, M., appointed Foreign Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_381">381;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy, ii. <a href="#Page_398">398,</a> <a href="#Page_406">406.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Flourens, Mme., ii. <a href="#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fontainebleau, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_375">375.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Foochow, Chinese fleet destroyed at, ii. <a href="#Page_337">337.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Formosa, blockade of, ii. <a href="#Page_337">337,</a> <a href="#Page_344">344.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Forsyth, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_14">14.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fort Issy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fort Lafayette, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_131">131.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fort Sumter, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fort Warren, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_71">71,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_75">75.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fournier, M., French Ambassador at Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_169">169,</a> <a href="#Page_182">182,</a> <a href="#Page_205">205;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">withdrawn from Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_210">210.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fourtou, M., ii. <a href="#Page_114">114.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">France, internal affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_190">190,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_238">238,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_280">280,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_105">105,</a> <a href="#Page_147">147,</a> <a href="#Page_164">164,</a> <a href="#Page_306">306,</a> <a href="#Page_402">402;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">republic declared, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_237">237,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_310">310;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Constitutional Government in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_290">290;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_271">271;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">government of National Defence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_311">311,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_336">336</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">National Assembly, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_363">363;</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[Pg 436]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+ <li class="isub1">public v. monarchy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_364">364;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">elections in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_227">227,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_360">360,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_97">97,</a> <a href="#Page_114">114,</a> <a href="#Page_116">116,</a> <a href="#Page_237">237,</a> <a href="#Page_363">363;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">unrest among peasantry, ii. <a href="#Page_297">297;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">finances, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_236">236,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Protection v. Free Trade, ii. <a href="#Page_321">321,</a> <a href="#Page_328">328,</a> <a href="#Page_335">335.</a></li>
+<li class="isub2">(<em>See</em> Commercial Treaties);</li>
+ <li class="isub1">press campaigns against England, ii. <a href="#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="#Page_307">307,</a> <a href="#Page_310">310,</a> <a href="#Page_328">328,</a> <a href="#Page_333">333,</a> <a href="#Page_376">376;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">anti-German attacks, ii. <a href="#Page_411">411;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military power of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_257">257,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_369">369,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_59">59,</a> <a href="#Page_102">102,</a> <a href="#Page_356">356;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lord Stanley on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_162">162;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Villiers' report, ii. <a href="#Page_310">310;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_246">246,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_258">258,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_277">277;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">navy of, ii. <a href="#Page_59">59;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_44">44,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_46">46,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_67">67,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_70">70,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_77">77,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_81">81;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Belgium, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in North Africa, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_199">199;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Eastern Question, ii. <a href="#Page_134">134;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">occupation of Rome, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_183">183</a>-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposes cession of Crete to Greece, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Franco-Prussian War, apprehensions of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_185">185,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_195">195;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">war declared, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">causes of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">panic in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_306">306;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggestion for armistice, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_312">312,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_314">314,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bourbaki on the military situation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">peace party, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_328">328;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggestion for European Congress, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_367">367;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggested terms of Peace, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">armistice agreed on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_360">360;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">preliminaries of Peace signed, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_369">369;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">harshness of conditions, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_373">373;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Neutral Powers and, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_371">371;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">the war indemnity, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_369">369,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="#Page_41">41,</a> <a href="#Page_45">45;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">effects on the Embassy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frankfort, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_236">236,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_370">370.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frederick William IV., King of Prussia, ii. <a href="#Page_41">41,</a> <a href="#Page_62">62;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the San Juan dispute, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_19">19;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on German unity, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and army, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247-9,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_252">252,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254-6,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_275">275,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_277">277;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Ems, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_204">204;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendship for Arnim, ii. <a href="#Page_46">46;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="#Page_57">57,</a> <a href="#Page_62">62,</a> <a href="#Page_73">73,</a> <a href="#Page_120">120;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">attempt to assassinate, ii. <a href="#Page_146">146;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">ill-health, ii. <a href="#Page_80">80,</a> <a href="#Page_354">354.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frederick William, Crown Prince of Prussia, on Franco-Prussian relations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the Franco-Prussian War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_309">309;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">peaceful policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">English sympathies, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_343">343;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">conversation with Odo Russell, ii. <a href="#Page_80">80;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_57">57,</a> <a href="#Page_63">63,</a> <a href="#Page_74">74.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Free Trade, decline in France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245">245,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_290">290,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_372">372,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_27">27,</a> <a href="#Page_163">163.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">(<em>See</em> Commercial Treaties and Protection);</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_284">284,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_27">27.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frère-Orban, M., visit to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_219">219.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Freycinet, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_119">119,</a> <a href="#Page_154">154,</a> <a href="#Page_200">200,</a> <a href="#Page_350">350;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeds Waddington at Foreign Office, ii. <a href="#Page_204">204;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his ideal ambassador, ii. <a href="#Page_211">211;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">refuses office in Gambetta Ministry, ii. <a href="#Page_262">262;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">forms Ministry, ii. <a href="#Page_277">277;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">retires from office, ii. <a href="#Page_291">291,</a> <a href="#Page_378">378;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian policy, ii. <a href="#Page_281">281</a>-<a href="#Page_291">91,</a> <a href="#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="#Page_377">377,</a> <a href="#Page_392">392;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern policy, ii. <a href="#Page_223">223.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Friedland</em>, the, sent to Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_238">238.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fuad Pasha, Grand Vizier, on Turkish finance, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Paris Conference, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">dismissal of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alluded to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">151,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_171">171.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Galliera, Duchess of, ii. <a href="#Page_433">43.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gallipoli, ii. <a href="#Page_127">127.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gallway, Colonel, sent to report on army of the Potomac, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_128">128,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_129">129.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Galt, Mr., Canadian Finance Minister, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gambetta, minister of war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_325">325</a><a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">-329,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_336">336,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_351">351,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_360">360;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resigns office, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">recovery of influence, ii. <a href="#Page_98">98;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">dispute with Grévy, ii. <a href="#Page_118">118;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with Prince of Wales, ii. <a href="#Page_156">156;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">growth of power, ii. <a href="#Page_168">168;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on foreign policy of France, ii. <a href="#Page_205">205;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, ii. <a href="#Page_277">277;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Ferry, ii. <a href="#Page_249">249;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">administrative qualities, ii. <a href="#Page_262">262;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">fall from office, ii. <a href="#Page_296">296;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">shot, ii. <a href="#Page_301">301;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death, ii. <a href="#Page_305">305;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy and views of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_362">362,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_363">363,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_370">370,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="#Page_67">67,</a> <a href="#Page_99">99,</a> <a href="#Page_106">106,</a> <a href="#Page_119">119,</a> <a href="#Page_133">133,</a> <a href="#Page_147">147,</a>
+<a href="#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="#Page_198">198,</a> <a href="#Page_226">226,</a> <a href="#Page_237">237,</a> <a href="#Page_266">266;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian policy, ii. <a href="#Page_177">177,</a> <a href="#Page_181">181,</a> <a href="#Page_261">261,</a> <a href="#Page_290">290;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">St. Hilaire on, ii. <a href="#Page_229">229.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gambia, the, ii. <a href="#Page_198">198.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Garibaldi, invades Papal States, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">embarrassing foreign policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177;</a></li>
+
+ <li class="isub1">in Franco-Prussian war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_324">324.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg 437]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx"><em>Gaulois</em>, on Sir J. Drummond Hay, ii. <a href="#Page_329">329.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Genoa, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Germany. <em>See also</em> Prussia and Franco-German War;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Confederation question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_190">190,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_192">192,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_204">204,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_205">205,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_251">251,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_276">276,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_277">277,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_343">343;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and need of seaboard, ii. <a href="#Page_60">60;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Russia, ii. <a href="#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="#Page_324">324;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military power, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_275">275,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_80">80,</a> <a href="#Page_356">356.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gibraltar, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_200">200,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_288">288.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gladstone, on American struggle, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_89">89;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Belgian independence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_212">212,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_214">214,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on a peer's vote, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_225">225,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_336">336;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_250">250,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_259">259;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the plébiscite, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_289">289,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_290">290;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Hohenzollern candidature, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_298">298;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on peace negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_334">334;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Russian sympathies, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern policy, ii. <a href="#Page_228">228,</a> <a href="#Page_231">231;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian policy, ii. <a href="#Page_274">274,</a> <a href="#Page_329">329;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_313">313;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's dislike of, ii. <a href="#Page_353">353,</a> <a href="#Page_354">354;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resigns office, ii. <a href="#Page_356">356;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_334">334,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_347">347.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Globe</em>, and the Anglo-Russian Agreement, ii. <a href="#Page_143">143.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Goblet, M., Prime Minister of France, ii. <a href="#Page_380">380;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy, ii. <a href="#Page_389">389;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">difficulties of, ii. <a href="#Page_392">392.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Godeaux, M., ii. <a href="#Page_172">172.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gontaut, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_29">29.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Goodenough, Captain, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_128">128.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gordon, General, sent to Soudan, ii. <a href="#Page_321">321,</a> <a href="#Page_343">343;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Khartoum, ii. <a href="#Page_326">326;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, ii. <a href="#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gortschakoff, Prince, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_181">181,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_209">209,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_248">248,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_273">273,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="#Page_77">77,</a> <a href="#Page_80">80,</a> <a href="#Page_85">85,</a> <a href="#Page_88">88,</a> <a href="#Page_90">90;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's abuse of, ii. <a href="#Page_168">168.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Goschen, Mr. (afterward Viscount), at Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_210">210,</a> <a href="#Page_223">223.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gozze, Count, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_6">6.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gramont, Duc de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_289">289,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_340">340;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the Hohenzollern candidature, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter from Napoleon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_304">304;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_320">320;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">publishes letter of Beust, ii. <a href="#Page_35">35,</a> <a href="#Page_36">36.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grant, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_372">372.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Granville, Lord, at the Foreign Office, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_343">343,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_383">383;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in Franco-Prussian War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_313">313;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with Thiers, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_316">316;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on revolution in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_379">379;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Free Trade policy, ii. <a href="#Page_27">27,</a> <a href="#Page_257">257;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Egyptian policy, ii. <a href="#Page_274">274,</a> <a href="#Page_277">277;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by Lord Derby, ii. <a href="#Page_54">54;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the Eastern Question, ii. <a href="#Page_231">231;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Franco in Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_250">250;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on peers' voting, ii. <a href="#Page_12">12;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Waddington, ii. <a href="#Page_314">314;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by Salisbury, ii. <a href="#Page_356">356;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_297">297,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_340">340,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_373">373,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_9">9,</a> <a href="#Page_23">23,</a> <a href="#Page_241">241,</a> <a href="#Page_242">242,</a> <a href="#Page_270">270,</a> <a href="#Page_289">289,</a> <a href="#Page_323">323,</a> <a href="#Page_324">324,</a>
+<a href="#Page_329">329,</a> <a href="#Page_332">332,</a> <a href="#Page_346">346,</a> <a href="#Page_348">348,</a> <a href="#Page_353">353;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Gladstone, ii. <a href="#Page_274">274.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Great Lakes, fortification of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Greece, ii. <a href="#Page_183">183;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">financial immorality, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">increase of power, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_164">164;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Turkey, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_209">209,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_89">89;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Eastern question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_160">160,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_131">131,</a> <a href="#Page_223">223;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">frontier question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_207">207,</a> <a href="#Page_227">227,</a> <a href="#Page_229">229.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Greece, King of, ii. <a href="#Page_225">225.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Greeley, Mr. Horace, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_96">96.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Green, Mr., at Bucharest, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_158">158.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grévy, M., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_328">328;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the National Assembly, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_16">16;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">dispute with Gambetta, ii. <a href="#Page_118">118;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">becomes President, ii. <a href="#Page_167">167;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">loss of prestige, ii. <a href="#Page_202">202;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Boulanger, ii. <a href="#Page_367">367,</a> <a href="#Page_393">393;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">New Year's reception, ii. <a href="#Page_305">305;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and peace policy, ii. <a href="#Page_382">382,</a> <a href="#Page_383">383.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grey, General, letter to Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Griffith, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_28">28.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grousset, Paschal, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_383">383.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Halifax, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_73">73,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Halim, ii. <a href="#Page_261">261;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed to make Khedive, ii. <a href="#Page_280">280.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hammond, Mr., Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs, views and opinions of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_63">63,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_77">77,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_86">86,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_172">172.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hauseman, ii. <a href="#Page_46">46.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">d'Harcourt, Emmanuel, ii. <a href="#Page_91">91,</a> <a href="#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="#Page_144">144.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Harney, General. i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_19">19,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_23">23.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Harper's Ferry, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_20">20.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hartington, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_330">330,</a> <a href="#Page_332">332,</a> <a href="#Page_371">371.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hartmann, nihilist, ii. <a href="#Page_207">207.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hatfield, Lyons at, ii. <a href="#Page_222">222.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Havannah, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hay, Sir J. Drummond, ii. <a href="#Page_329">329.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Haymerle and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. <a href="#Page_194">194.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg 438]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Head, Sir Edmund, Governor-General of Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_39">39,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Heneage, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_132">132.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Herat, ii. <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Herbert, Sir Michael, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_90">90.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Herbette, M. d', ii. <a href="#Page_386">386.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Heron's Ghyll, Lyons at, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Herzegovina, ii. <a href="#Page_141">141;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">annexation of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">insurrection in, ii. <a href="#Page_84">84;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Andrassy Note, ii. <a href="#Page_96">96,</a> <a href="#Page_127">127.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hesse, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hicks Pasha, disaster in Soudan, ii. <a href="#Page_320">320,</a> <a href="#Page_325">325.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hobart Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_136">136.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hohenlohe, Prince, ii. <a href="#Page_31">31,</a> <a href="#Page_69">69,</a> <a href="#Page_292">292.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hohenzollern, candidature for Spain, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_296">296,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Prince Charles of, chosen Hereditary Prince of Roumania, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155-157;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">invested at Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_158">158.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holland, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_217">217;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Luxembourg, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign designs on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_304">304,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_83">83;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">suggestions for protection of, ii. <a href="#Page_113">113;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign relations, ii. <a href="#Page_124">124;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Constantinople Conference, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's policy, ii. <a href="#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hope, Sir James, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hope, Lady Mary, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hope-Scott, James, ii. <a href="#Page_418">418.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hotham, Captain, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hovas, Queen of the, ii. <a href="#Page_301">301.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Howard, Lady Mary, ii. <a href="#Page_418">418,</a> <a href="#Page_423">423.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hoyos, Count, ii. <a href="#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hudson, Sir James, note to the Sardinian Government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_10">10.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hugo, Victor, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_224">224,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_363">363,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_370">370,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_371">371;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death and funeral, ii. <a href="#Page_354">354.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hungary, policy of Russia concerning, ii. <a href="#Page_134">134.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hussein Khan, ii. <a href="#Page_216">216.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Iddesleigh, Lord, Foreign Secretary, ii. <a href="#Page_375">375;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, ii. <a href="#Page_383">383.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ignatieff, General, Russian Minister at Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_148">148,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_158">158;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">mission to London, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy, ii. <a href="#Page_128">128,</a> <a href="#Page_130">130.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Imperialists, policy of, ii. <a href="#Page_56">56.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">India, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_205">205.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">International Law on blockade, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_97">97.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Irish emigrants in U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_16">16,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_25">25,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_69">69;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">liability to service, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_114">114,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">secret societies, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Irish Church Bill, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_224">224,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_10">10,</a> <a href="#Page_11">11.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Irish Nationalists, ii. <a href="#Page_232">232.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Isabella, Queen, in France, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ismail, Khedive, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_222">222,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_239">239;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Suez Canal Shares, ii. <a href="#Page_85">85;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Russo-Turkish War, ii. <a href="#Page_110">110,</a> <a href="#Page_155">155,</a> <a href="#Page_171">171;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">warning to, ii. <a href="#Page_177">177;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">deposed, ii. <a href="#Page_185">185;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposal to restore, ii. <a href="#Page_344">344.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Italy, ii. <a href="#Page_55">55;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">neutral policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_298">298,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_321">321;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_164">164;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Savoy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_240">240,</a> <a href="#Page_248">248.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Jahde, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_228">228.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">James river, America, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_83">83.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Janina, ii. <a href="#Page_183">183.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jecker bonds, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jenner, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Johnstone, Mr. Horace, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_127">127.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Joinville, Prince de, ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_7">7,</a> <a href="#Page_34">34.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Journal officiel</em>, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_315">315,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_320">320.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Juarez, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Karolyi, ii. <a href="#Page_391">391.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kars, ii. <a href="#Page_143">143.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kemble, Adelaide, ii. <a href="#Page_422">422.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kemble, Fanny, ii. <a href="#Page_422">422.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kennedy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kentucky, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kern, M., Swiss Minister at Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_255">255.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khaireddin Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_167">167,</a> <a href="#Page_196">196.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khartoum, ii. 322; Gordon in, ii. <a href="#Page_326">326;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">expedition to, ii. <a href="#Page_341">341;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">fall of, ii. <a href="#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khedive. <em>See</em> Ismail.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kiel, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_204">204.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kitchener, Major (Lord), Rochefort's abuse of, ii. <a href="#Page_358">358.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Klazko, Mgr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_272">272,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_278">278,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Knollys, Viscount, ii. <a href="#Page_152">152.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Knowsley, Lyons at, ii. <a href="#Page_222">222,</a> <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kroumirs, the, ii. <a href="#Page_240">240,</a> <a href="#Page_301">301.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Lacour, M. Challemel, ii. <a href="#Page_211">211,</a> <a href="#Page_257">257,</a> <a href="#Page_310">310;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">becomes Foreign Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_312">312;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Egyptian question, ii. <a href="#Page_316">316;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, ii. <a href="#Page_320">320.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lagarde, the Abbé, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_385">385.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Land Bill (English), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg 439]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Landsturm Bill, ii. <a href="#Page_62">62.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lang-Son, French defeat at, ii. <a href="#Page_349">349.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lascelles, Sir Frank, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">La Tour d'Auvergne, La Prince de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_233">233,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_234">234,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_240">240,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_308">308,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_310">310.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">La Valette, M. de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_223">223,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_234">234,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_242">242,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_256">256,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_261">261,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_287">287,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_298">298,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_300">300-303;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on home policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_229">229;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_247">247;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the Hohenzollern candidature, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_295">295;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on political situation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Layard, Mr. (Sir Henry), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_295">295,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reports from Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_123">123,</a> <a href="#Page_127">127;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">the Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. <a href="#Page_140">140,</a> <a href="#Page_142">142,</a> <a href="#Page_143">143;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Treaty of Berlin, ii. <a href="#Page_160">160;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">withdrawn from Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_209">209;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_138">138.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">League of Patriots, ii. <a href="#Page_402">402.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leb&oelig;uf, on France's readiness for war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Le Flô, General, ii. <a href="#Page_29">29;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">conversation with Alexander of Russia, ii. <a href="#Page_52">52,</a> <a href="#Page_54">54.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Legh, Mr. (Lord Newton), ii. <a href="#Page_220">220.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Legitimists, policy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_228">228,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_364">364,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="#Page_18">18,</a> <a href="#Page_25">25,</a> <a href="#Page_56">56;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Comte de Chambord, ii. <a href="#Page_7">7;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed fusion with Orleanists, ii. <a href="#Page_21">21;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">White Flag Manifesto, ii. <a href="#Page_47">47.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leighton, Sir Frederick, ii. <a href="#Page_423">423.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Le Mans, Chanzy at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leo XIII., ii. <a href="#Page_425">425.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lesseps, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_86">86;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Suez Canal Shares, ii. <a href="#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="#Page_93">93,</a> <a href="#Page_321">321;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Soudan expedition, ii. <a href="#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Levy, Mr., and the Enfida estate, ii. <a href="#Page_238">238.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lhuys, Drouyn de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Liberté</em>, publishes secret negotiations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lincoln, President Abraham, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_34">34,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_47">47,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_65">65,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_69">69,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_81">81,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_88">88,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_93">93,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_98">98,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">issues proclamations of Emancipation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_95">95;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the U.S. Army, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_110">110.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lindau, employed as secret agent by Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_46">46.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lindsay, Major-General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_129">129.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lisbon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Little, Mrs., ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lobanoff, Prince, ii. <a href="#Page_130">130.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Loftus, Lord Augustus, British Ambassador at Berlin, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_250">250,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_295">295;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">despatches from, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_273">273,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_276">276,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_293">293;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with Bismarck, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_261">261,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_270">270,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_275">275;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_270">270.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Longchamps, Reviews at, ii. <a href="#Page_368">368,</a> <a href="#Page_369">369,</a> <a href="#Page_410">410.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Longworth, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lord Mayor, in Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_64">64.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lords, House of, Lyons vote in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_226">226,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_9">9,</a> <a href="#Page_336">336.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lorraine. <em>See</em> Alsace and Lorraine.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louis XVI., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louis Philippe, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louis, Prince Imperial, ii. <a href="#Page_102">102;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, ii. <a href="#Page_190">190-193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lumley, British Minister at Brussels, ii. <a href="#Page_75">75.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Luxembourg, report of cession to France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Prussia refuses consent to sell, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">conference in London, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_169">169;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">railway affair, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_257">257;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Commission in London, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_219">219.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lynch Law, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_21">21.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyons, strength of garrisons at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyons, Richard Bickerton Pemell, Lord, early life, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_1">1;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeds to the peerage, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mission to Naples respecting <em>Cagliari</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8-11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">appointed Minister at Florence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">offer of the Washington Legation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">with Prince of Wales in Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_25">25;</a> a G.C.B., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_76">76;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visits to Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_134">134;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">returns to London on account of ill-health, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_89">89,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_136">136;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resigns U.S. Legation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_139">139;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">receives the degree of D.C.L., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">appointed to the Embassy at Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Paris Embassy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">removes with Embassy to Tours, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_322">322;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Bordeaux, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">returns to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_375">375;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">invited to represent England at Berlin Congress, ii. <a href="#Page_125">125;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proffered resignation, ii. <a href="#Page_394">394;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">offer of Foreign Secretaryship, ii. <a href="#Page_371">371;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">termination of office, ii. <a href="#Page_411">411;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">created an earl, ii. <a href="#Page_412">412;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death, ii. <a href="#Page_412">412;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his personal characteristics, ii. <a href="#Page_213">213</a>-<a href="#Page_222">222,</a> <a href="#Page_412">412;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in private life, ii. <a href="#Page_415">415.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Letters from Lyons&mdash;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_152">152,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_213">213,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_219">219,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_224">224,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_227">227,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_228">228,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_230">230,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_233">233,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_235">235,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_239">239,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_244">244,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_248">248,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_256">256,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_273">273,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_280">280,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_283">283,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_288">288,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_290">290.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Earl Cowley, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_154">154,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_158">158,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_174">174.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg 440]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Derby, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="#Page_66">66,</a> <a href="#Page_95">95,</a> <a href="#Page_102">102,</a> <a href="#Page_107">107,</a>
+<a href="#Page_111">111,</a> <a href="#Page_112">112,</a> <a href="#Page_117">117,</a> <a href="#Page_119">119,</a> <a href="#Page_127">127.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Sir C. Dilke, ii. <a href="#Page_254">254,</a> <a href="#Page_225">255.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Granville, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_296">296,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_308">308,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_312">312,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_315">315,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_322">322,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_325">325,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">329,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_350">350,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_367">367,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_371">371,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_374">374,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_376">376,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_380">380,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_385">385,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_386">386,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="#Page_7">7,</a> <a href="#Page_13">13,</a> <a href="#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="#Page_21">21,</a> <a href="#Page_24">24,</a> <a href="#Page_26">26,</a> <a href="#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="#Page_36">36,</a> <a href="#Page_37">37,</a> <a href="#Page_39">39,</a> <a href="#Page_47">47,</a> <a href="#Page_48">48,</a> <a href="#Page_50">50,</a> <a href="#Page_223">223,</a> <a href="#Page_225">225,</a> <a href="#Page_226">226,</a>
+<a href="#Page_229">229,</a> <a href="#Page_230">230,</a> <a href="#Page_233">233,</a> <a href="#Page_235">235,</a> <a href="#Page_239">239,</a> <a href="#Page_243">243,</a> <a href="#Page_247">247,</a> <a href="#Page_248">248,</a> <a href="#Page_249">249,</a> <a href="#Page_258">258,</a> <a href="#Page_261">261,</a> <a href="#Page_262">262,</a> <a href="#Page_263">263,</a> <a href="#Page_265">265,</a> <a href="#Page_271">271,</a>
+<a href="#Page_275">275,</a> <a href="#Page_278">278,</a> <a href="#Page_280">280,</a> <a href="#Page_281">281,</a> <a href="#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="#Page_286">286,</a> <a href="#Page_292">292,</a> <a href="#Page_296">296,</a> <a href="#Page_298">298,</a> <a href="#Page_300">300,</a> <a href="#Page_302">302,</a> <a href="#Page_303">303,</a> <a href="#Page_308">308,</a> <a href="#Page_309">309,</a> <a href="#Page_312">312,</a>
+<a href="#Page_313">313,</a> <a href="#Page_314">314,</a> <a href="#Page_315">315,</a> <a href="#Page_317">317,</a> <a href="#Page_319">319,</a> <a href="#Page_320">320,</a> <a href="#Page_321">321,</a> <a href="#Page_323">323,</a> <a href="#Page_326">326,</a> <a href="#Page_328">328,</a> <a href="#Page_330">330,</a> <a href="#Page_334">334,</a> <a href="#Page_338">338,</a> <a href="#Page_339">339,</a> <a href="#Page_341">341,</a>
+<a href="#Page_342">342,</a> <a href="#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="#Page_350">350,</a> <a href="#Page_351">351,</a> <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Mr. Green, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_158">158.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Mr. Griffith, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_28">28.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Mr. Hammond, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_127">127,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_132">132,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_309">309,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_346">346.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Sir Edmund Head, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_39">39,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Iddesleigh, ii. <a href="#Page_375">375,</a> <a href="#Page_377">377,</a> <a href="#Page_378">378,</a> <a href="#Page_379">379,</a> <a href="#Page_381">381.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Mr. Layard (Sir H.), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_207">207.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Captain Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_5">5.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lady Lytton, ii. <a href="#Page_209">209.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Malmesbury, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_14">14.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Admiral Sir A. Milne, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_104">104.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Viscount Monck, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_123">123.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Duke of Newcastle, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_28">28,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Rosebery, ii. <a href="#Page_363">363,</a> <a href="#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="#Page_366">366,</a> <a href="#Page_367">367,</a> <a href="#Page_368">368,</a> <a href="#Page_374">374.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord John Russell, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_20">20,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_21">21,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_26">26,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_30">30,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_31">31,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_36">36,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_41">41,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_47">47,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_55">55,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_57">57,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_59">59,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_65">65,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_67">67,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_71">71,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_82">82,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_85">85,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_88">88,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_101">101,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_102">102,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_120">120,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_128">128,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_136">136,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_143">143,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_145">145.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Odo Russell, ii. <a href="#Page_30">30,</a> <a href="#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="#Page_51">51,</a> <a href="#Page_129">129.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Salisbury, ii. <a href="#Page_134">134,</a> <a href="#Page_139">139,</a> <a href="#Page_145">145,</a> <a href="#Page_151">151,</a> <a href="#Page_152">152,</a> <a href="#Page_156">156,</a> <a href="#Page_165">165,</a> <a href="#Page_169">169,</a> <a href="#Page_171">171,</a> <a href="#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="#Page_191">191,</a> <a href="#Page_192">192,</a>
+<a href="#Page_195">195,</a> <a href="#Page_196">196,</a> <a href="#Page_198">198,</a> <a href="#Page_202">202,</a> <a href="#Page_204">204,</a> <a href="#Page_357">357,</a> <a href="#Page_371">371,</a> <a href="#Page_383">383,</a> <a href="#Page_387">387,</a> <a href="#Page_388">388,</a> <a href="#Page_389">389,</a> <a href="#Page_392">392,</a> <a href="#Page_394">394,</a> <a href="#Page_396">396,</a> <a href="#Page_398">398,</a>
+<a href="#Page_400">400,</a> <a href="#Page_402">402,</a> <a href="#Page_403">403,</a> <a href="#Page_404">404,</a> <a href="#Page_405">405,</a> <a href="#Page_410">410.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Mr. Seward, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_131">131,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Mr. Stuart, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_139">139,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Lord Stanley (Earl Derby), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_159">159,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_179">179,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_182">182,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_190">190,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Prince of Wales, ii. <a href="#Page_98">98.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyons, Admiral Sir Edmund, first baron, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_1">1.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyons, Captain Edmund, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_5">5,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lytton, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_52">52,</a> <a href="#Page_209">209;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeds Lyons at Paris Embassy, ii. <a href="#Page_411">411;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, ii. <a href="#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">McClellan, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_56">56,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_57">57,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_65">65,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_89">89.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">McHugh, Mr. James, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_131">131.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">McLane, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_14">14.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">MacMahon, Marshal, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_306">306,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_38">38;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeds Thiers as President, ii. <a href="#Page_43">43;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and war scare, ii. <a href="#Page_83">83;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy of, ii. <a href="#Page_56">56,</a> <a href="#Page_67">67,</a> <a href="#Page_97">97,</a> <a href="#Page_105">105,</a> <a href="#Page_111">111;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">character, ii. <a href="#Page_100">100;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Gambetta on, ii. <a href="#Page_100">100;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">election defeat, ii. <a href="#Page_116">116;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resigns office, ii. <a href="#Page_167">167.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">MacMahon, Madame la Maréchale, ii. <a href="#Page_47">47,</a> <a href="#Page_114">114.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Madagascar, ii. <a href="#Page_300">300,</a> <a href="#Page_301">301,</a> <a href="#Page_307">307,</a> <a href="#Page_318">318,</a> <a href="#Page_360">360,</a> <a href="#Page_380">380.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Magee, Mr., Consul at Mobile, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_97">97,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Magicienne</em>, the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_103">103.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Magne, M., finance minister, ii. <a href="#Page_59">59.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Malet, Sir Edward, accompanies Lyons to the Washington Legation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_90">90;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Lyons' work at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_137">137;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">transferred to Lisbon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">accompanies Lyons to Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">emissary to Bismarck, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_318">318;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alluded to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_383">383,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_128">128;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_238">238,</a> <a href="#Page_271">271,</a> <a href="#Page_276">276;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_319">319.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Malmesbury, Lord, foreign secretary, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the <em>Cagliari</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_10">10</a>-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_14">14;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by Lord John Russell, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Malta, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_5">5,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_139">139,</a> <a href="#Page_243">243,</a> <a href="#Page_288">288;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">troops in, ii. <a href="#Page_290">290;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons' boyhood at, ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marne river, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marseilles, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349;</a> riots at, ii. <a href="#Page_248">248.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Martel, M., ii. <a href="#Page_114">114.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Martin, Sir Theodore, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_61">61.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Martino, ii. <a href="#Page_177">177.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marvin, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_143">143.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mary, Grand Duchess, of Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_235">235.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Maryland, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mason, Mr., Confederate delegate to England, seized on board the <em>Trent</em>, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alluded to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_59">59,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_63">63,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_81">81;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">failure of mission to Europe, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Matamoros, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_104">104.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mathilde, Princess, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_223">223.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mayence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_265">265.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg 441]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Mazzinians, revolt of the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mazzini, plot against Napoleon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_188">188.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mediterranean, English power in, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="#Page_113">113,</a> <a href="#Page_140">140,</a> <a href="#Page_200">200;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">fleet ordered to Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_123">123;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Indian troops in, ii. <a href="#Page_132">132.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mehmet Ali, ii. <a href="#Page_276">276.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Menabrea, General, ii. <a href="#Page_294">294;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Sir J. Drummond Hay, ii. <a href="#Page_329">329;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Ministry, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mentana, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mercantile Marine Law in France, ii. <a href="#Page_24">24.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mercier, M., French Minister in U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_32">32-34,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_46">46,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_66">66,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendly relations with Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_44">44,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on <em>Trent</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_68">68,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_70">70;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visits Confederate headquarters, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_82">82;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_82">82;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposal of foreign intervention, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_96">96.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Merv, ii. <a href="#Page_325">325.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mesopotamia, Russian policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Metternich, Prince, Austrian Ambassador in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_287">287,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_318">318,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter from Beust, ii. <a href="#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Metz, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_304">304,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French army at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_321">321,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">capitulation of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">329,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_351">351.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mexico, United States policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_13">13,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_21">21;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">expedition against, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_70">70;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_218">218;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Emperor of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Michel, Louise, ii. <a href="#Page_316">316.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Midhat Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_196">196.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Military attachés, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_120">120.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Military efficiency, Lord Palmerston on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_48">48.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Militia regiments in U.S., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_47">47,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Milne, Admiral Sir A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_39">39,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_52">52,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_58">58,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_59">59,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_104">104,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Missouri, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mobile, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_97">97,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mohrenheim, Baron, ii. <a href="#Page_325">325.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_148">148-150.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moltke, General von, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_354">354,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_374">374,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_30">30;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Germany's position in Europe, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_196">196;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Franco-Prussian relations, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on relations with Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_202">202;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the war scare, ii. <a href="#Page_74">74.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Monck, Lord, Governor-General of Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_125">125,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_126">126;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Canadian defence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_132">132,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Moniteur</em>, article in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_159">159.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Monroe doctrine, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_23">23.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Monson, Mr., attaché at Washington, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montebello, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_165">165;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern policy, ii.<a href="#Page_225"> 225,</a> <a href="#Page_407">407.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montenegro, ii. <a href="#Page_142">142,</a> <a href="#Page_227">227;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">surrender of Dulcigno to, ii. <a href="#Page_232">232;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Prince of, ii. <a href="#Page_226">226.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montpensier, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moore, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Morier, Sir Robert, quoted, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_344">344,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_82">82.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Morocco, French policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_386">386.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Morrill Tariff (U.S.), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_57">57.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moscow, coronation, ii. <a href="#Page_314">314.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mouchy, Duc de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_233">233.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moustier, Marquis de, French Ambassador at Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_147">147,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_148">148,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Roumanian difficulty, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_158">158;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_192">192;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_195">195;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by de la Valette, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alluded to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_202">202,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Münster, Count, German Ambassador in London, ii. <a href="#Page_75">75;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the German army, ii. <a href="#Page_80">80;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and French policy in Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_139">139;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at French Embassy, ii. <a href="#Page_388">388,</a> <a href="#Page_410">410.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Münster, Countess Marie, ii. <a href="#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Murat, Prince Joachim, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_233">233.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Muscovite party, and Germany, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_255">255.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mussulmans, and the Roman Catholic Church, ii. <a href="#Page_4">4;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">population in Turkey, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">discontent among, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position in Bulgaria, ii. <a href="#Page_227">227.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Musurus Pasha, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_152">152,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_171">171,</a> <a href="#Page_348">ii. 348.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Naples, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Napoleon III., Emperor of France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposal of intervention in American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Pro-Russian sympathies, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165.</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_170">170;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_183">183,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_213">213,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_215">215.</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_220">220,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_238">238;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on foreign policy of Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_192">192;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Franco-Prussian situation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Spanish affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">love of Conferences, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_209">209;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">ill-health of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_236">236;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">plot, against, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">position in France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_235">235;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">home policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_227">227-9,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_232">232,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_234">234,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_237">237,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_240">240,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_250">250;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Constitutional Government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_190">190,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_274">274;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the plébiscite, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_280">280,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_291">291;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">disposition for peace, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_191">191,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_296">296;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">with the army, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">question of restoration, ii. <a href="#Page_17">17;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Chislehurst, ii. <a href="#Page_21">21;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, ii. <a href="#Page_36">36;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_320">320,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_333">333;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendship for Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Gramont, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_304">304.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg 442]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Napoleon, Prince, on the "Roman" question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_181">181;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on French foreign policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_185">185;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on war with Germany, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_191">191,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_194">194,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Germany, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_191">191;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Proclamation denouncing the Republic, ii. <a href="#Page_305">305,</a> <a href="#Page_309">309;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">arrest, ii. <a href="#Page_308">308;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">release, ii. <a href="#Page_311">311;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">expulsion from France, ii. <a href="#Page_366">366;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alluded to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_235">235,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="#Page_191">191.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">National Assembly, at Versailles, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_373">373.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">National Guards, defection of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_376">376;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Courbevoie, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_381">381.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Neapolitan troops, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nelidoff, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_389">389.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Newcastle, Duke of, Colonial Secretary, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_24">24,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_28">28,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Newfoundland Fisheries, ii. <a href="#Page_103">103,</a> <a href="#Page_153">153,</a> <a href="#Page_156">156,</a> <a href="#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="#Page_384">384,</a> <a href="#Page_386">386.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Newfoundland, Governor of, on colonial questions, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_292">292.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">New Hampshire, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_113">113.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">New Hebrides, ii. <a href="#Page_314">314,</a> <a href="#Page_374">374,</a> <a href="#Page_386">386,</a> <a href="#Page_388">388,</a> <a href="#Page_390">390,</a> <a href="#Page_407">407,</a> <a href="#Page_409">409.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">New Orleans, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_83">83;</a> captured, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_93">93.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">New York, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_111">111,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_113">113,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit of Russian squadron to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_120">120.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nice, ii. <a href="#Page_26">26.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nicholas, Grand Duke, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Niel, Marshal, orations by, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_196">196.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nigra, Italian minister in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Noailles, Marquis de, ii. <a href="#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="#Page_287">287.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nobiling, attempt to assassinate German Emperor, ii. <a href="#Page_146">146.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Noir, Victor, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_244">244.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Norfolk, America, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_83">83.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Norfolk, Duke of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Norfolk, Duchess of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_139">139,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_218">218,</a> <a href="#Page_373">373,</a> <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Normanby, Lord, Minister at Florence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_7">7,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Parliamentary voting, ii. <a href="#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Northbrook, Lord, mission to Cairo, ii. <a href="#Page_332">332;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">return to England, ii. <a href="#Page_337">337.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">North Carolina, revolt in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>North German Gazette</em>, articles in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">North Sea, Prussian fortifications on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_265">265.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nothomb, Baron, ii. <a href="#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="#Page_76">76.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nubar Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_171">171,</a> <a href="#Page_204">204;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Egyptian situation, ii. <a href="#Page_278">278.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nuncio, the, in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_287">287-8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Oldenburg, Duke of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ollivier, M. Emile, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_240">240,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_35">35;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">ministry of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_243">243;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the plébiscite, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_284">284,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_286">286;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_248">248,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Omar Pasha, sent to Crete, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ordega, M., French Minister at Tangier, ii. <a href="#Page_329">329.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Orénoque</em>, at Civita Vecchia, ii. <a href="#Page_55">55.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Oreto</em>, the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_99">99.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orleans, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_336">336,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orleanists, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_228">228,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="#Page_15">15,</a> <a href="#Page_18">18,</a> <a href="#Page_21">21,</a> <a href="#Page_25">25,</a> <a href="#Page_56">56,</a> <a href="#Page_66">66,</a> <a href="#Page_106">106,</a> <a href="#Page_116">116;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Expulsion Bill, ii. <a href="#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="#Page_366">366.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orloff, Prince, Russian Ambassador at Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_33">33,</a> <a href="#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="#Page_231">231;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in Central Asia, ii. <a href="#Page_38">38;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">conversation with Décazes, ii. <a href="#Page_69">69;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">withdrawn from Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_207">207.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Osman Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_167">167.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oxford, Lyons at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_1">1.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Pacific coast defence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pagny, ii. <a href="#Page_400">400.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pain, Olivier, ii. <a href="#Page_358">358.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paladines, General d'Aurelle de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_336">336.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Palermo, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Palikao, Count, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Palmerston, Lord, on fight of Bull's Run, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_48">48;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on foreign intervention in American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">death of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149</a> <em>n.</em></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Papal government, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_4">4,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_184">184,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_31">31;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Irish affairs, ii. <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-<a href="#Page_6">6.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paris, Conference at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_153">153,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons appointed to the Embassy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_173">173,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">riots in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_286">286,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_376">376,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_386">386,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_316">316;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">panic in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_306">306;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">defences of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">diplomatists leave, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_322">322;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">siege of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_348">348;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">bombardment of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_356">356,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_383">383;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military power in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_356">356;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Embassy returns to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_375">375;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Commune proclaimed, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_379">379.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paris Exhibition, ii. <a href="#Page_161">161.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paris, Treaty of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_339">339.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paris, Archbishop of, seized by Commune, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_384">384;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">killed, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_386">386.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg 443]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Paris, Comte de, ii. <a href="#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="#Page_21">21,</a> <a href="#Page_25">25,</a> <a href="#Page_48">48,</a> <a href="#Page_56">56,</a> <a href="#Page_365">365,</a> <a href="#Page_366">366,</a> <a href="#Page_382">382.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Park, engineer on the <em>Cagliari</em>, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Parnell, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_234">234.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pasquier, Duc d'Audiffret, ii. <a href="#Page_117">117.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pau, ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pauncefote and Egyptian Commission, ii. <a href="#Page_353">353.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pearson, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Peel, Sir Robert, attack on Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_324">324,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_129">129.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Penjdeh, fight at, ii. <a href="#Page_348">348.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Persia, Shah of, visit to Berlin, ii. <a href="#Page_354">354.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Persian Gulf, Russian policy in, ii. <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Peruvian Papers, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_32">32.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Peterhoff</em>, the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_103">103.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Petre, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Philippines, German interest in, ii. <a href="#Page_60">60.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Picard, M., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pines, Isle of, ii. <a href="#Page_362">362,</a> <a href="#Page_364">364.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pius IX., ii. <a href="#Page_423">423.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Playfair, Colonel, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Poland, French policy in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Polish Party, intrigues of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_272">272.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ponza island, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Portland, U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_81">81.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Portugal, independence threatened, ii. <a href="#Page_39">39.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Postage, international, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pothuau, Admiral, French ambassador, ii. <a href="#Page_203">203,</a> <a href="#Page_210">210.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Potomac, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_59">59;</a> army of the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_128">128.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prague, Treaty of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_204">204.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prince Consort, advice in <em>Trent</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_61">61,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_77">77.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prince Eugène Barracks, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_286">286.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Protection in U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_18">18.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Protection, growth of, in France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_241">241,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_243">243,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245">245,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_284">284,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_27">27,</a> <a href="#Page_165">165,</a> <a href="#Page_244">244,</a> <a href="#Page_257">257.</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1"><em>See also</em> <span class="smcap">Commercial Treaties</span>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Protestants in Papal dominions, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_4">4.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Provincetown, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prussia (<em>see also</em> Germany and Franco-German War), proposed intervention in American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_91">91;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">irritation against, in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_165">165;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alliance with Italy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">refuses consent to sell Luxembourg, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Austria, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">armament of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_192">192;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">desire for peace, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Russia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_202">202;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">question of disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_246">246;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Hohenzollern candidature in Spain, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Quebec, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_116">116,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Quertier, M. Pouyer, ii. <a href="#Page_23">23,</a> <a href="#Page_24">24.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Raby, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Radowitz, M., ii. <a href="#Page_130">130,</a> <a href="#Page_231">231.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rahming, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_132">132.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Raindre, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_317">317.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rastadt, Prussian troops at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_302">302.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Reciprocity Treaties, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_123">123.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Recruiting methods in American Civil War, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_110">110,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Redcliffe, Lord Stratford de, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_150">150.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Regnier, M., and General Bourbaki, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_327">327.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rémusat, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_23">23,</a> <a href="#Page_25">25.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>République Française</em>, anti-English articles in, ii. <a href="#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="#Page_302">302.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Réunion, ii. <a href="#Page_198">198.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rhenish Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rhodes, ii. <a href="#Page_159">159.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Riaz Pasha, ii. <a href="#Page_203">203.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Richmond, U.S.A., Confederate headquarters, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_82">82,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_93">93,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ring, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_182">182,</a> <a href="#Page_238">238.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rio Grande, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ripley, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_94">94.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ripon, Lord, mission to Washington, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_190">190.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rochebouet, General, ii. <a href="#Page_120">120.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rochefort, M. de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_230">230,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_244">244,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_313">313,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_363">363.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rogers, Mr., ii. <a href="#Page_425">425.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rome, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Roman question," i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_182">182,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_231">231.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rosebery, Lord, visit to Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_353">353;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Foreign Office, ii. <a href="#Page_361">361;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">retires from office, ii. <a href="#Page_371">371;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, ii. <a href="#Page_363">363,</a> <a href="#Page_374">374.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rothschild, Baron Alphonse de, ii. <a href="#Page_312">312,</a> <a href="#Page_315">315,</a> <a href="#Page_405">405.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rothschild, Sir Nathaniel, ii. <a href="#Page_93">93,</a> <a href="#Page_315">315.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rothschild, Messrs., ii. <a href="#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="#Page_175">175.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rouher, M., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_228">228,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_233">233,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_244">244,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_285">285,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_8">8;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_183">183,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_184">184,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_254">254;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_234">234,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_237">237.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Roumania, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_155">155,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_131">131.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Roumelia, ii. <a href="#Page_145">145,</a> <a href="#Page_227">227,</a> <a href="#Page_360">360.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Roustan. M., French Agent at Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_240">240,</a> <a href="#Page_248">248.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg 444]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Rouvier, M., ii. <a href="#Page_335">335;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">becomes President, ii. <a href="#Page_404">404.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russell, Lord John (Earl Russell), at Foreign Office, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">appoints Lyons attaché at Rome, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_37">37,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_38">38,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_61">61,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_76">76,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_101">101,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_127">127;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">dislike of Seward, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_118">118,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_123">123;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">his appreciation of Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_141">141;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">offers Lyons Constantinople Embassy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_283">283,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_284">284;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Versailles, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_19">19,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_37">37,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_52">52,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_62">62,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_98">98,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_99">99,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_118">118,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_132">132,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_141">141.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russell, Odo (Lord Ampthill), on Roman question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_187">187;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">meets Bismarck at Versailles, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_339">339;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">conversation with Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_55">55;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Bismarck's policy, ii. <a href="#Page_60">60,</a> <a href="#Page_73">73,</a> <a href="#Page_88">87;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Constantinople Congress, ii. <a href="#Page_145">145;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">alluded to, ii. <a href="#Page_71">71,</a> <a href="#Page_236">236,</a> <a href="#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="#Page_354">354;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Derby, ii. <a href="#Page_61">61,</a> <a href="#Page_72">72,</a> <a href="#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="#Page_77">77;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_184">184,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="#Page_31">31,</a> <a href="#Page_40">40,</a> <a href="#Page_45">45,</a> <a href="#Page_52">52,</a> <a href="#Page_130">130;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">despatch from, ii. <a href="#Page_96">96.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russell, W. H., quoted, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia, policy in America, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_91">91;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Treaty of Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_354">354,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_33">33,</a> <a href="#Page_75">75,</a> <a href="#Page_76">76;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">relations with Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_202">202,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_260">260,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_268">268,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_42">42,</a> <a href="#Page_324">324;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Denmark, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_355">355;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy in Turkey, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_159">154,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_159">159,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_209">209,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_351">351;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Eastern question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_164">164,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_186">186,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_85">85;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Asia, ii. <a href="#Page_38">38,</a> <a href="#Page_345">345;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reputed ill-will to England, ii. <a href="#Page_71">71;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">military honour of, ii. <a href="#Page_352">352.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russo-Turkish War, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109,</a> <a href="#Page_121">121.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Sackville, Lord, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_41">41.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sadowa, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_185">185,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_202">202,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_301">301,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_36">36.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Albans (Amer.), raid of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_135">135.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Cloud, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_233">233.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Denis, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Germain, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_375">375.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Hilaire, M. Barthélemy, at Foreign Office, ii. <a href="#Page_229">229,</a> <a href="#Page_213">213,</a> <a href="#Page_248">248.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Lawrence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_133">133.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Malo, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_22">22.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Paul, M. de, ii. <a href="#Page_114">114.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Petersburg, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_162">162,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Quentin, defeat of French at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Thomas, U.S. ships at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_104">104,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_105">105.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Vallier, Comte de, ii. <a href="#Page_136">136.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>St. Vincent</em>, deserters from, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_111">111.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Salisbury, Lord, on Derby's foreign policy, ii. <a href="#Page_105">105;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Constantinople Conference, ii. <a href="#Page_107">107,</a> <a href="#Page_108">108;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at the Foreign Office, ii. <a href="#Page_132">132,</a> <a href="#Page_356">356;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on government of Orientals, ii. <a href="#Page_178">178;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_250">250;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Mgr. Czacki, ii. <a href="#Page_233">233,</a> <a href="#Page_234">234;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by Rosebery, ii. <a href="#Page_361">361;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Layard on, ii. <a href="#Page_138">138;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, ii. <a href="#Page_133">133,</a> <a href="#Page_140">140,</a> <a href="#Page_142">142,</a> <a href="#Page_144">144,</a> <a href="#Page_158">158,</a> <a href="#Page_172">172,</a>
+<a href="#Page_173">173,</a> <a href="#Page_175">175,</a> <a href="#Page_176">176,</a> <a href="#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="#Page_185">185,</a> <a href="#Page_187">187,</a>
+<a href="#Page_188">188,</a> <a href="#Page_190">190,</a> <a href="#Page_193">193,</a> <a href="#Page_242">242,</a> <a href="#Page_371">371,</a> <a href="#Page_386">386,</a> <a href="#Page_391">391,</a> <a href="#Page_395">395,</a> <a href="#Page_409">409;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Waddington, ii. <a href="#Page_148">148.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Salzburg, ii. <a href="#Page_47">47.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sanford, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_44">44.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>San Jacinto</em>, American warship, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">San Juan, disputed ownership of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_18">18,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_23">23,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_30">30;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Company of Marines on, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_43">43.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">San Stefano, Treaty of, ii. <a href="#Page_124">124,</a> <a href="#Page_131">131,</a> <a href="#Page_136">136,</a> <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_144">144.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sapri, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sardinia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_10">10.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saumarez, Lord de, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saussier, General, ii. <a href="#Page_367">367.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Savannah, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_94">94.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Savoy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saxony, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saxony, Crown Prince of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Say, M. Léon, Minister of Finance, ii. <a href="#Page_119">119,</a> <a href="#Page_181">181,</a> <a href="#Page_200">200;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">elected President of the Senate, ii. <a href="#Page_210">210;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Eastern policy, ii. <a href="#Page_225">225;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">refuses office in Gambetta ministry, ii. <a href="#Page_262">262.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Schnaebelé, M., ii. <a href="#Page_400">400,</a> <a href="#Page_401">401.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Schouvaloff, Count, Russian Ambassador in London, ii. <a href="#Page_76">76,</a> <a href="#Page_80">80,</a> <a href="#Page_88">88,</a> <a href="#Page_140">140,</a> <a href="#Page_142">142.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Schwarzenberg, Prince, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_272">272.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Scotland, Papal Government's plans in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_4">4.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Scott, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_19">19,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_47">47,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_68">68.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sedan, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_351">351,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_17">17.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seine, English merchant ships sunk in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_344">344;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Prefect of the, ii. <a href="#Page_65">65.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Semmes, Captain, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_105">105.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Servians and the Fortress of Belgrade, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seward, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">appointed Secretary of State, U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_30">30;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_31">31</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">advocates annexation of Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the <em>Trent</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_65">65</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">friendly relations with England, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_80">80;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Conscription Act, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_115">115;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposes state visit to England, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_117">117-9;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">correspondence with, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_141">141.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg 445]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Seymour, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seymour, Admiral Sir Beauchamp (Lord Alcester), ii. <a href="#Page_228">228.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sfax, insurrections at, ii. <a href="#Page_249">249.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sheffield, Mr. George, Private Secretary to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_136">136;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">sent to Frankfort, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">accompanies Lyons to Constantinople, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_177">177,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_98">98,</a> <a href="#Page_128">128,</a> <a href="#Page_204">204,</a> <a href="#Page_397">397,</a> <a href="#Page_427">427;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">conversations with Gambetta, ii. <a href="#Page_226">226,</a> <a href="#Page_237">237.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Shifting Scenes" quoted, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_137">137.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shumla, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_138">138.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Siam, ii. <a href="#Page_358">358.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Simon, M. Jules, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_387">387;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Prime Minister, ii. <a href="#Page_106">106;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">turned out of office, ii.<a href="#Page_111"> 111.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sinkat, ii. <a href="#Page_322">322.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Slave trade in America, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_20">20,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_34">34;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proclamations of Emancipation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_95">95.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Slave Trade Treaty, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_85">85.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Slidell, Mr., Confederate delegate to England seized on board the <em>Trent</em>, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_59">59,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_63">63,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_74">74,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_81">81;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">failure of mission to Europe, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_121">121;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Mr. Benjamin's letter to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Smyrna, proposed seizure of, ii. <a href="#Page_228">228,</a> <a href="#Page_230">230.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Socialism in France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_280">280.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Somaliland coast troubles, ii. <a href="#Page_362">362,</a> <a href="#Page_363">363,</a> <a href="#Page_409">409.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Soudan, Hicks Pasha's disaster, ii. <a href="#Page_320">320,</a> <a href="#Page_321">321;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Baker Pasha's defeat, ii. <a href="#Page_323">323;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">affairs in, ii. <a href="#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Spain, internal affairs of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_200">200,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_207">207,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_39">39-41;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">the Hohenzollern candidature, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_294">294;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Mexico, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_70">70;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">commercial relations with France, ii. <a href="#Page_26">26;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Constantinople Conference, ii. <a href="#Page_109">109;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">King of, mobbed in Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_319">319.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Spüller, M., ii. <a href="#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="#Page_263">263.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stackelberg, on the Turco-Greek question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Standard</em>, the, on Franco-German relations, ii. <a href="#Page_382">382.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanley, Dean, ii. <a href="#Page_193">193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanley, Lord (Earl of Derby), becomes Foreign Secretary, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156</a><em>n.</em>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">diplomatic views, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_161">161;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the Cretan quarrel, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_163">163;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the Luxembourg difficulty, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_169">169;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">offers Paris Embassy to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_173">173;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the Roman question, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_181">181;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">American policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_188">188;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Franco-Prussian situation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_195">195,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_203">203;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Prussian disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_246">246;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Parliamentary vote, ii. <a href="#Page_10">10,</a> <a href="#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at the Foreign Office, ii. <a href="#Page_54">54,</a> <a href="#Page_123">123;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resignation of, ii. <a href="#Page_132">132;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">foreign policy, ii. <a href="#Page_105">105,</a> <a href="#Page_107">107;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_104">104,</a> <a href="#Page_122">122;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Russo-Turkish War, ii. <a href="#Page_121">121;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the Eastern Question, ii. <a href="#Page_95">95,</a> <a href="#Page_125">125;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in French politics, ii. <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <a href="#Page_112">112;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Suez Canal Shares, ii. <a href="#Page_93">93;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Bismarck's dislike of, ii. <a href="#Page_353">353,</a> <a href="#Page_354">354;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letters to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_164">164,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_168">168,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_195">195,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_71">71,</a> <a href="#Page_86">86,</a> <a href="#Page_87">87,</a> <a href="#Page_91">91,</a> <a href="#Page_121">121,</a> <a href="#Page_125">125;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Odo Russell, ii. <a href="#Page_75">75.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanton, General, and the Suez Canal Shares, ii. <a href="#Page_87">87,</a> <a href="#Page_90">90.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Staveley, Mr., letter to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_226">226.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stewart, Lady Phillippa, ii. <a href="#Page_427">427.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stoeckl, M. de, Russian Minister in U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_32">32,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_33">33.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stoffel, Colonel, military reports of, ii. <a href="#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Strasburg, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_321">321,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stuart, Lord, ii. <a href="#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stuart, Mr., Chargé d'affaires in Washington, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_89">89,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_92">92,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_116">116.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Suakim, French consul at, ii. <a href="#Page_362">362.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Suez Canal, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_156">156,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_222">222;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Anglo-French relations in, ii. <a href="#Page_287">287,</a> <a href="#Page_289">289,</a> <a href="#Page_321">321;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Commission, ii. <a href="#Page_348">348,</a> <a href="#Page_352">352,</a> <a href="#Page_362">362,</a> <a href="#Page_363">363,</a> <a href="#Page_375">375,</a> <a href="#Page_388">388-91.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Suez Canal Shares, Khedive prepares to sell, ii. <a href="#Page_85">85;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">purchased by England, ii. <a href="#Page_90">90,</a> <a href="#Page_96">96.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sumner, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_41">41,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_85">85,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_120">120.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sunderland. Rev. Dr., on the <em>Trent</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_76">76.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sweden, King and Queen of, visit to Berlin, ii. <a href="#Page_81">81.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Switzerland, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_198">198,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_363">363;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed Confederation with South German States, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_204">204,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_205">205;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Savoy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_382">382;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Commercial Treaty, ii. <a href="#Page_8">8;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Protectionist policy, ii. <a href="#Page_255">255.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Syria, Russia in, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_141">141.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Tahiti, ii. <a href="#Page_198">198.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tangier, ii. <a href="#Page_386">386.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tariff Bill, U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_50">50.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tel-el-Kebir, ii. <a href="#Page_285">285.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tennessee, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_85">85.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tenterden, Lord, letter to Lyons, ii. <a href="#Page_90">90;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_271">271.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg 446]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Tewfik, Prince, ii. <a href="#Page_174">174;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proclaimed Khedive, ii. <a href="#Page_185">185;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">plot to dethrone, ii. <a href="#Page_261">261;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposal to depose, ii. <a href="#Page_278">278,</a> <a href="#Page_280">280.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Texas, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_31">31.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Therapia, ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thibaudin, General, ii. <a href="#Page_312">312,</a> <a href="#Page_319">319.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thiers, M., foreign policy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_185">185,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_338">338,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_373">373,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_378">378,</a>
+ii. <a href="#Page_19">19,</a> <a href="#Page_43">43;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the political crisis, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_282">282,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_284">284;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Napoleon III., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_36">36;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_311">311;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">mission to the Powers, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_315">315,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_317">317,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_335">335;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on causes of the war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_316">316;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with Clarendon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_323">323;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interviews with Bismarck, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_329">329,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_331">331,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_353">353,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">peace efforts, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_347">347,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_369">369-71,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_29">29;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on the situation in Prussia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_332">332;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">favours a republic, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_362">362,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_372">372;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in the National Assembly, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_365">365,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_1">1;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">commercial policy, i.<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245"> 245,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_5">5,</a> <a href="#Page_24">24;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">made President, ii. <a href="#Page_14">14;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">tenders resignation, ii. <a href="#Page_21">21;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and military re-organization, ii. <a href="#Page_27">27,</a> <a href="#Page_29">29;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">ill-health, ii. <a href="#Page_31">31;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Triple Alliance, ii. <a href="#Page_42">42;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">succeeded by MacMahon, ii. <a href="#Page_43">43;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">home policy, ii. <a href="#Page_34">34,</a> <a href="#Page_64">64,</a> <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et passim</i>;</li>
+ <li class="isub1">Gambetta on, ii. <a href="#Page_99">99.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thile, Prussian Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_305">305.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thouvenel, M., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_44">44,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_63">63,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_66">66,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_67">67.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Three Emperors Alliance, ii. <a href="#Page_131">131,</a> <a href="#Page_145">145,</a> <a href="#Page_237">237.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Thunderer</em>, H.M.S., ii. <a href="#Page_239">239.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><cite>Times</cite>, references to, ii. <a href="#Page_258">258,</a> <a href="#Page_303">303,</a> <a href="#Page_335">335,</a> <a href="#Page_343">343,</a> <a href="#Page_358">358.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tirard, M., Minister of Commerce, ii. <a href="#Page_253">253.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tissot, M., i. 350, ii. <a href="#Page_205">205;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Constantinople, ii. <a href="#Page_210">210,</a> <a href="#Page_300">300.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tonquin, French affairs in, ii. <a href="#Page_302">302,</a> <a href="#Page_307">307,</a> <a href="#Page_318">318,</a> <a href="#Page_320">320,</a> <a href="#Page_322">322,</a> <a href="#Page_327">327,</a> <a href="#Page_334">334,</a> <a href="#Page_337">337,</a> <a href="#Page_340">340,</a> <a href="#Page_342">342,</a>
+<a href="#Page_344">344,</a> <a href="#Page_350">350,</a> <a href="#Page_360">360,</a> <a href="#Page_369">369,</a> <a href="#Page_380">380.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Toulon, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_349">349.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tours, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_315">315,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_324">324,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><em>Trent</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_29">29,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_54">54</a>-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_78">78,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_101">101,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_103">103.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tripartite Treaty, ii. <a href="#Page_141">141,</a> <a href="#Page_142">142.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Triple Entente foreseen by Thiers, ii. <a href="#Page_39">39.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tripoli, ii. <a href="#Page_105">105;</a> Italy in, ii. <a href="#Page_251">251.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trochu, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_303">303,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_307">307,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_318">318,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_354">354,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_359">359,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_361">361.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trower, Major, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Troyes, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tuilleries, balls at the, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_245">245,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_288">288.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tunis, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_8">8,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French position in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_199">199,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_55">55,</a> <a href="#Page_139">139,</a> <a href="#Page_154">154,</a> <a href="#Page_163">163,</a> <a href="#Page_164">164,</a> <a href="#Page_173">173,</a> <a href="#Page_238">238,</a> <a href="#Page_350">350;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">French Protectorate established, ii. <a href="#Page_243">243;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed Commission at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Germany in, ii. <a href="#Page_55">55;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Italy in, ii. <a href="#Page_105">105,</a> <a href="#Page_139">139.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tunis, Bey of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_148">148.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turkey, financial affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_146">146,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_149">149,</a> <em>et seq.</em>, ii. <a href="#Page_208">208;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">bankruptcy of, ii. <a href="#Page_84">84;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">navy of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_151">151;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">condition in 1866, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_159">159;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Crete, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_208">208;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_272">272,</a> <a href="#Page_276">276,</a> <a href="#Page_281">281,</a> <a href="#Page_321">321;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">policy of Russia in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_159">159,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_166">166,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_351">351;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Prussian opinion of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turco-Greece affairs, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_206">206,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_209">209,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_210">210.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turkey, Sultan of, and Khedive Ismail, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_221">221;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and French Ambassador, ii. <a href="#Page_32">32.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tuscany, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_2">2,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_7">7.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Ultramontane Party in Belgium, ii. <a href="#Page_68">68.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ultramontanes, Bismarck's contest with, ii. <a href="#Page_49">49,</a> <a href="#Page_50">50,</a> <a href="#Page_55">55,</a> <a href="#Page_81">81.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">United States Legation, represents Prussia in France, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_308">308,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_309">309.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><cite>Univers</cite>, the, ii. <a href="#Page_51">51.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Vacoufs, question of secularization, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_147">147.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Varna, ii. <a href="#Page_137">137,</a> <a href="#Page_138">138.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Varzin, Bismarck at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_70">70.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vattel, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Venables, Mrs. Lister, ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Versailles, diplomatic meetings at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_330">330,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_337">337,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">peace negotiations at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_368">368;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">National Assembly established at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_373">373;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Government retires to, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_376">376;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Thiers at, ii. <a href="#Page_3">3,</a> <a href="#Page_21">21;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">MacMahon at, ii. <a href="#Page_44">44.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vevey, ii. <a href="#Page_90">90.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Victor Emmanuel (King of Italy), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_183">183,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_201">201.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Victor, Prince, expulsion from France, ii. <a href="#Page_366">366.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Victoria, Queen, letter to President Buchanan, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_26">26;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and <em>Trent</em> case, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_61">61;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Sultan's wish to visit, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_171">171;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">reported plot against, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_188">188;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_197">197,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_198">198;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on France in Belgium, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_211">211;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Empress Eugénie, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_222">222;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Prussian disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_250">250;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on French disarmament, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_259">259;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Hohenzollern candidature i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_297">297;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and exiled royalties, ii. <a href="#Page_23">23;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">opening speech on Russo-Turkish war, ii. <a href="#Page_123">123;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">projected visit to Paris Exhibition, ii. <a href="#Page_162">162;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_76">76,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_144">144,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_354">354,</a> <a href="#Page_397">397.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg 447]</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="indx">Vienna, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_140">140.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Villiers, Colonel the Hon. George, report on French army, ii. <a href="#Page_310">310.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vinoy, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_345">345.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Virginia, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_60">60,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_85">85,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_93">93.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vivian, Mr., H.B.M. Agent at Cairo, ii. <a href="#Page_172">172,</a> <a href="#Page_173">173,</a> <a href="#Page_177">177.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vogué, Comte de, ii. <a href="#Page_32">32.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Waddington, M., Minister for Foreign Affairs, ii. <a href="#Page_119">119;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and foreign policy, ii. <a href="#Page_123">123;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">on Egyptian affairs, ii. <a href="#Page_133">133,</a> <a href="#Page_171">171,</a> <a href="#Page_176">176,</a> <a href="#Page_180">180,</a> <a href="#Page_338">338,</a> <a href="#Page_389">389;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Bismarck, ii. <a href="#Page_168">168;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">internal policy, ii. <a href="#Page_147">147,</a> <a href="#Page_148">148,</a> <a href="#Page_195">195;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">despatches, ii. <a href="#Page_158">158;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">resigns office, ii. <a href="#Page_201">201;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">a Free Trader, ii. <a href="#Page_257">257;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and the Ferry Ministry, ii. <a href="#Page_313">313;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons on, ii. <a href="#Page_145">145.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wagner, opera in Paris, ii. <a href="#Page_403">403.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wales, Prince of (Edward VII.), visit to Canada, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_24">24,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_25">25;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to U.S.A., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_27">27,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_86">86,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_117">117;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visits to Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_199">199;</a> ii. <a href="#Page_136">136,</a> <a href="#Page_139">139,</a> <a href="#Page_162">162,</a> <a href="#Page_328">328;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">at Paris Exhibition, ii. <a href="#Page_161">161;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">proposed visit to South of France ii. <a href="#Page_26">26;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">visit to Paris abandoned, ii. <a href="#Page_311">311;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">and Thiers, ii. <a href="#Page_29">29;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">attacked in French press, ii. <a href="#Page_152">152;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">interview with Gambetta, ii. <a href="#Page_156">156;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">anti-Turkish opinions, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_162">162.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wales, Princess of (Queen Alexandra), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_99">99,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_199">199.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walker, Colonel, British military attaché at Berlin, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_219">219,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_372">372.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walker, Mr., despatch to Lord Russell, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_122">122.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walpole, Lord, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_6">6.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Warre, Mr., i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_14">14,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_17">17,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Washbourne, Mr., American Minister in Paris, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_384">384.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Washington, Lyons appointed to Legation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">Lyons at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_23">23;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">society in, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_87">87;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">climate of, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">official figures of despatches to and from in 1864, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_137">137;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">work of the Chancery, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_138">138.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Watt, engineer on the <em>Cagliari</em>, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_9">9.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Weiss, appointment by Gambetta, ii. <a href="#Page_266">266.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Welles, Mr., Secretary to U.S. Navy, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_58">58,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_101">101,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_103">103,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_119">119.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Werther, Prussian Ambassador at Paris, ii.<a href="#Page_299"> 299.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">West Indies, proposals for defence, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Westminster Abbey, ii. <a href="#Page_193">193.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Westmoreland, Lord, on Parliamentary vote, ii. <a href="#Page_10">10.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wheaton on international law, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_40">40,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">White Flag manifesto, ii. <a href="#Page_57">57,</a> <a href="#Page_58">58,</a> <a href="#Page_65">65,</a> <a href="#Page_66">66.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilhelmshöhe, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_333">333.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilkes, Captain (of the <em>San Jacinto</em>), i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_58">58,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_64">64,</a>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_100">100,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_105">105.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilmington, Vigilance Committee at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_35">35.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilson, M. Daniel, on the Franco-Prussian war, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_328">328.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilson, Sir C. Rivers, Minister of Finance in Egypt, ii. <a href="#Page_153">153,</a> <a href="#Page_58">171171,</a> <a href="#Page_173">173,</a> <a href="#Page_175">175,</a> <a href="#Page_178">178,</a> <a href="#Page_188">188,</a> <a href="#Page_271">271,</a> <a href="#Page_313">313.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Winchester, Lyons at, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_1">1.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wistar, General, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_112">112.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Woburn, Lyons at, ii. <a href="#Page_219">219,</a> <a href="#Page_222">222,</a> <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wodehouse, Mr. Henry, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_342">342,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_377">377;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">letter to Lyons, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_343">343.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wood, Mr., despatch from, ii. <a href="#Page_55">55.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wolff, Sir H. Drummond, question on Tunis, ii. <a href="#Page_239">239;</a></li>
+ <li class="isub1">mission to the Porte, ii. <a href="#Page_376">376,</a> <a href="#Page_387">387,</a> <a href="#Page_389">389,</a> <a href="#Page_391">391,</a> <a href="#Page_407">407,</a> <a href="#Page_409">409.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wolseley, Sir Garnet, in Egypt, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_299">299,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_358">358.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Würtemberg and Confederation, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_193">193,</a> <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_266">266.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wurtzburg, Baron, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_11">11,</a> ii. <a href="#Page_417">417.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wurtzburg, Baroness, ii. <a href="#Page_424">424.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Young Turk Party, i. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43317/43317-h/43317-h.htm#Page_167">167.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Zanzibar, ii. <a href="#Page_378">378.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Zululand expedition, ii. <a href="#Page_190">190.</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg 448]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="p7">THE END</p>
+
+<p class="p1">PRINTED BY<br />
+WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,<br />
+LONDON AND BECCLES.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg 449]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center">Telegrams:</p>
+
+<p class="center">"Scholarly, London."</p>
+
+<p class="center">Telephone:<br />
+No. 1883 Mayfair.</p>
+
+<p class="center">41 and 43 Maddox Street,<br />
+Bond Street, London, W.<br />
+<em>September, 1913.</em></p>
+
+<p class="p8">Mr. Edward Arnold's<br />
+AUTUMN<br />
+ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1913.</p>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+<p class="p8">LORD LYONS.</p>
+
+<p class="p9">A Record of British Diplomacy.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By the Right Hon. LORD NEWTON.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Portraits. In Two Volumes.</em> <strong>30s. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The late Lord Lyons was not only the most prominent but the
+most trusted English diplomatist of his day, and so great was the
+confidence felt in his ability that he was paid the unique compliment
+of being offered the post of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Newton, who has now undertaken the task of preparing a
+memoir of him, enjoys the advantage of having served under him for
+five years at the Paris Embassy. The interest of this work lies,
+however, less in the personality of the Ambassador than in the highly
+important events in which he played so prominent a part.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lyons was the British representative at Washington during
+the period of the Civil War; subsequently he was Ambassador at
+Constantinople for two years; and finally he spent twenty years&mdash;from
+1867 to 1887&mdash;as Ambassador at Paris. During the whole of
+this eventful period his advice was constantly sought by the Home
+Government upon every foreign question of importance, and his
+correspondence throws fresh light upon obscure passages in diplomatic
+history.</p>
+
+<p>In this book will be found hitherto unpublished information relating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[Pg 450]</a></span>
+to such matters as the critical relations between England and the
+United States during the course of the Civil War; the political
+situation in France during the closing years of the Second Empire;
+the secret attempt made by the British Foreign Secretary to avert
+the Franco-German War, and the explanation of its failure; the
+internal and external policy of France during the early years of the
+Third Republic; the War Scare of 1875; the Congress of Berlin;
+the Egyptian Expedition; Anglo-French political relations, and
+many other matters of interest.</p>
+
+<p>The method selected by the writer has been to reproduce all important
+correspondence verbatim, and it may be confidently asserted
+that the student of foreign politics will find in this work a valuable
+record of modern diplomatic history.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r5" />
+
+<p class="center">LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 &amp; 43 MADDOX STREET. W.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF<br />
+GEORGE WILLIAM FREDERICK,<br />
+FOURTH EARL OF CLARENDON.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>In Two Volumes. With Portraits. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>30s. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Born in the year 1800 and dying in 1870, Lord Clarendon lived
+through a period of social, political, and economic change more rapid
+probably than had been witnessed in any similar space of time in the
+previous history of mankind. It was his lot, moreover, to wield considerable
+influence over the course of affairs, inasmuch as his public
+service, extending over fifty years, caused him to be employed in a
+succession of highly responsible, and even critical, situations. British
+Minister at Madrid at the outbreak and during the course of the Carlist
+Civil War from 1833 to 1839, he was admitted into Lord Melbourne's
+Cabinet immediately upon returning to England in the latter year.
+He was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland throughout the memorable famine
+years, 1847-1852. Relieved of that arduous post, Lord Clarendon
+entered Lord Aberdeen's government in 1852 as Foreign Secretary,
+which office he retained through the Crimean War, and became responsible
+for the terms of the Treaty of Paris in 1856. On Lord
+Palmerston's death in 1865, he returned to the Foreign Office, and
+had to deal with the settlement of the "Alabama" claims.</p>
+
+<p>The annals of the first half of Queen Victoria's reign having been
+pretty thoroughly explored and dealt with by many competent
+writers, the chief interest in these pages will be found in Lord
+Clarendon's private correspondence, which has been well preserved,
+and has been entrusted to Sir Herbert Maxwell for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg 451]</a></span>
+purpose of this memoir. Lord Clarendon was a fluent and diligent
+correspondent; Charles Greville and others among his contemporaries
+frequently expressed a hope that his letters should some
+day find their way into literature. Sir Arthur Helps, for instance,
+wrote as follows in <em>Macmillan's Magazine</em>: "Lord Clarendon was a
+man who indulged, notwithstanding his public labours, in an immense
+private correspondence. There were some persons to whom, I
+believe, he wrote daily, and perhaps in after years we shall be
+favoured&mdash;those of us who live to see it&mdash;with a correspondence
+which will enlighten us as to many of the principal topics of our own
+period." It is upon this correspondence that Sir Herbert Maxwell
+has chiefly relied in tracing the motives, principles, and conduct of
+one of the last Whig statesmen. Among the letters dealt with,
+and now published for the first time, are those from Lord Melbourne,
+Lord Palmerston, Lord Aberdeen, Lord Derby, M. Thiers,
+M. Guizot, the Emperor Louis Napoleon, etc., and many ladies.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">WILLIAM AUGUSTUS, DUKE OF<br />
+CUMBERLAND, HIS EARLY LIFE<br />
+AND TIMES, 1721-1748.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By the Hon. EVAN CHARTERIS,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "Affairs of Scotland, 1744-1746."</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Plans and Illustrations.</em> <strong>12s. 6d. net.</strong> [<em>In preparation.</em></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Mr. Charteris has a good subject in "Butcher" Cumberland, not
+only on account of the historical and romantic interest of his background,
+but also by reason of the Duke's baneful reputation.</p>
+
+<p>In the present volume the author has carried the career of
+the Duke of Cumberland down to the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle.
+The period includes the Duke's campaigns in Flanders against
+Marshal Saxe, the Battle of Culloden, and the measures taken for
+the suppression of the Jacobites in Scotland. Mr. Charteris has had
+the exceptional advantage of studying the Cumberland Papers at
+Windsor Castle, and it is largely by the aid of hitherto unpublished
+documents that he is now able to throw fresh light on a character
+which has been the subject of so much malevolent criticism. At the
+same time the volume deals with the social and political conditions
+among which Cumberland was called on to play so important a part
+in the life of the nation. These have been treated by the author
+with some fulness of detail. Cumberland, in spite of his foreign
+origin, was remarkably typical of the characteristics of the earlier
+Georgian period, and an endeavour has been made in the present
+volume to establish the link between the Duke and the politics, the
+morals, the aims, and the pursuits of the age in which he lived.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg 452]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">MY ART AND MY FRIENDS.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Reminiscences of Sir F. H. COWEN.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Portrait. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>10s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In the course of a long and distinguished musical career, Sir
+Frederic Cowen has had opportunities of visiting many parts of the
+world, of meeting all the most eminent artists of the last half-century,
+and of amassing material for an extremely diverting volume
+of personal recollections. As a child he enjoyed the privilege of being
+embraced by the great Piccolomini; as a young man he toured with
+Trebelli, and became acquainted with the famous Rubinstein, with
+Bülow, and with Joachim. In later life he numbered such well-known
+musicians as Pachmann, Paderewski, Sir Arthur Sullivan, and the
+de Reszkes, among his friends. Nor was the circle of his intimates
+entirely confined to the world of music; he was on terms of the
+closest friendship with Corney Grain, with George Grossmith and
+Arthur Cecil; he capped the puns of Henry J. Byron and Sir
+Francis Burnand; he laughed at the practical jokes of Toole, at
+the caricatures which Phil May drew for him of his friends. To
+the public Sir Frederick Cowen is well known as the conductor of
+Covent Garden Promenade and Philharmonic Concerts, as the
+composer of such celebrated songs as "The Better Land" and "The
+Promise of Life," of "The Corsair" and "The Butterfly's Ball."
+In these pages he shows himself to be a keen but kindly student of
+human nature, who can describe the various experiences of his past
+life with a genial but humorous pen. The inexhaustible fund of
+anecdote from which he draws tends still further to enliven an amusing
+and lively volume.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">A CIVIL SERVANT IN BURMA.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By Sir HERBERT THIRKELL WHITE, K.C.I.E.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With 16 Pages of Illustrations. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>12s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<p>Sir Herbert Thirkell White, who has but recently retired from the
+post of Lieutenant-Governor of Burma, which he filled with ability
+and distinction, has now written what he modestly calls a "plain
+story" of more than thirty years of official life in India. In this
+volume are narrated the experiences of an Indian Civilian who has
+devoted the best part of his existence to the service of the Empire,
+and is in a position to speak with assurance of the many complicated
+problems with which the white man in India is continually faced.
+Sir Herbert's acquaintance with Burma began in 1878; since then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg 453]</a></span>
+he has had every opportunity of judging the peculiar habits, customs,
+and characteristics of the native Burmese, and has been able to
+compile a valuable record of the impressions they have made upon
+his mind. It was his fate to hold official positions of increasing importance
+during the Viceroyalties of Lord Ripon, Lord Dufferin, and
+Lord Curzon; he was privileged to serve such distinguished chiefs
+as Sir Charles Bernard and Sir Charles Crosthwaite, and witnessed
+that pacification of Burma which the last-named Chief Commissioner
+has described so eloquently in his well-known book on the subject.
+Sir Herbert writes clearly and with knowledge of every aspect of
+Burmese life and character, and this volume of his recollections should
+prove extremely popular among English readers who are interested
+in the government of our Indian Empire and the daily routine of the
+Indian Civil Servant.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">THIRTY YEARS IN KASHMIR.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By ARTHUR NEVE, F.R.C.S.E.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Illustrations and a Map. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>12s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The stupendous natural surroundings amidst which they dwell
+have inspired sojourners in Kashmir and other Himalayan countries
+to produce some of the finest books of travel to be found. Among
+them will have to be included in future this book of Dr. Arthur Neve's,
+so effectively does the author reveal the wonders of the land of
+towering peaks and huge glaciers where he has made his home for
+the last thirty years.</p>
+
+<p>Going out to Kashmir in 1882 under the auspices of the Church
+Missionary Society, Dr. Neve took over the charge of the Kashmir
+Mission Hospital at Srinagur from Dr. Edmund Downes, who was
+retiring, and has stayed there ever since. In his earlier chapters he
+gives some account of the Punjab and Kashmir in the eighties, and
+also of the work of the mission. He then gets to the principal motif
+of the book&mdash;the exploring tours and mountaineering expeditions to
+which he has devoted his spare time. Nanga Parbat, Nun Kun, and
+many other Himalayan giants, are within hail of Srinagur, and before
+he has finished with the book the reader will find he has acquired the
+next best thing to a first-hand knowledge of this magnificent country.
+Dr. Neve has also a great deal that is interesting to tell about the
+people of various races and religions who inhabit the valleys, and
+from whom his medical help gained him a warm welcome at all
+times.</p>
+
+<p>A series of rare photographs gives a pictorial support to the letter-press.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg 454]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">SPORT AND FOLK-LORE IN THE
+HIMALAYA.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By Captain H. L. HAUGHTON.</p>
+
+<p class="center">(<span class="smcap">36th Sikhs.</span>)</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Illustrations from the Author's Photographs. One Volume.</em></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>12s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Captain Haughton has written a book which should prove a
+welcome addition to the library of every sportsman, as well as being
+of supreme interest to the naturalist and the student of folk-lore. On
+the subject of sport the author writes with that thorough insight and
+sympathy which are the fruits of many years' practical experience
+with rod and rifle, in the jungle, on river-bank or mountain-side. In
+his agreeable society the reader may stalk the markhor or the ibex,
+lightly throw his "Sir Richard" across some Kashmiri trout-stream,
+or lie in wait for the Himalayan black bear on its way to feed;
+and if the author's description of his many amusing and exciting
+adventures and experiences is eminently readable, the value of his
+work is still further enhanced by his intimate knowledge of natural
+history, and by the introduction of many of those old Indian legendary
+tales that he has culled from the lips of native Shikaris round the
+camp-fire at night. The book is illustrated throughout with a series
+of remarkably interesting photographs taken by the author in the
+course of his many sporting expeditions.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">RECOLLECTIONS OF A PENINSULAR
+VETERAN.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By the late Lieut.-Colonel JOSEPH ANDERSON, C.B., K.H.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Photogravure Portrait. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>10s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The late Lieut.-Colonel Joseph Anderson was born in 1790, and
+from the age of fifteen, when he received a commission as Ensign in
+the 78th Regiment, to within a few years of his death in 1877, his
+career was almost continuously as adventurous as it was distinguished.
+In 1806 he saw active service for the first time, when he took part in
+the expedition to Calabria; in the following year he served in the
+Egyptian Campaign of that date; and during the Peninsular War he
+fought at the battles of Maida, Busaco, Fuentes d'Onoro, was
+wounded at Talavera, and accompanied Wellington on the retreat to
+the lines of Torres Vedras. A few years later Captain Anderson, now
+a Captain in the York Chasseurs, was sent with his regiment to
+Barbadoes, and was present at the capture of Guadeloupe in 1815.
+He was appointed Colonel Commandant of the Penal Settlement
+at Norfolk Island in 1834, where his humane endeavours to reform<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg 455]</a></span>
+the prevailing penal system, and his efforts to quell mutinous convicts,
+met with marked success. Nine years later Colonel Anderson went
+to India to take part in the Mahratta Campaign, and at the Battle of
+Punniar (where he commanded a Brigade) was severely wounded
+when charging the enemy's guns. After retiring from the Service,
+Colonel Anderson settled down in Australia, and it was at his home
+near Melbourne that these memories were compiled, during the later
+years of a strenuous and active life, for the edification of his family.
+They are written in a simple, unaffected style, which renders them
+peculiarly readable, and form a most instructive record of the
+manners and customs, of the mode of warfare, and the military and
+social life of a past age, and a bygone generation.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">MEMORIES OF A SOLDIER'S LIFE.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By Major-General Sir H. M. BENGOUGH, K.C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Portrait. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>8s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Major-General Sir H. M. Bengough joined the army in 1855, and
+retired in 1898, after more than forty years of distinguished service
+in all quarters of the Empire. His first experience of active warfare
+dates from the Crimea; later on he took the field in the Zulu War and
+the Burma Expedition of 1885. In days of peace he held various
+high commands in India, South Africa, and Jamaica, and finally
+commanded a brigade of infantry at Aldershot. In this volume of
+personal recollections the author narrates the many varied incidents
+and experiences of a long military career and vividly describes the
+campaigns in which he took part. He also gives an interesting
+account of his adventures in the realm of sport&mdash;pig-sticking, tiger-shooting,
+and pursuing other forms of game in India and elsewhere;
+subjects upon which a long experience enables him to write with
+expert knowledge. It will be strange indeed if so interesting an
+autobiographical volume from the pen of a deservedly popular
+soldier and sportsman fails to appeal to a wide public.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">ZACHARY STOYANOFF.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Pages from the Autobiography of a Bulgarian
+Insurgent.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Translated by M. POTTER.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>One Volume. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>10s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In this volume Zachary Stoyanoff gives us the narrative of his
+personal experiences during the Bulgarian outbreaks of 1875 and
+1876. Almost by accident he became an "apostle" of rebellion, and
+was sent out forthwith to range the country, stirring up the villagers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg 456]</a></span>
+and forming local committees. It is an amazing story. With
+unsurpassable candour he portrays for us the leaders, their enthusiasm,
+their incredible short-sightedness, and the pitiful inadequacy
+of their preparations. The bubble burst, and after a miserable
+attempt at flight, Stoyanoff was taken prisoner and sent to Philippopolis
+for trial. There is no attempt at heroics. With the same
+Boswellian simplicity he reveals his fears, his cringing, his mendacity,
+and incidentally gives us a graphic picture, not wholly black, of the
+conquering Turk. The narrative ends abruptly while he is still
+in peril of his life. One is glad to know that, somehow, he escaped.
+A very human document, and a remarkable contrast to the startling
+exhibition of efficiency given to the world by the Bulgarians in
+their latest struggle with the Turks.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">SPLENDID FAILURES.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By HARRY GRAHAM,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "A Group of Scottish Women," "The Mother of Parliaments," etc.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Portraits. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>10s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>It is perhaps unlikely that any two individuals will agree as to the
+proper definition of the term "A Splendid Failure"&mdash;a phrase of
+which the origin would appear to be obscure. It may, however, be
+roughly stated that the "Splendid Failures" of the past divide themselves
+naturally into three classes: those whom their contemporaries
+invested with a fictitious or exaggerated splendour which posterity
+is quite unable to comprehend or appreciate; those whom the modern
+world regards with admiration&mdash;but who signally failed in impressing
+the men of their own generation; and those who, gifted
+with genius and inspired with lofty ideals, never justified the world's
+high opinion of their talents or fulfilled the promise of their early
+days. In this volume of biographical essays, the author of "A Group
+of Scottish Women" and other popular works has dealt with a
+selection of "splendid failures" of whose personal history the public
+knows but little, though well acquainted with their names. Wolfe
+Tone, "the first of the Fenians"; Benjamin Haydon, the
+"Cockney Raphael"; Toussaint L'Ouverture, the "Napoleon of
+San Domingo"; William Betty, the "Infant Roscius"; and
+"Champagne" Townshend, the politician of Pitt's day, may be
+included under this category. The reader cannot fail to be interested
+in that account which the author gives of the ill-fated
+Archduke Maximilian's attempt to found a Mexican monarchy; in
+his careful review of the work and character of Hartley Coleridge;
+and in his biographical study of George Smythe, that friend of
+Disraeli whom the statesman-novelist took as his model for the
+hero of "Coningsby." This book, which should appeal strongly
+to all readers of literary essays, is illustrated with eight excellent
+portraits.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8">THE CORINTHIAN YACHTSMAN'S
+HANDBOOK.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By FRANCIS B. COOKE.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><em>With 20 Folding Plates of Designs for Yachts, and numerous black
+and white Illustrations. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>10s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<p>This new handbook covers the sport of yachting in all its branches.
+The writer, who has had many years' experience of cruising and
+racing in yachts and boats of all types, has treated the subject in a
+thoroughly practical manner. The book is divided into six parts.</p>
+
+<p>In Part I., which deals with the selection of a yacht, the various
+types and rigs suitable for Corinthian yachting are discussed. The
+designing and building of new craft are also dealt with at some
+length, and designs and descriptions of a number of up-to-date small
+cruisers are given.</p>
+
+<p>In Part II. some hints are given as to where to station the yacht.
+All available headquarters within easy reach of London are
+described, and the advantages and disadvantages of each pointed
+out.</p>
+
+<p>Part III. is devoted to the equipment of yachts, and contains a
+wealth of information as to the internal arrangement, rigging, and
+fittings of small cruisers.</p>
+
+<p>Part IV. treats of the maintenance of small cruising vessels, with
+notes on the cost of upkeep, fitting out and laying up. Other
+matters dealt with in this section are the preservation of sails and
+gear, and insurance.</p>
+
+<p>Part V., on seamanship, covers the handling of fore-and-aft
+vessels under all conditions of weather, and upon every point of
+sailing.</p>
+
+<p>Part VI. covers the racing side of the sport in a comprehensive
+manner. An exhaustive exposition of the International Sailing Rules
+is followed by hints on racing tactics. The appendix contains, <em>inter
+alia</em>, an illustrated description of the British Buoyage System.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cooke's well-known handbooks have come to be regarded by
+yachtsmen as standard works, and a new and more ambitious work
+from his pen can hardly fail to interest them.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg 458]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8">THE FALL OF PROTECTION.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By BERNARD HOLLAND, C.B.,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "Imperium et Libertas."</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>One Volume. Demy 8vo.</em> <strong>12s. 6d. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>This volume is a political-historical study of the great change
+which took place in British commercial and financial policy mainly
+between the years 1840 and 1850. The writer examines the state
+of things in these respects which existed before this revolution, and
+describes the previous protective system, navigation system, and
+colonial system. He then narrates the process by which those
+systems were overthrown, devoting special attention to the character,
+career, and changes in opinion of Sir Robert Peel, and to the attitude
+and action of the Tory, Whig, and Radical parties, and of their leading
+men, especially Mr. Disraeli, Lord John Russell, and Mr. Cobden.
+He analyses with care the arguments used on all sides in these controversies,
+especially with regard to the Repeal of the Corn Laws,
+and he shows the extent to which questions of imperial preference
+and the relations between the United Kingdom and the Colonies
+entered into the issues. One chapter is devoted to the Bank Act of
+1844, and to the consideration of its causes and results. The author
+concludes by tracing very briefly the chain of events which connect
+the period in question with our own day, in respect of commercial
+and fiscal policy, and expresses his own views as to existing tendencies
+and future developments.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bernard Holland is known as the author of the Life of the
+Duke of Devonshire, and of "Imperium et Libertas." In a sense
+the present volume is a continuation of the latter book, or rather is
+an attempt to deal more expansively and in detail with certain
+history and questions connected with the same theme, for the full
+treatment of which there was insufficient space in that book. Mr.
+Holland having acted for a number of years as Private Secretary to
+two successive Secretaries of State for the Colonies, has been brought
+into close touch in a practical way with colonial questions. This
+book, it is hoped, will be of some service both to students of economic
+history and to politicians in active life.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg 459]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8">PAINTING IN THE FAR EAST.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By LAURENCE BINYON.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>A New Edition, thoroughly Revised, with many new and additional
+Illustrations. Crown 4to.</em> <strong>21s. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Since the first edition of this book was published in 1907, much
+has happened, and a quantity of new material has been brought
+to light.</p>
+
+<p>Interest in the subject has been immensely widened and strengthened.
+The museums of Europe and America are vying with each other to
+procure fine specimens of Chinese and Japanese art. The opening
+this autumn of a new museum at Cologne, exclusively devoted to the
+arts of Eastern Asia, is a symptom of the times. Collections, public
+and private, both European and American, have been greatly
+enriched; and the exhibition in 1910 at Shepherd's Bush, of treasured
+masterpieces lent from Japanese collections, has provided a standard
+for the student.</p>
+
+<p>Six years ago, again, scarcely any of the voluminous literature of
+art existing in Chinese and Japanese had been translated. On this
+side, too, an added store of information has been made accessible,
+though still in great part scattered in the pages of learned periodicals.
+Above all, the marvellous discoveries made of recent years in China
+and Chinese Turkestan have substituted a mass of authentic material
+for groping conjectures in the study of the art of the early periods.</p>
+
+<p>In preparing a new edition of this book and bringing it up to date,
+Mr. Binyon has therefore been able to utilize a variety of new sources
+of information. The estimates given of the art of some of the most
+famous of the older masters have been reconsidered. The sections
+dealing with the early art have been in great measure rewritten;
+and the book has been revised throughout. In the matter of illustrations
+it has been possible to draw on a wider range and make a
+fuller and more representative selection.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">PAINTING IN EAST AND WEST.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By ROBERT DOUGLAS NORTON,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "The Choice."</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Crown 8vo.</em> <strong>5s. net.</strong></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The art of painting, which in the days of Gothic church-building
+contributed so much both to the education and the pleasure of the
+community at large, has admittedly come to appeal to ever-narrowing
+circles, until to-day it cannot be said to play any part in popular life
+at all. This book seeks to discover the causes of its decline in influence.
+A brief review of the chief contemporary movements in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg 460]</a></span>
+painting gives point to a suggestion made by more than one
+thoughtful critic that the chief need of Western painting is spirituality.
+Since this is a quality which those competent to judge are at one in
+attributing to Eastern art, the author, in a chapter on Far Eastern
+Painting, sets forth the ideals underlying the great painting of China
+and Japan, and contrasts these ideals with those which have inspired
+painters and public in the West. This leads to an inquiry into the
+uses of imagination and suggestion in art, and to an attempt to find
+a broad enough definition for "spirituality" not to exclude many
+widely divergent achievements of Western painting. Finally, the
+possibility of training the sense of beauty is discussed in the light of
+successful instances.</p>
+
+<p>Incidentally the book touches on many questions which, though
+of interest to picture-lovers, often remain unasked; such, for instance,
+as what we look for in a picture; how far subject is important; why
+it may happen that the interest of one picture, which pleases at first,
+soon wanes, while that of another grows steadily stronger; the value
+of technique, of different media of expression, of mere resemblance,
+etc.</p>
+
+<p>Without going into the technicalities of aesthetics, the author aims
+at investigating certain first principles which are overlooked at times
+by possessors of even the widest knowledge of individual schools.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">SHAKESPEARE'S STORIES.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By CONSTANCE MAUD and MARY MAUD.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">As You Like It&mdash;The Tempest&mdash;King Lear&mdash;Twelfth Night&mdash;The
+Merchant of Venice&mdash;A Midsummer Night's Dream&mdash;Macbeth&mdash;Hamlet&mdash;Romeo
+and Juliet.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With Illustrations from the famous Boydell prints. Crown 8vo.</em></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b>5s. net.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Miss Constance Maud is the author of "Wagner's Heroes" and
+"Wagner's Heroines," two books on similar lines to these tales
+which have had a great vogue among young people of all ages. In
+the present volume she tells the charming stories of nine of the most
+famous of Shakespeare's Tragedies and Comedies in prose of delightful
+and unstudied simplicity. On occasion the actual text has
+been used for familiar passages and phrases. These great world-tales,
+regarded merely as tales, with the elemental motives and
+passions displayed in them, appeal strongly to the imagination, and
+when narrated by a competent pen there cannot be finer or more
+absorbing reading. In addition to this, he must be a dull reader in
+whom they do not awaken a desire to make a closer acquaintance
+with the plays themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The book forms a companion volume to Sir A. T. Quiller-Couch's
+well-known "Historical Tales from Shakespeare."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg 461]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8">THE MUSE IN MOTLEY.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By HARRY GRAHAM.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes," etc., etc.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>With 24 Illustrations by</em></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Lewis Baumer.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Fcap. 4to.</em> <b>3s. 6d. net.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>All lovers of humorous verse will welcome a fresh volume of lyrics
+by the author of "Deportmental Ditties," "Canned Classics," and
+other deservedly popular products of the Minor Muse. Readers of
+Captain Graham's new collection of light verse will agree with the
+<em>Daily Chronicle</em> in describing its author as "a godsend, a treasure
+trove, a messenger from Olympus; a man who really does see the
+ludicrous side of life, a man who is a genuine humorist." Once
+again the author of these amusing poems attempts to "shoot Folly
+as she flies," and genially satirizes the foibles of the age in a fashion
+that will certainly add to his reputation as a humorist; and his
+work is rendered still more delightful by the drawings of Mr. Lewis
+Baumer, the well-known <em>Punch</em> artist, with which it is lavishly
+illustrated. "It is a great and good thing," as the <em>Pall Mall Gazette</em>
+remarked with reference to another of Captain Graham's books,
+"to have a man among us who is witty all the time and lets himself
+go. We ought to be duly thankful. And we are!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">HANNIBAL ONCE MORE.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By DOUGLAS W. FRESHFIELD, M.A.,</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Vice-President of the Royal Geographical Society; Treasurer of the Hellenic
+and Roman Societies; formerly President of the Alpine Club.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center"><em>8vo.</em> <b>5s. net.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In this little volume Mr. Freshfield has put into final shape the
+results of his study of the famous and still-debated question: "By
+which Pass did Hannibal cross the Alps?" The literature which
+has grown up round this intricate subject is surprisingly extensive,
+and various solutions have been propounded and upheld, with remarkable
+warmth and tenacity, by a host of scholars, historians,
+geographers, military men, and mountaineers. Mr. Freshfieid has
+a solution of his own, which, however, he puts forward in no
+dogmatic spirit, but in such a fashion that his book is practically
+a lucid review of the whole matter in each of its many aspects. To
+an extensive acquaintance with ancient and modern geographical
+literature he unites a wide and varied experience as an alpine climber
+and a traveller, and a minute topographical knowledge of the regions
+under discussion; and these qualifications&mdash;in which many of his
+predecessors in the same field of inquiry have been conspicuously
+lacking&mdash;enable him to throw much new light on a perennially
+fascinating problem.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8">THE PASTORAL TEACHING OF
+ST. PAUL.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By the Rev. Canon H. L. GOUDGE,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Principal of the Theological College, Ely;
+Author of "The Mind of St. Paul," etc.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Crown 8vo. Cloth.</em> <b>2s. 6d. net.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>These lectures were delivered at the end of May, 1913, at the
+Palace, Gloucester, to the clergy of the diocese, and are now
+published in response to the request of those who heard them.
+They do not constitute a detailed commentary on the Pastoral
+Epistles, though a good deal of detailed exegesis necessarily finds a
+place in them. The writer's aim has been to collect and arrange
+St. Paul's teaching as to the work of the Christian pastor, and to
+point out its applicability to modern conditions and modern difficulties.
+The writer has often found, through his experience in
+conducting Retreats, that the Pastoral Teaching of St. Paul is of
+the greatest value to the clergy to-day, but that this teaching is
+often obscured by the unsystematic character of St. Paul's writing
+and by the passing controversies with which he has to deal. In
+these lectures the First Epistle to Timothy is used as the basis, but
+continually illustrated by passages from the other Pastoral Epistles,
+and from St. Paul's earlier writings. The first lecture deals with
+the pastor's aim, the second with the pastor's character, the third
+with the pastor's work, and the fourth with the adaptation of his
+message to men and to women, to old and to young, to rich and to
+poor. The ground already covered by the writer's earlier book,
+"The Mind of St. Paul," has been carefully avoided, but it is hoped
+that the one book may throw light upon the other. An index of
+texts has been added for those who may wish to use this second book,
+as far as that is possible, as a commentary.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg 463]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8"><em>NEW NOVELS</em></p>
+
+<p class="center">SOMETHING AFAR.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By MAXWELL GRAY,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "The Silence of Dean Maitland," "The Great Refusal," etc.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Crown 8vo. Cloth.</em> <b>6s.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The scene of Maxwell Gray's new story is laid in London and in
+Italy, where the gradual unfolding of an elaborate but absorbing
+plot holds the reader's attention until the very last page of the
+book. This is a tale of heroism, of self-sacrifice, of romance, full of
+incident and adventure, illumined by those tender and imaginative
+touches, that vivid portrayal of character, which the public has learnt
+to expect from the author of "The Silence of Dean Maitland."
+From these pages we may learn that there is "something afar from
+the sphere of our sorrow," the highest aspiration of the lover, the
+artist, the poet and the saint, which, beautiful beyond all that man's
+heart can divine, is yet within the reach of every one of us.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">THE GENTLE LOVER.</p>
+
+<p class="center">A Comedy of Middle Age.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By FORREST REID,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "The Bracknells," "Following Darkness," etc.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Crown 8vo.</em> <b>6s.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>This extremely interesting story, of which the title gives a most
+apt description, is written in a lighter vein than the author's previous
+work. It is a love story, and while the tale itself is enthralling,
+it depends in great measure for its charm on the attractiveness of
+the characters who figure in the drama and who are all very pleasant
+company. The book is essentially human, the note is never forced,
+yet the interest goes on increasing right up to the end. It is actual
+life with its comedy and tragedy so closely intermingled that it is
+not always easy to distinguish one from the other. The scene is laid
+abroad, partly in Bruges, and partly in Italy, but the characters are,
+with one or two exceptions, natives of that part of Ireland with
+which the author is most familiar, and they lose none of their
+individuality by being transplanted to those beautiful old-world
+cities where we follow their varied fortunes. Mr. Reid's previous
+novels have already secured for his work the warm appreciation of
+some of the best judges of literary values, and the present novel
+may be confidently stated to exhibit his undoubted power as a writer
+of fiction in an advanced and progressive stage.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg 464]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p8"><em>NEW SCIENTIFIC WORKS</em></p>
+
+<p class="p8">INDUSTRIAL POISONING</p>
+
+<p class="center">From Fumes, Gases, and Poisons of Manufacturing
+Processes.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By Dr. J. RAMBOUSEK,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Professor of Factory Hygiene, and Chief State Health Officer, Prague</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">Translated and Edited by Dr. T. M. LEGGE,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">H.M. Medical Inspector of Factories.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Fully Illustrated. Demy 8vo.</em> <b>12s. 6d. net.</b></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">MALINGERING</p>
+
+<p class="center">And Feigned Sickness.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By Sir JOHN COLLIE, M.D., J.P.,</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Medical Examiner, London County Council; Chief Medical Officer, Metropolitan
+Water Board; Consulting Medical Examiner to the Shipping Federation; Medical
+Examiner to the Sun Insurance Office, Central Insurance Company, London, Liverpool,
+and Globe Insurance Company, and other Accident Offices; late Home Office Med.
+Ref. Workmen's Compensation Act.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center">Assisted by ARTHUR H. SPICER, M.B., B.S. (Lond.), D.P.H.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><em>Illustrated, xii + 340 pp. Demy 8vo.</em> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In this work Sir John Collie, whose wide experience has eminently
+fitted him for the task, has given an interesting and lucid
+description of the methods and peculiarities of the malingerer. He
+describes fully and in detail the methods of examination for the
+detection of malingering and the diseases usually simulated, and
+discusses the attitude required by the medical attendant towards
+unduly prolonged illness.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">OLD AGE:</p>
+
+<p class="center">Its Care and Treatment in Health and Disease.</p>
+
+<p class="center">By ROBERT SAUNDBY, M.D., F.R.C.P., LL.D., J.P.,</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Member General Medical Council; Ex-President British Medical Association; Professor
+of Medicine, University of Birmingham; Physician to the Birmingham General Hospital.</span></p></blockquote>
+
+<p class="center"><em>320 pp.</em> <b>7s. 6d. net.</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>No English writer having recently dealt with this subject, it has
+been felt that there is room for a book which should bring together
+the various contributions made to it in modern times, including the
+results of the author's extensive experience during forty years of
+medical practice. The author discusses the principles of health, by
+due attention to which healthy old age may be attained. The
+diseases to which the aged are especially liable are fully described,
+their causes are clearly indicated, and the author shows in a practical
+way by what means they may be avoided and how they may be
+appropriately treated. Special attention is given to such important
+subjects as diet, exercise, etc. Suggestive dietary tables are given,
+both for use in health and in particular diseases, while the chapters
+devoted to methods of exercise most suitable in advanced age will
+also prove of value.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<p class="p8">LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 &amp; 43 MADDOX STREET, W.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> June, 1871.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> German Ambassador at Paris.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Foreign Minister in succession to M. Jules Favre.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Subsequently Lord Ampthill.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> French Ambassador at Berlin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Formerly Mr. Odo Russell.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> French Military Attaché at Berlin before the war of 1870.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> French Ambassador at St. Petersburg.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Finance Minister.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Lord Lyons to Lord Granville, Jan. 16, 1874.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Blowitz.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> British Minister at Brussels.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> German Ambassador at London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> British Consul-General at Cairo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Now Lord Rothschild.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Lord Lyons to Lord Derby, July 11, 1874.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Jan. 7, 1876.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Jan. 24, 1877.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Nobiling's attempt to assassinate the German Emperor.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Now Viscount Knollys.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> French Secretary of Embassy at London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> French Ambassador at Constantinople.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Sir Charles Rivers Wilson, G.C.M.G.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> H.B.M. Agent and Consul General at Cairo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Now Earl of Cromer.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> At that period British Consul-General at Düsseldorf.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Austrian Ambassador at Paris.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> French Ambassador at London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Subsequently Viscount Goschen.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Sir Francis Adams, Minister at Berne.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> See Appendix by Mrs. Wilfrid Ward, "Lord Lyons in Private Life."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Afterwards Lord Alcester.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> 1911.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> French Consul-General at Tunis.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> 'Egypt and the Egyptian Question,' Sir D. Mackenzie Wallace.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Lyons to Granville.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> <em>Times</em> correspondent in Paris.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Col. the Hon. George Villiers, Military Attaché at Paris.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Lyons, Feb. 1883.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Sir Joseph Crowe, K.C.M.G., Commercial Attaché at the Paris Embassy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> French Minister at Tangier.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Mr. G. Errington, M.P., had been despatched by Mr. Gladstone on
+a secret mission to the Vatican in connection with the Home Rule
+agitation.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Now Lord Kitchener.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Lord Salisbury had taken over the Foreign Office upon the death of
+Lord Iddesleigh on January 12, 1887.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Dongorita. A town on the Somali coast.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Secretary of French Embassy at London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> French Ambassador at Constantinople.</p></div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+
+<p class="p7">Transcriber notes:</p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">P.30. 'Chiselhurst' changed to 'Chislehurst'</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.42. 'Gortchakoff' changed to 'Gortschakoff'</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.88. 'attribute' changed to 'attributed'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.268. 'Commerical' changed to 'Commercial'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.277. 'Commerical' changed to 'Commercial'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.294. 'futher' changed to 'further'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.358. 'in in' changed to 'in'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.376. 'Débats' changed to 'Débuts'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.378. 'the the' changed to 'the'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.388. 'Agenu' changed to 'Agence' as in Agence Havas.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.397. 'radicle' changed to 'radical'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.401. 'Schraebelé" changed to 'Schnaebelé'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.417. 'D'Israeli' changed to 'Disraeli'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.419. 'holdiay' changed to 'holiday'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.432. 'Amabssador' changed to 'Ambassador'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.437' 'Gortchakoff' changed to 'Gortschakoff'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.440. 'Maréchal' changed to 'Maréchale'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.440. 'Malot' changed to 'Malet'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.442. 'Caroina' changed to 'Carolina'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.443. 'Pasquior' changed to 'Pasquier'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.443. 'd'Audiffrot' changed to 'd'Audiffret'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.445. 'Stowart' changed to 'Stewart'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">P.446. 'Secreatry' changed to 'Secretary'.</li>
+ <li class="indx">Fixed Various punctuation.</li>
+</ul>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Lyons: A Record of British
+Diplomacy, Vol. 2 of 2, by Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Lyons: A Record of British Diplomacy,
+Vol. 2 of 2, by Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+Title: Lord Lyons: A Record of British Diplomacy, Vol. 2 of 2
+
+Author: Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2013 [EBook #44143]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Brian Foley, Jane Robins and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ LORD LYONS
+
+ VOLUME II
+
+[Illustration: _Lord Lyons, at the age of 65._
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD.]
+
+
+
+
+ LORD LYONS
+
+ A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY
+
+ BY
+ LORD NEWTON
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+ VOLUME II
+
+ WITH PORTRAITS
+
+ LONDON
+ EDWARD ARNOLD
+ 1913
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ THE THIRD REPUBLIC
+
+ 1871-1873
+ PAGE
+
+ Thiers as Chief of the Executive--Negotiations respecting a new
+ Anglo-French Commercial Treaty--Return of the Princes--Embarrassment
+ caused by the Comte de Chambord--Question
+ of voting in the House of Lords--Thiers elected President--State
+ of parties in France--Irritation in Germany against Thiers--Diplomatic
+ incident at Constantinople--Signature of Anglo-French
+ Commercial Treaty--Death of the Emperor Napoleon--Lord
+ Odo Russell on Bismarck's policy--Fall of Thiers--Bismarck
+ and Arnim 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ MARSHAL MACMAHON'S PRESIDENCY
+
+ 1873-1875
+
+ MacMahon as President of the Republic--Franco-German
+ relations--Bismarck's confidences to Lord Odo Russell--Political
+ confusion in France--The war scare of 1875--Rumoured intention
+ of Khedive to sell his Suez Canal shares--Lord Odo Russell on
+ Bismarck's Foreign Policy--Purchase of Khedive's shares by H.M.
+ Government 47
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ THE EASTERN QUESTION
+
+ 1876-1878
+
+ The Powers and Turkey: England and the Andrassy Note--Gambetta
+ on French Politics--Simplicity of Marshal MacMahon--Political
+ consequences of French military re-organisation--Struggle
+ between the Marshal and Parliament--The Constantinople
+ Conference: Determination of Lord Derby to do nothing--Intrigues
+ of the Duc Decazes--Constitutional crisis in
+ France--Defeat of Marshal MacMahon: new Radical Ministry
+ formed under Dufaure with Waddington as Foreign Minister--Treaty
+ of San Stefano; nervousness of French Government--Determination
+ of H.M. Government to secure a Conference--Invitation
+ to Lord Lyons to be the British representative at
+ Berlin--Resignation of Lord Derby: appointment of Lord
+ Salisbury--Lord Salisbury's circular of April 1st, 1878--Inquiry
+ of Lord Salisbury respecting French desire for Tunis--The Anglo-Turkish
+ Convention--The Congress of Berlin--Reception in
+ France of the Anglo-Turkish Convention--Waddington and
+ Tunis--Sir H. Layard on the Treaty of Berlin 95
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ M. GREVY'S PRESIDENCY
+
+ 1878-1879
+
+ Paris Exhibition of 1878: desire of Queen Victoria to visit it
+ incognito--Tunis--Resignation of MacMahon: Election of
+ Grevy--Waddington Prime Minister: his difficulties--Anglo-French
+ policy in Egypt--Question of deposing the Khedive
+ Ismail--Differences between British and French Governments
+ with regard to Egypt--Deposition of the Khedive by the Sultan--Death
+ of the Prince Imperial: effect in France--Proposed
+ visit of Gambetta to England: his bias in favour of English
+ Conservatives--Resignation of Waddington: Freycinet Prime
+ Minister--Coolness between France and Russia 161
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ THE REVIVAL OF FRANCE
+
+ 1880-1881
+
+ Change of Government in England and reversal of Foreign Policy--The
+ French Embassy in London: Freycinet's model Ambassador--Personal
+ characteristics of Lord Lyons: _On ne lui connait
+ pas de vice_--The work at the Paris Embassy--The Eastern
+ Question: Mr. Goschen at Constantinople--The Dulcigno
+ Demonstration and the difficulties of the European Concert--Proposal
+ to seize Smyrna--Opportune surrender of the Sultan--H.M.
+ Government and the Pope: Mission of Mr. Errington,
+ M.P.--Gambetta on the European situation--French expedition
+ to Tunis--Ineffectual objections of H.M. Government--Establishment
+ of French Protectorate over Tunis--Irritation in England
+ and Italy--Distinction drawn between Tunis and Tripoli--Attempt
+ to negotiate a new Anglo-French Commercial
+ Treaty: Question of Retaliation 209
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ ARABI'S REBELLION
+
+ 1881-1882
+
+ Egypt: the _coup d'etat_ of the Colonels: joint Anglo-French
+ action--Gambetta as Prime Minister--His desire to remain on good
+ terms with England--Egypt: the Dual Note--Gambetta in favour of
+ a more resolute joint policy--Fall of Gambetta after two months
+ of office--Ministry formed by Freycinet--French vacillation
+ with regard to Egypt--Decision of H.M. Government to employ
+ force--Bombardment of Alexandria--Decision of French Government
+ to take no part in expedition--Fall of Freycinet--Invitation to
+ Italy to join in expedition declined--Effect produced in France by
+ British military success in Egypt--French endeavour to re-establish
+ the Control in Egypt--Madagascar and Tonquin 258
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ ANGLOPHOBIA
+
+ 1883-1885
+
+ Death of Gambetta--General discontent in France--Change of
+ Government: Jules Ferry Prime Minister--Waddington appointed
+ Ambassador in London--Insult to King of Spain in
+ Paris--Growth of French ill-will towards English influence in
+ Egypt--Baron de Billing and General Gordon--Establishment
+ of French Protectorate over Tonquin--Egyptian Conference
+ in London--Renewed request to Lord Lyons to vote in House
+ of Lords--Anti-English combination with regard to Egypt--Jules
+ Ferry on the necessity of delivering a _coup foudroyant_ upon
+ China--French reverse in Tonquin: resignation of Jules Ferry--New
+ Government under Freycinet--Bismarck and the persons
+ whom he disliked--Funeral of Victor Hugo--Return of Lord
+ Salisbury to the Foreign Office--Anglophobia in Paris: scurrilities
+ of Rochefort 305
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ THE LAST YEAR'S WORK
+
+ 1886-1887
+
+ Lord Rosebery at the Foreign Office--His surprise at
+ ill-feeling shown by French Government--Proceedings of General
+ Boulanger--Princes' Exclusion Bill--Boulanger at the Review
+ of July 14th--Causes of his popularity--General Election
+ in England: Lord Salisbury Prime Minister--The Foreign
+ Office offered to Lord Lyons--Egyptian questions raised
+ by French Government--Apprehension in France of a German
+ attack--Embarrassment caused by Boulanger--Unofficial attempt
+ on behalf of French Government to establish better relations
+ with England--Application by Lord Lyons to be permitted to
+ resign--Pressed by Lord Salisbury to remain until end of the
+ year--Desire of French Government to get rid of Boulanger--Lord
+ Salisbury's complaints as to unfriendly action of the French
+ Government in various parts of the world--Resignation of Lord
+ Lyons--Created an Earl--His death 360
+
+
+ APPENDIX
+
+ Lord Lyons in Private Life. By MRS. WILFRID WARD 415
+
+ INDEX 429
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF PLATES IN VOL. II
+
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ LORD LYONS AT THE AGE OF 65 _Frontispiece_
+
+ WILLIAM HENRY WADDINGTON 169
+
+ GENERAL BOULANGER 370
+
+ THE BRITISH EMBASSY, PARIS 420
+ (_Photograph by F. Contet, Paris._)
+
+
+
+
+LORD LYONS
+
+A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE THIRD REPUBLIC
+
+(1871-1873)
+
+
+Strictly speaking, the existence of the National Assembly which had
+been summoned to ratify the Preliminaries of Peace, had now[1] come to
+an end, but under prevailing circumstances, it was more convenient to
+ignore Constitutional technicalities, and the Government proceeded to
+carry on the business of the country on the basis of a Republic. Thiers
+had been elected Chief of the Executive, and it was astonishing how
+rapidly his liking for a Republic increased since he had become the
+head of one. It was now part of his task to check the too reactionary
+tendencies of the Assembly and to preserve that form of government which
+was supposed to divide Frenchmen the least. The feeling against the
+Government of National Defence was as strong as ever, and the elections
+of some of the Orleans princes gave rise to inconvenient demonstrations
+on the part of their political supporters, who pressed for the repeal
+of the law disqualifying that family. Thiers realized plainly enough
+that the revival of this demand was premature, and would only add to
+the general confusion, and had therefore induced the princes to absent
+themselves from Bordeaux, but the question could no longer be avoided.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 6, 1871.
+
+ Thiers has been hard at work 'lobbying,' as the Americans
+ say, but could not come to any settlement with the Assembly,
+ and so begged them to postpone the question of the elections of
+ the Princes of Orleans till the day after to-morrow. One of the
+ plans proposed was that the provisional state of things should
+ be formally continued for two years, by conferring his present
+ powers on Thiers for that period. This would, it was hoped, keep
+ the Republicans quiet and allay the impatience of the monarchical
+ parties, by giving them a fixed time to look forward to. But this,
+ it seems, the majority in the Assembly would not promise to vote.
+ On the other hand, Thiers is said to be afraid of having the Duc
+ d'Aumale and perhaps Prince Napoleon also, speaking against him
+ in the Assembly, and attacking him and each other outside. Then
+ comes the doubt as to the extent to which the fusion between the
+ Comte de Chambord and the other Princes, or rather that between
+ their respective parties, really goes. Altogether nothing can be
+ less encouraging than the prospect. The Duc d'Aumale, as Lieutenant
+ General du Royaume, to prepare the way for the Comte de Chambord,
+ is, for the moment, the favourite combination. In the meantime
+ Thiers has thrown a sop to the majority by putting an Orleanist
+ into the Home Office. The idea at Versailles yesterday was that
+ Thiers and the Assembly would come to a compromise on the basis
+ that the Orleans elections should be confirmed, but with a preamble
+ repeating that nothing done was to be held to prejudge the question
+ of the definitive government of France.
+
+When the question came up, Thiers yielded on the point of the admission
+of the Princes, and the majority were highly pleased at having extorted
+this concession. Lord Lyons, dining at Thiers's house at Versailles, a
+few days after the debate in the Assembly, met there the German General
+von Fabrice, the Prince de Joinville, the Duc d'Aumale, and the Duc de
+Chartres, and mentions the significant fact that M. and Madame Thiers
+and the rest of the company treated these Princes with even more than
+the usual respect shown to Royal personages. In private conversation
+Thiers expressed great confidence in soon getting the Germans out of the
+Paris forts, but both he and Jules Favre complained that Bismarck was a
+very bad creditor, and insisted upon having his first half-milliard by
+the end of the month: in fact, the Germans were so clamorous for payment
+that they hardly seemed to realize how anxious the French were to get
+rid of them, and that if the money was not immediately forthcoming, it
+was only because it was impossible to produce it.
+
+What was of more immediate concern to the British Government than either
+the payment of the indemnity or the future of the Orleans princes,
+was the prospect of a new Commercial Treaty. This was sufficiently
+unpromising. Lord Lyons had pointed out during the Empire period, that
+under a Constitutional _regime_ in France, we were not likely to enjoy
+such favourable commercial conditions as under personal government,
+and the more liberal the composition of a French Government, the
+more Protectionist appeared to be its policy. Thiers himself was an
+ardent Protectionist, quite unamenable to the blandishments of British
+Free Traders, who always appear to hold that man was made for Free
+Trade, instead of Free Trade for man, and the Finance Minister, Pouyer
+Quertier, entertained the same views as his chief. But, even if the
+Emperor were to come back, it was more than doubtful whether he would
+venture to maintain the existing Commercial Treaty as it stood, and
+there was every probability that the Bordeaux wine people and other
+so-called French Free Traders would turn Protectionist as soon as they
+realized that there was no prospect of British retaliation. What cut
+Lord Lyons (an orthodox Free Trader) to the heart, was that, just as the
+French manufacturers had got over the shock of the sudden introduction
+of Free Trade under the Empire and had adapted themselves to the new
+system, everything should be thrown back again. It was likely, indeed,
+that there would be some opposition to Thiers's Protectionist taxes,
+but he knew well enough that there were not a sufficient number of
+Free Traders in the Assembly, or in the country, to make any effective
+resistance to the Government. When approached on the subject, the French
+Ministers asserted that all they wanted was to increase the revenue,
+and that all they demanded from England was to be allowed to raise
+their tariff with this view only, whereas, in their hearts, they meant
+Protection pure and simple. Lord Lyons's personal view was that England
+would be better off if the Treaty was reduced to little more than a
+most favoured nation clause. 'The only element for negotiation with the
+school of political economy now predominant here,' he sadly remarked,
+'would be a threat of retaliation, and this we cannot use.' It will
+be found subsequently that this was the one predominant factor in all
+commercial negotiations between the two Governments.
+
+A long conversation with Thiers, who was pressing for a definite reply
+from Her Majesty's Government on the subject of a new Treaty showed
+that matters from the British point of view were as unsatisfactory
+as they well could be. Thiers, whose language respecting England was
+courteous and friendly, made it clear that Her Majesty's Government
+must choose between the proposed modifications in the tariff and the
+unconditional denunciation of the whole Treaty, and that if the Treaty
+were denounced, England must not expect, after its expiration, to be
+placed upon the footing of the most favoured nation. He considered that
+he had a right to denounce the Treaty at once, but had no wish to act
+in an unfriendly spirit, and had therefore refrained from doing so, and
+although he and his colleagues considered that the existing Treaty was
+disadvantageous and even disastrous to France, they had never promoted
+any agitation against it, and had confined themselves to proposing
+modifications of the tariff, which their financial necessities and the
+state of the French manufacturing interests rendered indispensable.
+Coal and iron, which were articles of the greatest importance to
+England, were not touched, and all that had, in fact, been asked for
+was a moderate increase on the duties on textile fabrics. As for the
+French Free Traders, whatever misleading views they might put forward in
+London, their influence upon the Assembly would be imperceptible, and it
+remained therefore for Her Majesty's Government to decide whether they
+would agree to the changes he had proposed to them, or would give up
+altogether the benefits which England derived from the Treaty.
+
+Thiers's real motive was disclosed later on, when, whilst asserting
+that he should always act in a friendly spirit towards England, he
+admitted that 'England was a much more formidable competitor in
+commerce than any other nation.' Concessions which might safely be
+made to other countries might very reasonably be withheld from her.
+For instance, privileges which might be safely granted to the Italian
+merchant navy might, if granted to Great Britain, produce a competition
+between English and French shipping very disadvantageous to France.
+It would also be certainly for the interest of France that she should
+furnish herself with colonial articles brought direct to her own ports
+rather than resort, as at present, to the depots of such goods in
+Great Britain. Nothing could be further from his intentions than to be
+influenced by any spirit of retaliation, nor, if the Treaty should be
+denounced, would he, on that account, be less friendly to England in
+political matters; but it was evident that, in making his financial and
+commercial arrangements, the interests and necessities of France must
+be paramount. In conclusion he pressed for an immediate answer from Her
+Majesty's Government in order that the French Government might complete
+their plans, which were of urgent importance.
+
+To the impartial observer the opinions expressed by Thiers seem to be
+logical, natural, and reasonable, unless the principle of looking after
+one's own interests is unreasonable; but to the ardent devotees of Free
+Trade, they must have appeared in the light of impiety. Lord Lyons, in
+reporting the interview, remarked that 'nothing could have been more
+unsatisfactory than Thiers's language,' and added significantly that he
+himself had managed to keep his temper.
+
+Thiers did not get his definite answer, and the wrangle continued until
+in February, 1872, the French Government, with the general approval of
+the nation, gave notice of the termination of the Commercial Treaty of
+1860.
+
+The Bill abrogating the proscription of the French Royal families had
+been passed by the Assembly, and the elections of the Duc d'Aumale and
+the Prince de Joinville consequently declared valid, but these princes
+having established their rights, wisely remained in the background. Not
+so another illustrious Royalist, the Comte de Chambord. This prince, who
+was also included in the reversal of the disqualifying law, returned
+to France and issued a proclamation from the Chateau of Chambord in
+July which spread consternation in the Royalist camp. After explaining
+that his presence was only temporary and that he desired to create no
+embarrassment, he declared that he was prepared to govern on a broad
+basis of administrative decentralization, but that there were certain
+conditions to which he could not submit. If he were summoned to the
+throne he would accept, but he should retain his principles, and above
+all the White Flag which had been handed down to him by his ancestors.
+This announcement seemed, to say the least, premature, and the
+supporters of a Republic must have warmly congratulated themselves upon
+having to encounter an enemy who played so completely into their hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 11, 1871.
+
+ The Comte de Chambord seems to have upset the Legitimist
+ coach. The Legitimist Deputies have been obliged to repudiate
+ the White Flag, being sure that they could never be elected to a
+ new Chamber under that Banner, and of course fusion between the
+ Orleans Princes and their cousin is now out of the question.
+
+ Thiers said to me last night that he did not regard the
+ Comte de Chambord's declaration in favour of the White Flag as
+ irrevocable--and that it looked as if it had been made in a moment
+ of ill-temper. According to Thiers, both the Comte de Chambord and
+ the Comte de Paris eagerly desire to be kings--most people doubt,
+ however, whether the Comte de Chambord does really wish it. All
+ that has occurred tends to strengthen and prolong Thiers's hold on
+ power, and he is rejoicing accordingly. Indeed, there is hardly a
+ Frenchman who professes to doubt that Thiers's Government is the
+ only Government possible at the moment.
+
+ Gambetta is not considered by Thiers to be dangerous; he
+ declares that he will only maintain a constitutional or legal
+ opposition so long as the Government is Republican, and if he and
+ his supporters stick to this, Thiers will certainly have no great
+ cause to dread them. If Rouher had been elected he would have been
+ a formidable opponent, though he has been too much accustomed
+ to lead an applauding and acquiescing majority to be good at
+ speaking to a hostile audience. Thiers says that the rejection of
+ Rouher will be a good thing for his own health and repose, as he
+ should have found it very fatiguing to have to answer the great
+ Imperialist orator.
+
+ The hurry with which the new duties were rushed through
+ the Assembly on Saturday is disquieting. Thiers and Jules Favre
+ protest, however, that they are determined to do nothing irregular
+ regarding the Commercial Treaties. The Swiss Minister tells me his
+ Government is determined to insist upon the strict execution of
+ the Swiss Treaty, without admitting any alteration of the tariffs,
+ but then the Swiss Treaty does not expire for five or six years. I
+ take care to give no opinion as to what we shall or shall not do.
+ Thiers talked again last night of conferring with me soon about the
+ details of the changes. I am not very anxious that he should do so,
+ as confusion is much more likely than anything else to arise from
+ carrying on the discussion in both places at once.
+
+ Half my time is taken up with the affairs of the unfortunate
+ English prisoners. It is necessary to be cautious, for the French
+ Authorities are extremely touchy on the subject. There does not
+ appear to be any danger of their being executed, as fortunately
+ they are a very insignificant and unimportant set of insurgents,
+ if insurgents they were; but they are kept a long time without
+ examination, and some do run the risk of being shipped off to New
+ Caledonia.
+
+The Comte de Chambord, having effectually destroyed the chances of
+his own party for the time being, now disappeared from the scene, and
+nothing more was heard of him or his White Flag for a considerable
+period.
+
+The summer of 1871 did not pass without the old question of voting in
+the House of Lords cropping up again. In July, Lord Lyons received
+an intimation from the Liberal Whip that his vote was wanted on the
+following day, accompanied by a letter from Lord Granville in the same
+sense. He declined to come, on the same ground as formerly, viz. that
+he considered it advisable that a diplomatist should keep aloof from
+home politics, and also because he was extremely reluctant to give
+votes on questions of which he had little knowledge. The particular
+question involved was presumably a vote of censure on the Government in
+connection with the Army Purchase Bill, and he seems to have taken it
+for granted that Lord Granville would make no objection. A letter from
+the latter showed that he was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, July 17, 1871.
+
+ I cannot agree with the principle you lay down--Lord Stuart,
+ my father, the late Lord Cowley, and Lord Normanby when Ambassador
+ at Paris used to vote when specially summoned. So did Lord Cowley,
+ although he served under successive Governments. So did Lord
+ Westmoreland and others. I find no recommendation of your principle
+ in the report of the Committee of the House of Commons, and
+ although Lord Derby may have given evidence in favour of it, his
+ father gave practical proof in several instances that he entirely
+ disagreed with it.
+
+ A Foreign Government can hardly believe in the confidential
+ relations of this Government and her Ambassador, if the latter
+ being a Peer abstains from supporting them when a vote of want of
+ confidence, or one amounting to it, is proposed against them.
+
+ Clarendon brought before the Cabinet your disinclination to
+ vote on the question of the Irish Church. They unanimously decided
+ that we had a claim upon you, and you were good enough to consent,
+ stating the grounds you mention in your letter of yesterday.
+
+ It is of course too late for any practical result to our
+ controversy as regards to-night, but I hope you will consider
+ that I have a claim on you for the future, when your vote is of
+ importance. I shall never ask you unnecessarily to come over.
+
+An intimation of this kind from an official chief could not well be
+disregarded, but the reply to Lord Granville's letter is conclusive in
+its arguments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, July 27, 1871.
+
+ Your letter of the 17th about my voting in the House of Lords
+ goes farther than Lord Clarendon did on the previous occasion.
+ Lord Clarendon originally acquiesced in my not voting on the Irish
+ Church Bill, and when he subsequently begged me to come over,
+ unless I objected to the Bill, he founded his request principally
+ upon a strong opinion of Mr. Gladstone's that it was the duty of
+ a peer not to abstain from voting, and that every vote was of
+ consequence. On this ground he expressed a hope that I should come
+ over unless I was opposed to the Bill.
+
+ Of my predecessors, the only one who was in a position
+ resembling mine, was the present Lord Cowley; and certainly he will
+ always be a high authority with me.
+
+ I have been for more than thirty years, and I still am,
+ devoted to my own profession, and I am sure that if I can be of
+ any use in my generation, and do myself any credit, it must be
+ as a diplomatist. I have worked my way up in the regular course
+ of the profession, and have served under successive Governments,
+ both before and since I became a peer, without any reference to
+ home politics. In fact, I received my original appointment to the
+ service from Lord Palmerston; I was made paid attache by Lord
+ Aberdeen; I was sent to Rome by Lord Russell; to Washington by Lord
+ Malmesbury; to Constantinople by Lord Russell; and finally to Paris
+ by Lord Derby. The appointment was given to me in the ordinary way
+ of advancement in my profession, and I was told afterwards by Lord
+ Clarendon that my being wholly unconnected with any party at home
+ had been considered to be a recommendation. I have myself always
+ thought that a regular diplomatist could only impair his efficiency
+ by taking part in home politics, and I have throughout acted upon
+ this conviction. During the thirteen years or thereabouts which
+ have elapsed since I succeeded to my father's peerage, I have given
+ only one vote in the House of Lords; the question, the Irish Church
+ vote, was one on which there really did seem to be a possibility
+ that the decision might turn upon one vote; and the question, as it
+ stood before the House, was hardly a party question.
+
+ In addition to all this, I must say that while I have a very
+ great reluctance to give blind votes, I do not wish to be diverted
+ from my diplomatic duties by having to attend to home questions;
+ also, I would rather give my whole energies to carrying out the
+ instructions of the Government abroad, without having continually
+ to consult my conscience about voting in the House of Lords.
+
+ I did not intend to have given you the trouble of reading
+ a long answer to your letter, but I have just received another
+ summons from Lord Bessborough. I hope, however, you will not press
+ me to come over to vote on Monday. You were at all events good
+ enough to say that you should never ask me to come unnecessarily;
+ but if, after considering my reasons, you insist upon my coming, I
+ must of course defer to your opinion and do what you desire.
+
+It is difficult to believe that Lord Granville, who was one of the
+most amiable and considerate of men, was acting otherwise than under
+pressure in thus endeavouring to utilize an Ambassador as a party hack.
+His arguments certainly do not bear much investigation. If a foreign
+government could not feel any confidence in an Ambassador who failed to
+support his party by a vote in Parliament, what confidence could they
+possibly feel in him if his party were out of office, and he continued
+at his post under the orders of political opponents? If the Clarendon
+Cabinet really decided that they had a claim upon diplomatists as party
+men it only showed that they were conspicuously wanting in judgment and
+a prey to that dementia which occasionally seizes upon British statesmen
+when a division is impending. That state of mind is intelligible when
+a division in the House of Commons is concerned, but what passes
+comprehension is that pressure should be put upon members of the House
+of Lords to vote, whose abstention is obviously desirable, whilst scores
+of obscure peers are left unmolested. One peer's vote was as good as
+another's in 1871, just as it is now; but in the division on the vote of
+censure on the Army Purchase Bill only 244 peers voted out of a House
+containing about double that number.
+
+Before long the question of the prolongation of Thiers's powers for a
+fixed period became the chief topic of interest. He was infinitely the
+most important personage in France, and a large number of members were
+desirous of placing him more or less in the position of a constitutional
+sovereign, and obliging him to take a Ministry from the majority in
+the Assembly. The majority in the Assembly not unnaturally thought
+that their ideas ought to prevail in the Government, and they resented
+being constantly threatened with the withdrawal of this indispensable
+man, an action which, it was thought, would amount to little short of a
+revolution. What they wanted, therefore, was to bestow a higher title
+upon him than Chief of the Executive Power, which would exclude him from
+coming in person to the Assembly; and it was only the difficulty of
+finding some one to take his place, and the desire to get the Germans
+out of the Paris forts that kept them quiet. Like many other eminent
+persons considered to be indispensable, Thiers now began to give out
+that he really desired to retire into private life, and that it was
+only the country which insisted upon his staying in office, while as a
+matter of fact, he was by no means as indifferent to power as he fancied
+himself to be. In the Chamber he damaged his reputation to some extent
+by displays of temper and threats of resignation, but there was never
+much doubt as to the prolongation of his powers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Aug. 25, 1871.
+
+ Thiers quitted the Tribune in a pet yesterday, and the whole
+ series of events in the Assembly has very much lowered his credit.
+ In the one thing in which he was thought to be pre-eminent, the
+ art of managing a deliberative body, he completely failed: and his
+ first threatening to resign, and then coming back and half giving
+ in, has very much damaged him. Nevertheless the general opinion
+ is that the prolongation of his powers will pass, upon his making
+ it a condition, as a vote of confidence, of his remaining. But it
+ is difficult to believe, even if it be passed by a considerable
+ majority, that things can go on smoothly between him and the
+ Assembly very long. If any party had a leader and courage, it might
+ do almost anything in France at this moment.
+
+ Arnim[2] is expected on Saturday. I knew him years ago at
+ Rome. I doubt his being a conciliatory negotiator. The French
+ believe that Bismarck is so anxious to obtain commercial advantages
+ for Alsace, that he will give them great things in return. He
+ is supposed to wish, in the first place, to conciliate his new
+ subjects; and, in the second, to divert for a time from Germany
+ the torrent of Alsatian manufactures which would pour in if the
+ outlets into France were stopped up. The French hope to get the
+ Paris forts evacuated in return for a continuance of the free
+ entrance of Alsatian goods into France until the 1st of January,
+ and they even speculate upon getting the Prussians to evacuate
+ Champagne, and content themselves with keeping the army, which was
+ to have occupied it, inside the German frontier, the French paying
+ the expenses, as if it were still in France. All this to be given
+ in return for a prolongation of commercial privileges for Alsace.
+ It would be ungenerous of 'most favoured nations' to claim similar
+ privileges.
+
+ Thiers was too full of the events of the afternoon in the
+ Assembly to talk about the Commercial Treaty. I don't believe he
+ has brought the Committee round to his duties on raw materials.
+
+At the end of August, the Assembly by a very large majority passed a
+bill conferring upon Thiers the title of President of the Republic and
+confirmed his powers for the duration of the existing Assembly, adopting
+at the same time a vote of confidence in him personally. The result
+of these proceedings was that the attempt to make a step towards the
+definite establishment of a Republic and to place Thiers as President
+for a term of years in a position independent of the Assembly, failed.
+The bill asserted what the Left had always denied, viz. the constituent
+power of the Assembly, and declared that the President was responsible
+to it. So far, it expressed the sentiments of the moderate men, and the
+minority was composed of extreme Legitimists and extreme Republicans. It
+also proved that Thiers was still held to be the indispensable man.
+
+The Assembly, which had adjourned after the passing of the
+above-mentioned bill, met again in December, and was supposed to be
+more Conservative than ever, owing to the fear created by Radical
+progress in the country. Thiers's Presidential Message did not afford
+much satisfaction to the extreme partisans on either side, and it was
+evident that he did not desire any prompt solution of the Constitutional
+question, preferring to leave himself free, and not to be forced into
+taking any premature decision. As for the Legitimist, Orleanist, and
+Moderate Republican groups, their vacillation tended only to the
+advantage of two parties, the Bonapartists and the Red Republicans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 26. 1871.
+
+ The New Year will open gloomily for France. The Germans appear
+ to be alarmed, or at all events irritated, by Thiers's military
+ boasts and military preparations. The boasts are certainly unwise,
+ and preparations or anything else which encourages the French
+ to expect to get off paying the three milliards are extremely
+ imprudent. The Germans mean to have their money and keep the
+ territory they have taken, and they say that they had better have
+ it out with France now that she is weak, than wait till she has
+ got strong again. The irritation of the French against the Germans
+ seems to grow, and the Germans are angry with the French for not
+ loving them, which after the conditions of peace, to say nothing of
+ the events of the war, seems somewhat unreasonable.
+
+ Thiers so far holds his own, and no party seems willing to
+ displace him, while no party agrees with him. The one thing in
+ which men of all parties seem to agree is in abusing Thiers, and
+ I must say that a good deal of the abuse is exceedingly unjust.
+ But with the members of the Assembly in this inflammable state of
+ feeling towards him, an unexpected spark may at any moment make
+ them flare up and turn him out almost before they are aware of
+ it. The general idea is that the Assembly would appoint the Duc
+ d'Aumale to succeed him; the acceptance of the Duc d'Aumale by
+ the country would depend upon the amount of vigour he showed in
+ putting down illegal opposition by force. There are members of the
+ Assembly who wish to declare that in case of Thiers's abdication
+ or dethronement, the President of the Assembly is to exercise the
+ Executive Power. This is with a view of bringing forward Grevy, who
+ is an honourable, moderate man, but an old thoroughbred Republican.
+ The immediate event people are looking forward to with interest
+ and anxiety is the election of a deputy for Paris on the 7th of
+ next month. No one will be surprised if a Red is returned, in
+ consequence of the men of order declining to vote. The Legitimists
+ and the Orleanists seem to be at daggers drawn again.
+
+ Arnim says that Bismarck's fierce despatch was partly intended
+ to strengthen Thiers's hands in resisting violence against the
+ Germans. If this is so, the ferocity went too far beyond the mark
+ to be successful, great as the provocation on the French side was.
+
+ I will write a mild disclaimer of the accuracy of Jules
+ Favre's accounts of his communications with me. There is no _malus
+ animus_, I think, in them. My Russian and Italian colleagues are
+ very much annoyed by the language he attributes to them.
+
+The fierce despatch referred was a harsh communication from Bismarck
+complaining of the recent acquittal of some Frenchmen who had
+assassinated German soldiers of the army of occupation.
+
+At the close of 1871, the Bonapartist Party, although scarcely
+represented in the Assembly, appeared to be that which caused the
+Government the most anxiety. That party had undoubtedly made progress
+in the country; it held out the hope of a vigorous and determined
+maintenance of public order, and a vast number of Frenchmen were so much
+out of heart, so wearied and disgusted by the results of the attempts
+at political liberty, and so much afraid of the triumph of the Commune,
+that they were prepared to sacrifice anything in order to be assured of
+peace and tranquillity. The peasants, shopkeepers, and even many of the
+workmen in the towns, sighed for the material prosperity of the Empire.
+They believed that the Emperor had been betrayed by his Ministers and
+Generals, and were willing to excuse his personal share even in the
+capitulation of Sedan. If more confidence could have been felt in his
+health and personal energy, the advocates of a restoration of the Empire
+would have been still more numerous. As it was, a great mass of the
+ignorant and the timid were in favour of it, and it was the opinion
+of so impartial an observer as the British Ambassador, that if a free
+vote could have been taken under universal suffrage a majority would
+probably have been obtained for the re-establishment upon the throne of
+Napoleon III. If the Imperialists could by any means have seized upon
+the executive Government and so directed the operations of a plebiscite,
+there was little doubt as to their securing the usual millions of votes
+under that process. With them, as with the other parties, the difficulty
+lay in bringing about such a crisis as would enable them to act, and the
+Emperor himself was disinclined to take any adventurous step.
+
+The Legitimists had the advantage of holding to a definite principle,
+but it was a principle which carried little weight in the country in
+general. Their chief, the Comte de Chambord, had shown himself to be so
+impracticable, that it really seemed doubtful whether he wished to mount
+the throne, and the party had more members in the existing Assembly than
+it was likely to obtain if a fresh general election took place; added
+to which it had quarrelled with the Orleanists, a union with whom was
+essential to the attainment of any practical end.
+
+The Orleanists were weakened by their dissensions with the Legitimists
+and discouraged by what they considered the want of energy and
+enterprise of the Princes of the family. The members of the Orleans
+party suffered from the want of a definite principle, and consisted
+chiefly of educated and enlightened men who held to Constitutional
+Monarchy and Parliamentary Government; in reality they were a
+fluctuating body willing to accept any Government giving a promise of
+order and political liberty.
+
+The moderate Republicans included in their ranks many honest and
+respected men, but they had to contend with the extreme unpopularity of
+the Government of National Defence in which they had formed the chief
+part, and although the existing Government was nominally based upon
+their principles, they did not appear to be gaining ground. The extreme
+Republicans endeavoured to make up by violence what they wanted in
+numerical strength, and as they saw no prospect of obtaining office in
+a regular manner, founded their hopes upon seizing power at a critical
+moment with the help of the Paris mob.
+
+Amidst this collection of parties stood Thiers's Government, supported
+heartily by none, but accepted by all. By skilful management, by
+yielding where resistance appeared hopeless, and by obtaining votes
+sometimes from one side of the Assembly, and sometimes from the other,
+Thiers had carried many points to which he attached importance, and
+had never yet found himself in a minority. His Government was avowedly
+a temporary expedient, resting upon a compromise between all parties,
+or rather upon the adjournment of all constitutional questions. To the
+monarchical parties which formed the majority of the Assembly, Thiers's
+apparent adoption of the Republican system rendered him especially
+obnoxious. On the other hand, the Republicans were dissatisfied because,
+the whole weight of the Government was not unscrupulously used for the
+purpose of establishing a Republic permanently, with or without the
+consent of the people.
+
+On the centralization of the administration, on military organization,
+on finance, and on other matters, Thiers's personal views were widely
+different from those generally prevalent in the Assembly, and there was
+plenty of censure and criticism of him in private; but no one party saw
+its way to ensuring its own triumph, and all were weighed down by the
+necessity of maintaining endurable relations with Germany. In forming
+such relations, Thiers had shown great skill and obtained considerable
+success in his arduous task. Bismarck, in imposing the hardest possible
+conditions of peace, had acted avowedly on the principle that it was
+hopeless to conciliate France, and that the only security for Germany
+lay in weakening her as much as possible. This policy having been
+carried out, the German public and the German press appeared to be quite
+surprised that France was slow to be reconciled to her conquerors,
+and even to doubt whether already France was not too strong for their
+safety. The apparent recovery of the French finances may well have
+surprised them disagreeably, but Thiers was not over careful to avoid
+increasing their distrust. His intention to create a larger army than
+France had ever maintained before, and his frequent praises of the army
+he already possessed, was not reassuring to them. It was, therefore,
+not altogether surprising that they should have felt some doubts as to
+the consequences of finding themselves confronted by an immense army,
+when they called upon France to pay the remaining three milliards in
+1874. Nevertheless the German Government had expressed its confidence in
+Thiers, and it would have been almost impossible for any new Government
+to have placed matters on as tolerable a footing.
+
+All things considered, therefore, it seemed not improbable that the
+existing Government might last for some time, although its life was
+somewhat precarious, since it was liable to be upset by commotions
+and conspiracies, and having no existence apart from Thiers, its
+duration was bound to depend on the health and strength of a man nearly
+seventy-four years old.
+
+In January, 1872, Thiers, in consequence of a dispute in the Chamber
+over the question of a tax on raw materials, tendered his resignation,
+but was persuaded with some difficulty to reconsider it. 'I have never
+known the French so depressed and so out of heart about their internal
+affairs,' wrote Lord Lyons. 'They don't believe Thiers can go on
+much longer, and they see nothing but confusion if he is turned out.
+The Legitimists and Orleanists are now trying for fusion. They are
+attempting to draw up a constitution on which they can all agree, and
+which, when drawn up, is to be offered to the Comte de Chambord, and if
+refused by him, then to the Comte de Paris. I hear they have not yet
+been able to come to an understanding on the first article. It all tends
+to raise the Bonapartists. Many people expect to hear any morning of a
+coup by which Thiers and the Assembly will be deposed, and an _appel au
+peuple_, made to end in a restoration of the Empire.' Probably it was
+the knowledge of a Bonapartist reaction in the country that led Thiers
+to make a singularly foolish complaint against an alleged military
+demonstration in England in favour of the ex-Emperor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 9, 1872.
+
+ M. Thiers said to me yesterday at Versailles that he had
+ been told that a general of the name of Wood had marched 6000 of
+ Her Majesty's troops to Chislehurst to be reviewed by the Emperor
+ Napoleon.
+
+ M. Thiers went on to say that no one could appreciate more
+ highly than he did the noble and generous hospitality which England
+ extended to political exiles, and that he had indeed profited by
+ it in his own person. He admired also the jealousy with which the
+ English nation regarded all attempts from abroad to interfere with
+ the free exercise of this hospitality. He should never complain
+ of due respect being shown to a Sovereign Family in adversity. But
+ he thought that there was some limit to be observed in the matter.
+ For instance, he himself, while on the best terms with the reigning
+ dynasty in Spain, still always treated the Queen Isabella, who was
+ in France, with great respect and deference. Nevertheless, when Her
+ Majesty had expressed a desire to go to live at Pau, he had felt it
+ to be his duty to ask her very courteously to select a residence at
+ a greater distance from the frontier of Spain. In this, as in all
+ matters, he felt that consideration for the exiles must be tempered
+ by a due respect for the recognized Government of their country.
+ Now if the Emperor Napoleon should choose to be present at a review
+ of British troops, there could be no objection to his being treated
+ with all the courtesy due to a head which had worn a crown. It was,
+ however, a different thing to march troops to his residence to hold
+ a review there in his honour.
+
+Thiers had not taken the trouble to substantiate his ridiculous
+complaint, and his action was an instance of the extreme gullibility
+of even the most intelligent French statesmen, where foreign countries
+are concerned, and so perturbed was the French Government at the idea
+of a Bonapartist restoration, that according to Captain Hotham, British
+Consul at Calais, two gunboats, the _Cuvier_ and _Faon_, were at that
+time actually employed in patrolling the coast between St. Malo and
+Dunkirk with a view to preventing a possible landing of the Emperor
+Napoleon. A little later, the Duc de Broglie, French Ambassador in
+London, made a tactless remonstrance to Lord Granville with regard to
+the presence of the Emperor and Empress at Buckingham Palace, on the
+occasion of a National Thanksgiving held to celebrate the recovery of
+the Prince of Wales from a dangerous illness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, March 1, 1872.
+
+ The Duc de Broglie told me to-day that he had been rather
+ surprised when he heard of the Emperor and Empress having been at
+ Buckingham Palace on so public an occasion as that of last Tuesday,
+ that I had not mentioned it to him on Monday afternoon, when we had
+ had a long conversation. It would have enabled him to write to M.
+ de Remusat,[3] and thus have prevented any of the effect which a
+ sudden announcement in the papers might create in France.
+
+ I told him that I had not been consulted and did not know the
+ fact of the invitation when I saw him, and that if I had, I should
+ probably have mentioned it to him, although not a subject about
+ which I should have written.
+
+ I should have explained to him that it was an act of courtesy
+ of the Queen to those with whom she had been on friendly relations,
+ and that it was analogous to many acts of courtesy shown by the
+ Queen to the Orleanist Princes.
+
+ He laid stress on the publicity of the occasion, and on the
+ few opportunities which he, as Ambassador, had of seeing the Queen,
+ of which he made no complaint; but it made any attentions to the
+ Emperor on public occasions more marked. He was afraid that the
+ announcement would produce considerable effect, not upon statesmen,
+ but upon the press in France.
+
+ I repeated that the admission of the Emperor and Empress had
+ no political significance, but had been in pursuance with the
+ long-established habit of the Queen to show personal courtesy
+ to Foreign Princes with whom she had been formerly on friendly
+ relations.
+
+The fall of the Finance Minister, Pouyer Quertier, in the spring had
+given rise to hopes that the French commercial policy would become more
+liberal, but the letters quoted below show how powerless were the
+arguments of the British Government and how completely wasted upon the
+French Ministers were the lamentations of the British free traders,
+and their prognostications of ruin to those who were not sufficiently
+enlightened to adopt their policy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 5, 1872.
+
+ I suppose Pouyer Quertier is really out, but we see so many
+ changes from hour to hour in resolutions here, that I shall not
+ report it officially until his successor is gazetted. We cannot
+ have a more Protectionist successor; but, after all, no one is so
+ bigoted a Protectionist as Thiers himself.
+
+ Nevertheless the change of Minister will give a chance or an
+ excuse for a change of policy to some extent. I think that with a
+ view to this some stronger expression of displeasure, or rather
+ perhaps of regret than we have hitherto ventured upon, might have
+ a good effect. The new Minister and perhaps even Thiers himself
+ might be struck by a report from Broglie that you had put strongly
+ before him the impossibility, whatever efforts the Government might
+ make, of preventing public opinion in England becoming hostile to
+ France if the present commercial policy is persisted in. It is in
+ fact plain that there is no probability of France obtaining the
+ concessions from the Treaty Powers, on which Thiers professed to
+ reckon. The result already is that, whatever may have been the
+ intention, the Mercantile Marine Law is in practice a blow which
+ falls on England, and not on other European Powers. Unless the
+ French Government means to give us a real most favoured nation
+ clause, the result of denouncing our treaty will be to place us,
+ when it expires, at a special disadvantage as compared with other
+ nations. And what it now asks us to effect by negotiation, is to
+ hasten the moment at which it can accomplish this. It is quite idle
+ to talk of special friendship for us, when its measures practically
+ treat us much worse than they do the Germans. M. de Remusat and
+ some other people are fond of saying that it is quite impossible
+ that France could bear to see two nations so friendly as Belgium
+ and England placed exceptionally in a position inferior to Germany.
+ But France seems to bear this with great equanimity so far as our
+ merchant navy is concerned.
+
+ The demand we have made to be exempted from the _surtaxes de
+ pavillon_ under our most favoured nation clause would give the
+ French Government a means of remedying the injustice _if it wished
+ to do so_. At any rate some strong expressions of discontent on
+ our part might increase the disinclination of the Assembly and
+ some members of the Government to insist on imposing the duties on
+ the raw materials. It would be very convenient if there were some
+ retaliatory measures to which we could resort, without injuring
+ ourselves or departing from our own Free Trade principles. The
+ French Government grossly abuses, in order to influence the
+ Assembly, our assurances of unimpaired good will, and reluctance
+ to retaliate; and so, in my opinion, is preparing the way for the
+ real diminution of good will which its success in carrying its
+ protectionist measures, to our special injury, must produce in the
+ end.
+
+ The present Government of France does not gain strength; far
+ from it. The Imperialists are gaining strength, as people become
+ more and more afraid of the Reds, and feel less and less confidence
+ in the power either of Thiers, or the Comte de Chambord, or the
+ Comte de Paris, to keep them down. The end will probably be brought
+ about by some accident when it is least expected. It would not be
+ wise to leave out of the calculation of possibilities, the chance
+ of Thiers's Government dragging on for some time yet, and it would
+ be very difficult to predict what will succeed it. At present the
+ Legitimists and Orleanists seem to have lost, and to be daily
+ losing prestige, and naturally enough, to be bringing down with
+ them the Assembly in which they are or were a majority.
+
+ Perhaps I ought to say that the despatch which I send you
+ to-day about the sojourn of our Royal Family in the South of
+ France applies exclusively to them. Everybody knows or ought to
+ know that affairs are uncertain in France, but I should not think
+ it necessary or proper to warn private people against coming to
+ France or staying there. The conspicuous position of members
+ of the Royal Family increase the risk of their being placed in
+ awkward circumstances, and circumstances which would be of little
+ consequence in the case of private people, would be very serious
+ and embarrassing if they affected members of the Royal Family of
+ England.
+
+The last passage referred to a stay at Nice contemplated by the Prince
+of Wales. In the event of any change of Government, it was always feared
+that disorders would take place in the southern towns of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 14, 1872.
+
+ The commercial disputes with the French Government which, as
+ you know, I always apprehended, are coming thick upon us. I foresaw
+ what was coming and begged Thiers, Remusat and other members of
+ the Government over and over again to guard against vexations in
+ the execution of the Treaty while it lasted. I make little doubt,
+ notwithstanding, that all these violent and unfair proceedings are
+ prompted, not checked, from Paris.
+
+ The Spaniards have found out the only way to deal with the
+ Protectionist spirit here. The slightest hint at retaliation would
+ have such an effect in the Assembly as to stop the onward career of
+ illiberality. As things now are, the extortioners have the game in
+ their own hands. They levy what duty they please, and pay just as
+ much or as little attention as may suit them, to our remonstrances.
+ It is a very disagreeable affair for one who, like myself, is
+ really anxious that there should be good feeling between the two
+ countries. We are in a fix. On the one hand, we cannot, without
+ injuring ourselves and abandoning our principles, retaliate; and
+ on the other hand, while they feel sure we shall do no more than
+ remonstrate, the Protectionist officials will care very little.
+ If indeed the general opinion is to be relied upon, the present
+ Government and its chief may come down with a crash at any moment,
+ but I don't know whether a change would benefit us commercially.
+
+Lord Lyons, like Lord Granville and other English public men and
+officials of the day, was a Free Trader, as has already been stated.
+But it would be difficult for the most ardent Protectionist to make
+out a stronger case against the helplessness of a Free Trade policy
+when negotiating with a foreign Government than is disclosed in these
+letters, and there are any number of others all in the same strain. All
+the protestations of goodwill, of sympathy, and benefit to the human
+race, etc., were, and presumably are still, a pure waste of time when
+addressed to a country about to frame a tariff in accordance with its
+own interests, unless the threat of retaliation is used in order to
+retain some bargaining power, as apparently the Spaniards had already
+discovered.
+
+It has already been stated that Thiers's plans of military
+re-organization and his somewhat imprudent language had caused some
+agitation in Germany, and when the German Ambassador, Count Arnim,
+returned to his post at Paris in the spring of 1872, it was freely
+rumoured that he was the bearer of remarkably unpleasant communications.
+These apprehensions turned out to be exaggerated, and Thiers in
+conversation always assumed a lamb-like attitude of peace. He denied
+that the Germans had addressed any representations to him, said that all
+suspicions against him were grossly unjust, that it would be absolute
+madness for France to think of going to war, and that, for his part,
+the keystone of all his foreign policy was peace. As for his army
+reform schemes, he was a much misunderstood man. He was undoubtedly
+reorganizing the military forces of France, and it was his duty to place
+them upon a respectable footing, and so provide a guarantee for peace.
+It was, however, quite false to say that he was arming, for that term
+implied that he was making preparations for war, and that he was putting
+the army into a condition to pass at once from a state of peace to a
+state of war. He was doing nothing of the sort; on the contrary, his
+efforts were directed to obtaining the evacuation of the territory, by
+providing for the payment of the war indemnity to Germany, and it could
+hardly be supposed that if he were meditating a renewal of the contest,
+he would begin by making over three milliards to her.
+
+From Arnim's language, it appeared that the German public was irritated
+and alarmed at the perpetual harping of the French upon the word
+'Revenge,' and that the German military men (the _militaires_ who were
+always so convenient to Bismarck for purposes of argument) conceived
+that the best guarantee for peace would be to keep their soldiers as
+long as possible within a few days' march of Paris.
+
+The German fears were, no doubt, greatly exaggerated, but if they
+existed at all they were largely due to Thiers's own language, who,
+while not talking indeed of immediate revenge, was fond of boasting of
+the strength and efficiency of the French army, and even of affirming
+that it was at that very moment equal to cope with the Germans. That he
+was conscious of having created suspicion may be inferred from the fact
+that when the Prince of Wales passed through Paris on his way from Nice
+to Germany, he begged H.R.H. to use his influence at the Court of Berlin
+to impress upon the Emperor and all who were of importance there, that
+the French Government, and the President himself in particular, desired
+peace above all things, and were resolved to maintain it. A letter from
+the British Ambassador at Berlin throws some light upon the prevalent
+German feeling.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Mr. Odo Russell[4] to Lord Lyons._
+
+ British Embassy, Berlin, April 27, 1872.
+
+ Since your letter of the 9th inst. reached me feelings have
+ changed in Berlin.
+
+ Thiers's Army bill and Speech have irritated the Emperor,
+ Bismarck and indeed everybody.
+
+ The Generals tell the Emperor it would be better to fight
+ France before she is ready than after; but Bismarck, who scorns the
+ Generals, advises the Emperor to fight France _morally_ through
+ Rome and the Catholic alliances against United Germany.
+
+ Although he denies it, Bismarck probably caused those violent
+ articles against Thiers to appear in the English newspapers, and he
+ tells everybody that Thiers has lost his esteem and may lose his
+ support. The next grievance they are getting up against him is that
+ he is supposed to have made offers through Le Flo to Russia against
+ Germany.
+
+ In short, from having liked him and praised him and wished for
+ him, they are now tired of him and think him a traitor because he
+ tries to reform the French Army on too large a scale!
+
+ Gontaut[5] does not appear to do anything beyond play the
+ agreeable, which he does perfectly, and every one likes him. But
+ it is said that _Agents_, financial Agents I presume, are employed
+ by Thiers to communicate through Jewish Bankers here indirectly
+ with Bismarck. Through these agents Thiers is supposed to propose
+ arrangements for an early payment of the 3 milliards and an early
+ withdrawal of the German troops of occupation,--the payment
+ to be effected by foreign loans and the guarantee of European
+ Bankers,--in paper not in gold. Bismarck has not yet pronounced
+ definitely, but the Emperor William won't hear of shortening the
+ occupation of France. Indeed, he regrets he cannot by Treaty leave
+ his soldiers longer still as a guarantee of peace while he lives,
+ for he is most anxious to die at peace with all the world.
+
+ So that nothing is done and nothing will be done before Arnim
+ returns to Paris. He has no sailing orders yet and seems well
+ amused here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Mr. Odo Russell._
+
+ Paris, May 7, 1872.
+
+ Many thanks for your interesting letter.
+
+ Arnim's account of public opinion at Berlin entirely confirms
+ that which you give, only he says Bismarck would be personally
+ willing to come to an arrangement with France for payment of the
+ milliards and the evacuation of the territory, but that he will not
+ run any risk of injuring his own position by opposing either Moltke
+ or public opinion on this point.
+
+ I don't think the Germans need the least fear the French
+ attacking them for many years to come. The notion of coming now
+ to destroy France utterly, in order to prevent her ever in the
+ dim future being able to revenge herself, seems simply atrocious.
+ The French are so foolish in their boasts, and the Germans so
+ thin-skinned, that I am afraid of mischief.
+
+ I should doubt Bismarck's being wise in setting himself in
+ open hostility to the Vatican. The favour of the Holy See is seldom
+ of any practical use, so far as obtaining acts in its favour, to a
+ Protestant or even to a Roman Catholic Government; but the simple
+ fact of being notoriously in antagonism to it, brings a vast amount
+ of opposition and ill-will on a Government that has Catholic
+ subjects. The fear of this country's being able at this moment
+ to work the Catholic element in Germany or elsewhere against the
+ German Emperor appears to me to be chimerical.
+
+ I wish the Germans would get their milliards as fast as they
+ can, and go: then Europe might settle down, and they need not be
+ alarmed about French vengeance, or grudge the French the poor
+ consolation of talking about it.
+
+ Arnim was a good deal struck by the decline in Thiers's
+ vigour, since he took leave of him before his journey to Rome, but
+ he saw Thiers some days ago, when the little President was at his
+ worst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Mr. Odo Russell to Lord Lyons._
+
+ British Embassy, Berlin, May 11, 1872.
+
+ I have nothing new to say about the relations of France and
+ Germany, but my friends here seem so alarmed at the idea that
+ France cannot pay the much longed for three milliards, that if
+ Thiers really does pay them, all the rest will be forgiven and
+ forgotten, and the withdrawal of the German troops will then be
+ impatiently called for. Like yourself I write the impressions of
+ the moment and am not answerable for future changes of public
+ opinion. Clearly the thing to be desired for the peace of the world
+ is the payment by France and the withdrawal by Germany, after which
+ a normal state of things can be hoped for--not before.
+
+ The Pope, to my mind, has made a mistake in declining to
+ receive Hohenlohe. He ought to have accepted and in return sent a
+ Nuncio to Berlin, thereby selling Bismarck, and controlling his
+ German Bishops and the Doellinger movement.
+
+ Bismarck is going away on leave to Varzin. He is so irritable
+ and nervous that he can do no good here at present, and rest is
+ essential to him.
+
+ Your letter of the 7th is most useful to me, many thanks for
+ it. I shall not fail to keep you as well informed as I can.
+
+In reality, the Germans made little difficulty about the arrangements
+for the payment of the indemnity and evacuation of French territory, and
+early in July Thiers was able to state confidently that he felt certain
+of being able to pay the whole of the indemnity by March, 1874, and
+that he had only obtained an additional year's grace in order to guard
+against accidents.
+
+A curious incident which occurred in July, 1872, showed how, if
+sufficient ingenuity be employed, a trivial personal question may
+be turned to important political use. The Comte de Vogue, French
+Ambassador at Constantinople, who possessed little or no diplomatic
+experience, before proceeding on leave from his post, had an audience
+of the Sultan. The Sultan received him standing, and began to talk,
+when Vogue interrupted His Majesty, and begged to be allowed to sit
+down, as other Ambassadors had been accustomed to do, according to him,
+on similar occasions. What the Sultan actually did at the moment was
+not disclosed, but he took dire offence, and telegrams began to pour
+in upon the Turkish Ambassador at Paris desiring him to represent to
+the French Government that if Vogue came back his position would be
+very unpleasant--intimating in fact that his return to Constantinople
+must be prevented. The French Foreign Minister, however, refused this
+satisfaction to the Sultan, and the Turkish Ambassador in his perplexity
+sought the advice of Lord Lyons, who preached conciliation, and urged
+that, at all events, no steps ought to be taken until Vogue had arrived
+at Paris, and was able to give his version of the incident. The French,
+naturally enough, were at that moment peculiarly susceptible on all
+such matters, and more reluctant to make a concession than if they
+were still on their former pinnacle of grandeur at Constantinople,
+although Vogue was clearly in the wrong, for Lord Lyons admitted that
+he had himself never been asked to sit. The importance of the incident
+consisted in the fact that it gave an opportunity of cultivating the
+goodwill of Russia, as the traditional enemy of Turkey. No Frenchman
+had ever lost sight of the hope that some day or other an ally against
+Germany might be found in Russia, and there were not wanting signs of a
+reciprocal feeling on the part of the latter. It had, for instance, been
+the subject of much remark, that the Russian Ambassador at Paris, Prince
+Orloff, had recently been making immense efforts to become popular
+with all classes of the French: Legitimists, Orleanists, Imperialists,
+Republicans, and especially newspaper writers of all shades of politics.
+As it was well known that neither Prince nor Princess Orloff were really
+fond of society, these efforts were almost overdone, but nevertheless
+they met with a hearty response everywhere, from Thiers downwards,
+for all Frenchmen were eagerly hoping for a quarrel between Russia
+and Germany, and were ready to throw themselves into the arms of the
+former in that hope. Russia, on her side, was clearly not unwilling to
+cultivate a friendship which cost nothing, and might conceivably be of
+considerable profit.
+
+On November 5 the new Anglo-French Commercial Treaty was signed,
+indignant British Free Traders striving to console themselves with the
+thought that France would soon discover the error of her ways and cease
+to lag behind the rest of the civilized world in her economic heresy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 12, 1872.
+
+ I saw Thiers on Friday after I wrote to you on that day; and
+ I dined with him on Saturday. He looked remarkably well, and was
+ in high spirits and in great good humour, as he ought to be, with
+ us. He spoke, as indeed he always does, as if he felt quite sure
+ that he should have his own way with the Assembly in all things.
+ As regards the organic measures, he talked as if the fight would
+ be entirely with the Right; but both sections of the Left have
+ declared against organic changes to be made by this Assembly. I
+ suppose, however, Thiers is pretty sure to get his own powers
+ prolonged for four years certain, and this is what he cares about.
+
+ I do not, however, find in my Austrian, German, and Russian
+ colleagues so unqualified an acquiescence in Thiers remaining
+ in power as they professed before I went away. It is said that
+ the three Emperors at Berlin were alarmed at the prospect of the
+ definitive establishment of any Republic, and still more so at
+ the apparent tendency of M. Thiers's policy to leave the country
+ to drift into a Red Republic, whenever he quitted the scene.
+ However this may be, there is certainly a change in the language
+ of their Representatives here, not very marked, but nevertheless
+ quite perceptible. Orloff in particular talks as if an immediate
+ Imperialist restoration were not only desirable but probable. If he
+ really thinks it probable, he is almost alone in the opinion.
+
+ The Prince de Joinville, who came to see me yesterday,
+ said that he had been a great deal about in the country, and
+ that he found everywhere an absolute indifference to persons
+ and dynasties, and a simple cry for any Government which would
+ efficiently protect property. He thought that Thiers would be
+ supported for this reason, but that whatever institutions might
+ be nominally established, they would last only as long as Thiers
+ himself did, and that afterwards everything would be in question,
+ and the country probably divide itself into two great parties,
+ Conservatives and Reds, between whom there would be a fierce
+ struggle notwithstanding the great numerical superiority of the
+ former.
+
+In the absence of exciting internal topics, the year closed with a
+slight sensation provided by Gramont, who, it might have been supposed,
+would have preferred not to court further notoriety. Count Beust had
+recently asserted that he had warned France against expecting help
+from Austria in the event of a war with Prussia. Gramont replied
+by publishing a letter in which the following statement occurred.
+'L'Autriche considere la cause de la France comme la sienne, et
+contribuera au succes de ses armes dans les limites du possible.'
+This quotation was supposed to be taken from a letter from Beust to
+Metternich, dated July 20, 1870 (the day after the declaration of war),
+and left by Metternich with Gramont, who took a copy and returned the
+original. Metternich was believed to have shown the letter also to the
+Emperor Napoleon and to Ollivier. The letter was represented as going on
+to say that the neutrality proclaimed by Austria was merely a blind to
+conceal her armaments, and that she was only waiting till the advance of
+winter rendered it impossible for Russia to concentrate her forces.
+
+It was generally believed that there was plenty of evidence that an
+offensive and defensive alliance was in course of negotiation between
+France and Austria in 1869, though no treaty was signed, and the record
+appears to have consisted in letters exchanged between the two Emperors,
+but as Gramont had nothing more than a copy of a letter from Beust to
+Metternich his evidence was legally defective, whatever its moral
+value, and it was questionable whether as an ex-Minister he had any
+right to disclose such secrets.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 31, 1872.
+
+ Gramont's further revelations confirm what I told you in my
+ letter of the 24th. The question is becoming tiresome. I conceive
+ there is no doubt that Beust at Vienna, and Metternich here,
+ fanned the flame of French discontent after Sadowa, with a view
+ to avenging themselves when Austria and France should be ready,
+ and circumstances favourable. I think also that Gramont came back
+ from Vienna full of Beust's warlike ideas, and very well inclined
+ to carry them out. What exchange of letters may have taken place
+ between the two Emperors, or what record of any kind there may be
+ of engagements between the two countries to help one another, it is
+ more difficult to say.
+
+ The assertion is that after war had been declared, Austria
+ engaged to move on the 15th September. Others say that she also
+ required that France should have an army in Baden.
+
+ This is not inconsistent with her having dissuaded France from
+ war in July, 1870, when she knew positively it would be premature
+ for herself, and probably had some suspicion that France was also
+ not really prepared.
+
+Early in January, 1873, the Emperor Napoleon died at Chiselhurst. The
+view of Thiers was that this event would render the Bonapartists, for
+the time, more turbulent and less dangerous. He believed that the
+Emperor's personal influence had been used to quiet the impatience
+of his followers, while, on the other hand, his death removed the
+only member of the family who was popular enough in France to be a
+formidable candidate. Thiers's childish susceptibility with regard to
+the Bonapartists showed itself in his expressed hope that the Emperor's
+death would be followed by the disappearance of the public sympathy in
+England with the family in its misfortunes.
+
+The opinions of Thiers seem to have been generally prevalent. The
+Emperor was remarkably kind and courteous to all who approached him; he
+was a firm friend; not, as a rule, an implacable enemy, and he inspired
+no small number of people with a warm attachment to him personally. He
+was also generally popular, and the glittering prosperity of the early
+part of his reign was attributed by a large part of the common people
+to his own genius and merits, while they were prone to consider that
+its disastrous close was due to treason. No other member of the family
+excited feelings of the same kind, and in France a cause was always so
+largely identified with an individual that there was no doubt that the
+hold of the Imperialists upon the country was largely weakened by the
+loss of their chief.
+
+It is perhaps worth noting that Lord Lyons, although it was notoriously
+difficult to extract any such opinions from him, did in after years
+admit reluctantly to me, that although he liked Napoleon III.
+personally, he had always put a low estimate upon his capacity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Jan. 31, 1873.
+
+ I cannot say that the political atmosphere grows clearer. The
+ Right are in their hearts as anxious as ever to depose Thiers.
+ They believe as firmly as ever that if he makes the new elections,
+ he will have a Chamber, not only of Republicans, but of very
+ advanced Republicans. They see that all their little endeavours to
+ restrain him and to establish ministerial responsibility will have
+ no political effect. The death of the Emperor has not strengthened
+ Thiers's position with regard to the Right. On the contrary,
+ they are less disposed to bear with him since the removal of the
+ candidate for the Throne of whom they were most afraid, and from
+ whom they justly thought that Thiers would make every effort to
+ shield them. They are consequently, even more than they usually
+ are, employed in casting about for something to put in Thiers's
+ place. The Fusion is again 'almost' made, and MacMahon is again
+ talked of as ready to take the Government during the transition
+ from the Republic to the King.
+
+ Orloff, the Russian Ambassador, propounded to me to-day a plan
+ of his own for preventing conflicts between Russia and England
+ in Central Asia. So far as I understood it, it was that England
+ and Russia should enter into a strict alliance, should encourage
+ and protect, by force of arms, commerce between their Asiatic
+ Dominions, and unite them at once by a railroad. He said there
+ was a Russian company already formed which desired to connect the
+ Russian railway system with the Anglo-Indian railways. He told me
+ that Bruennow was always writing that war between England and Russia
+ was imminent and that England was preparing for it. If Bruennow's
+ vaticinations are believed, they may perhaps have a not unwholesome
+ effect upon the Russian Government.
+
+Prince Orloff seems to have had in contemplation that Trans-Persian
+Railway which has met with the approval of the Russian and British
+Governments at the present day. The Russian advance in Central Asia
+in 1872 and 1873 had been the subject of various perfectly futile
+representations on the part of Her Majesty's Government, but Baron
+Bruennow must have been a singularly credulous diplomatist if he really
+believed that we were making preparations for a war with Russia or any
+one else.
+
+If Orloff with prophetic insight foresaw a Trans-Persian Railway, Thiers
+might be acclaimed as being the first person to suggest the project of
+the Triple Entente between England, France, and Russia. Strangely enough
+it was the affairs of Spain that put this notion into his head, the idea
+prevalent in France being that Germany was bent on making that country a
+dangerous neighbour to France, and bestowing a Hohenzollern prince upon
+her as sovereign. The prospect of an 'Iberic Union,' which was being
+discussed at the time, was considered to be exceptionally threatening to
+France, and Thiers had had quite enough of united states on the French
+frontier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 4, 1873.
+
+ M. Thiers spoke to me last night very confidentially about
+ Spain and Portugal. The Spanish question was, he said, becoming so
+ serious that it could hardly be considered an internal question.
+ Among other things, the independence of Portugal was at stake. Now,
+ in his opinion, the best chance of avoiding a collision between the
+ Powers of Europe would be that England, France, and Russia should
+ come to an understanding on the subject. He did not think that
+ there would be any difficulty in effecting such an understanding;
+ and indeed he had reason to believe that Russia was at this moment
+ particularly well disposed to act in concert with England. He was
+ far from being so absurd as to propose a new Holy Alliance; indeed,
+ he desired to avoid all show and ostentation--indeed all publicity.
+ He simply wished that, without any parade, the three Powers he had
+ named should concert measures in order to avert events which might
+ imperil the peace of Europe. After some further conversation, he
+ observed that it would be impossible to avert a collision, if the
+ Peninsula were formed into one Iberic state with a Hohenzollern for
+ a monarch.
+
+ I did not invite M. Thiers to state more definitely in what
+ form he proposed that the understanding between France, Russia, and
+ England should be effected, or what combined action he proposed
+ they should adopt. I thought indeed that it would be very dangerous
+ for France to enter into any sort of an alliance with Foreign
+ Powers against Germany at this moment, and that the smallest result
+ might be to delay the evacuation of French territory. Nor indeed
+ did I know that there was any evidence that Germany was actively
+ pursuing designs in Spain in such a way and to such a degree,
+ as would render it proper or advantageous to try the hazardous
+ experiment of undertaking to settle a European question without
+ her, not to say in spite of her.
+
+ I consequently only listened to what M. Thiers said. He
+ concluded by telling me to treat his idea as most strictly
+ confidential and to confide it only to your ear in a whisper.
+
+ As regards the state of Spain, M. Thiers said that he believed
+ the Federal Party was after all the party of order; that at all
+ events it was predominant in all the outer circumference of
+ Spain; that the Unitarians existed only in Madrid and the central
+ provinces, and that the North was Carlist or Federal. This being
+ the case, his advice to the Government of Madrid had been to make
+ concessions to the Federals. He did not think that, if properly
+ managed, their pretensions would go much beyond what was called in
+ France 'decentralisation administrative.'
+
+ The view of the Federals being the party of order in Spain
+ was new to me, but M. Thiers was beset by a host of deputies and I
+ could not continue the conversation.
+
+A letter from Lord Odo Russell[6] to Lord Lyons admirably defines
+the attitude of Germany, and is an exceptionally lucid summary of
+Bismarckian policy in general.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ British Embassy, Berlin, March 14, 1873.
+
+ Thanks for yours of the 4th instant.
+
+ As regards Spain, Thiers, and Bismarck I cannot add anything
+ more definite or more precise. Bismarck and the Emperor William
+ are so far satisfied that the Republic will make room for the
+ Alphonsists so that they can afford to wait and look on.
+
+ What Bismarck intends for Spain later, no one can guess, but
+ clearly nothing favourable or agreeable to France.
+
+ The two great objects of Bismarck's policy are:
+
+ (1) The supremacy of Germany in Europe and of the German race
+ in the world.
+
+ (2) The neutralization of the influence and power of the Latin
+ race in France and elsewhere.
+
+ To obtain these objects he will go any lengths while he lives,
+ so that we must be prepared for surprises in the future.
+
+ A change has come over the Emperor and his military advisers
+ in regard to the evacuation of French territory, as you have seen
+ by his speech on opening the German Parliament.
+
+ His Majesty is now prepared to withdraw his garrison as soon
+ as the fifth and last milliard shall have been paid by Paris and
+ received at Berlin.
+
+ So that if it is true that Thiers proposes to pay the fifth
+ milliard in monthly instalments of 250,000,000 fs. beginning from
+ the 1st of June, the evacuation might be expected in October and
+ France be relieved of her nightmare.
+
+ This I look upon as a most desirable object. It appears to
+ me that the re-establishment of the future balance of power in
+ Europe on a general peace footing, is _the_ thing Diplomacy should
+ work for, and that nothing can be done so long as the Germans have
+ not got their French gold, and the French got rid of their German
+ soldiers.
+
+ The Germans, as you know, look upon the war of revenge as
+ unavoidable and are making immense preparations for it.
+
+ Germany is in reality a great camp ready to break up for any
+ war at a week's notice with a million of men.
+
+ We are out of favour with the Germans for preferring the old
+ French alliance to a new German one, as our commercial policy is
+ said to prove, and this impression has been lately confirmed by
+ Thiers's _expose des motifs_.
+
+ Thiers is again out of favour at Berlin, because the Russian
+ Government has warned the German Government that Thiers is working
+ to draw Russia into the Anglo-French Alliance contrary to their
+ wishes. I believe myself that the alliance or understanding between
+ Russia and Germany, Gortschakoff and Bismarck is real, intimate, and
+ sincere; and that they have agreed to preserve Austria so long as
+ she obeys and serves them, but woe to Austria if ever she attempts
+ to be independent!
+
+ Then the German and Slav elements she is composed of, will be
+ made to gravitate towards their natural centres, leaving Hungary
+ and her dependencies as a semi-oriental vassal of Germany and
+ Russia. However, those are things of the future, at present I can
+ think of nothing but the crisis at home and the deep regret I feel
+ at losing my kind benefactor Lord Granville as a chief. My only
+ consolation is that he will the sooner return to power as our
+ Premier, for he is clearly the man of the future.
+
+ I hope you will write again occasionally.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord O. Russell._
+
+ Paris, April 8, 1873.
+
+ Many thanks for your most interesting letter of the 14th. I
+ entirely agree with you that the one object of diplomacy should be
+ to re-establish the balance of power in Europe on a peace footing.
+ The payment of the indemnity and the departure of the German troops
+ from France are of course necessary to the commencement of anything
+ like a normal state of things. The French all more or less brood
+ over the hope of vengeance, and the Germans give them credit for
+ being even more bent upon revenge than they really are. So Germany
+ keeps up an enormous army, and France strains every nerve to raise
+ one; and what can diplomatists do?
+
+ In Germany they seem to attach a great deal more than due
+ importance to the Commercial Treaty, as a sign of a tendency
+ towards a renewal of the Anglo-French Alliance. But then the
+ Germans have always been more angry with us for not helping to blot
+ France out of Europe than the French have been with us for not
+ helping them out of the scrape they got into by their own fault.
+ Germans and French are to my mind alike unreasonable, but we only
+ suffer the ordinary fate of neutrals.
+
+ Thiers professes to have no thought of forming any alliance at
+ present; and to consider that it would be absurd of France to try
+ for more at this moment than to ward off great questions, and live
+ as harmoniously as she can with all Foreign Powers, without showing
+ a preference to any. This is no doubt the wise and sensible policy.
+ Thiers certainly acts upon it so far as England is concerned. Does
+ he also act upon it as regards Russia? I cannot say. I think there
+ is a little coquetry between him and the Russians.
+
+Lord Granville appears to have sent through the Duchesse de Galliera
+a private message warning Thiers of the dangers of his advances to
+Russia; but the latter asserted that although the French Ambassador at
+St. Petersburg had been directed to maintain the most cordial relations
+with the Russian Government, matters had not gone further than that, and
+that he had made no communications which he should object to Germany
+knowing of. Thiers's tenure of power was, however, destined shortly to
+come to an end. On May 24, the veteran who had rendered such invaluable
+services to the country was defeated by a combination of opponents, and
+Marshal MacMahon became President of the Republic in his stead. The
+change of Government was received quietly by the country; the elaborate
+precautions which had been taken in case of disorder proved superfluous,
+and the funds rose on the assumption that the Marshal was to prove to
+be the new saviour of society. MacMahon, who had reluctantly accepted
+the honour thrust upon him, was generally regarded as a French General
+Monk, but which of the three pretenders was to be his Charles the Second
+remained a matter of complete uncertainty. The fickle crowd hastened to
+prostrate itself before the rising sun, and the first reception held by
+the new President at Versailles constituted a veritable triumph; swarms
+of people of all sorts attending, particularly those members of smart
+society who had long deserted the salons of the Prefecture. Amongst the
+throng were particularly noticeable the Duc d'Aumale and his brothers,
+wearing uniform and the red ribands which they had never been known to
+display before. All looked smooth and tranquil, as it usually did at
+the beginning; but the Government so far had not done anything beyond
+changing Prefects and Procureurs. The political situation, for the time
+being, might be summed up in the phrase that the French preferred to
+have at their head a man _qui monte a cheval_, rather than a man _qui
+monte a la tribune_.
+
+Although the dismissal of Thiers savoured of ingratitude, it was not
+altogether unfortunate for him that he had quitted office at that
+particular moment, for little doubt was felt that, with or without any
+error of policy on his own part, the country was gradually drifting
+towards communism. At any rate, he could compare with just pride the
+state in which he left France to the state in which he found her.
+Although the last German soldier had not yet left French soil, the
+credit of the liberation of the country was due to him, and by his
+financial operations, successful beyond all expectations, he had not
+only paid off four milliards, but provided the funds for discharging
+the fifth, and so admirably conducted the negotiations that the German
+Government was willing to withdraw the rest of the occupying force.
+
+The fall of Thiers caused searchings of heart at Berlin, and a
+conversation with Count Arnim, the German Ambassador at Paris, in June
+showed that the German Government regarded MacMahon with anything but
+favour. Arnim stated that displeasure had been felt at Berlin, both
+at language held by the Marshal before his appointment, and at his
+neglect in his former position to act with proper courtesy towards the
+Emperor's Ambassador in France. The German Government did not doubt that
+the remainder of the indemnity would be paid, but Thiers indulged less
+than other Frenchmen in hostile feelings towards Germany, and he and a
+few of the people about him seemed to be the only Frenchmen who could
+bring themselves to act with propriety and civility in their relations
+with Germans. In fact, Thiers's foreign policy had been wise and
+conciliatory, but as for his internal policy, he, Count Arnim, avowed
+that he entirely concurred in the opinion that it would have thrown the
+country in a short time into the hands of the Red Republicans.
+
+The unfortunate Arnim was apparently at this time unconscious of his
+impending doom, although, as the following interesting letter from Lord
+Odo Russell to Lord Lyons shows, his fate had been sealed months before.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _British Embassy, Berlin, Jan. 18, 1873._
+
+ What I have to say to-day grieves me to the soul, because it
+ goes against my excellent friend and landlord Harry Arnim.
+
+ Said friend, it is said, could not resist the temptation of
+ turning an honest penny in the great War Indemnity Loan at Paris,
+ and the Jew Banker he employed, called Hanseman, let it out to
+ Bismarck, who could not understand how Arnim was rich enough to buy
+ estates in Silesia and houses in Berlin.
+
+ Now Bismarck, who is tired of Arnim, and thinks him a rising
+ rival, will make use of this discovery with the Emperor whenever he
+ wants to upset Arnim and send a new man to Paris.
+
+ He thinks him a rising rival because Arnim went to Baden
+ last autumn and advised the Emperor, behind Bismarck's back, to
+ go in for an Orleanist Monarchy and drop Thiers, in opposition to
+ Bismarck's policy, who wishes to drop all Pretenders and uphold
+ Thiers as long as he lives.
+
+ Besides which Arnim hinted at a readiness to take office at
+ home if Bismarck came to grief.
+
+ The Emperor is fond of Arnim and listened with complacency and
+ told Bismarck when he returned from Varzin,--Bismarck has vowed
+ revenge! I have not written all this home because it would serve
+ no purpose yet,--but it may be useful to you as a peep behind the
+ curtain. Meanwhile Bismarck has appointed one of his _secret_
+ agents as Commercial Secretary to the Paris Embassy to watch Arnim.
+ His name is Lindau and as he is a very able man and an old friend
+ of mine, I have given him a letter to you. He might become useful
+ some day.
+
+ Let me add _in confidence_ that he corresponds privately and
+ secretly with Bismarck behind Arnim's back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It will be observed that the views expressed by Arnim to Lord Lyons in
+June are not altogether consistent with those attributed to him in the
+above letter, but Lord Odo Russell's opinion that his implacable chief
+would crush him at the first opportunity was only too well justified
+before long.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: June, 1871.]
+
+[Footnote 2: German Ambassador at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Foreign Minister in succession to M. Jules Favre.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Subsequently Lord Ampthill.]
+
+[Footnote 5: French Ambassador at Berlin.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Formerly Mr. Odo Russell.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+MARSHAL MACMAHON'S PRESIDENCY
+
+(1873-1875)
+
+
+The new French Government had been received with great favour by
+the upper classes, while the remainder of the population remained
+indifferent, but the Marshal was credited with the wish to place the
+Comte de Chambord on the throne, and the language of his entourage was
+strongly Legitimist, auguries being drawn from a frequent remark of the
+Marechale, who was supposed to dislike her position: _nous ne sommes pas
+a notre place!_
+
+As the confused political situation began to clear, it became evident
+that everything depended upon the Comte de Chambord himself, and if he
+could be brought to adopt anything like a reasonable attitude, it was
+generally felt that there would be a large majority in his favour in the
+Assembly. The historic White Flag manifesto issued from Salzburg at the
+end of October effectually ruined the Legitimist cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 31, 1873.
+
+ The Royalists were counting up new adhesions and expecting a
+ letter from the Comte de Chambord which was to be read from the
+ tribune at the last moment and rally the waiters upon Providence
+ and the waverers to them, when, to their utter consternation,
+ the actual letter arrived, and fell like a shell with a violent
+ explosion in the midst of them.
+
+ I don't know what they are to do. All plans for making the
+ Comte de Paris or the Duc d'Aumale Regent will be voted against
+ by the present Legitimists, unless the Comte de Chambord approves
+ them. It is very doubtful whether any explanation could do away
+ with the impression the letter will have produced throughout the
+ country, which was already averse from the idea of the Legitimist
+ King.
+
+ The maintenance of MacMahon and the present Ministry seems the
+ best mode of postponing trouble, but it cannot do much more than
+ postpone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 3, 1873.
+
+ If the Chamber met to-morrow, I suppose it would vote the
+ prolongation of MacMahon's powers; and though no one can answer
+ for what a day or an hour may bring forth, I suppose this is what
+ must be done. It is said that the Marshal himself insists upon a
+ term of six years, if not ten. This is rather hard to understand,
+ if, as I believed, he really wished to be out of the thing, and I
+ doubt its adding practically to the stability of his Government.
+ On the other hand, the Conservatives want to have the prolongation
+ voted in such a way as to make it apparent that MacMahon is _their_
+ President. It would not suit them that he should be elected
+ unanimously, or nearly so, as he perhaps might be. This would put
+ him, they think, in a position too like that which Thiers held. The
+ preposterous notion of making a Lieutenant General of the Kingdom
+ to govern in the name of a King of full age and in possession of
+ all his faculties, who would undoubtedly repudiate and denounce
+ his representative, has been put an end to by the refusal of the
+ Princes of Orleans, one and all, it is affirmed, to accept the post.
+
+ Thiers told me the day before yesterday that he did not
+ intend to oppose the Government this session, and that we might
+ count on a quiet winter. We shall see.
+
+ The Legitimists are furious with their King, as well they
+ may be. How long this may last, one cannot say, but the numbers
+ of those who adore him _quand meme_, as a sort of fetish, have
+ certainly fallen off.
+
+MacMahon had been as much disappointed with the Chambord manifesto as
+the ultra-Legitimists themselves, and had looked forward to retiring
+from a position which he found distasteful; but as no king was
+available, and he was looked upon as the only guarantee for order,
+obviously the best course was to secure the prolongation of his powers
+for as long a period as possible. After many long and stormy discussions
+MacMahon was declared President of the Republic for seven years, and a
+committee of thirty was appointed to consider the Constitutional Laws.
+This result was so far satisfactory to the Right, that it enabled them
+to retire from the dangerous position in which they were placed by
+the attempt to put the Comte de Chambord on the throne, but it failed
+to establish a durable Government, and the whole period of MacMahon's
+Presidency was marked by a ceaseless struggle with his Republican
+opponents, which only terminated with his fall four years later.
+
+The anxieties of French Ministers were, however, not confined to
+internal difficulties. Although the fact was concealed as much as
+possible, the anti-Ultramontane campaign of Bismarck created serious
+alarm in the beginning of 1874, and in that year may be said to have
+originated the long series of panics, well or ill founded, which have
+prevailed in France ever since. MacMahon in conversation did not scruple
+to express his fear of a country which, according to him, could
+place 800,000 men on the Rhine in less than seventeen days, and made
+the interesting confession that the French military authorities had
+never credited the famous reports of Colonel Stoffel[7] as to Prussian
+military efficiency. The Foreign Minister, the Duc Decazes, expressed
+the strongest apprehensions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 17, 1874.
+
+ The fall of France has never, I think, been brought so
+ forcibly home to me, as when I listened yesterday to the humble
+ deprecation which Decazes was obliged to make with regard to
+ Bismarck's threats, in the same room in which I had so often heard
+ the high language with which the Imperial Minister used to speak of
+ the affairs of Europe. One can only hope that Odo may be right in
+ thinking that Bismarck's menaces may subside, when he has carried
+ his Army Bill at home. But may not his eagerness in his contest
+ with the Ultramontanes continue and carry him on to language and
+ even to measures against France from which it may be difficult for
+ him to draw back? and of course there is a limit to the submission
+ of the French Government, however disastrous it may know the
+ consequences of resistance to be. It is difficult to persecute
+ any religion in these days, but it is impossible for the French
+ Government to set itself in violent opposition to the predominant
+ religion in France. I do not know what means we may have of getting
+ pacific and moderate counsels listened to at Berlin, but I do
+ not think the weakness of France a sufficient safeguard to other
+ countries against the perils of the present state of things to the
+ peace of Europe. It may be very easy to bully and to crush France,
+ but will it be possible to do this without raising a storm in other
+ quarters?
+
+What Bismarck wanted was that the French Government should attack the
+French bishops; and in order to conciliate him, a circular was issued
+by the Minister of the Interior remonstrating with them on the nature
+of the language in which their pastoral addresses were couched. The
+well-known clerical newspaper the _Univers_ was suppressed, and although
+every effort was made to disguise the various acts of subserviency
+resorted to, it was perfectly well known to what cause they were due,
+and it was not surprising that the French writhed under the necessity
+of submitting to such dictation. In view of the military weakness
+of France, however, it was useless to think of resistance, the Duc
+d'Aumale, who commanded the most vulnerable district, having reported
+confidentially that there were neither fortresses nor an army which
+would have any chance of repelling a German invasion; added to which,
+owing to considerations of economy, the conscription was six months in
+arrear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Odo Russell._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 3, 1874.
+
+ The French want above all things to keep the peace, or, to put
+ it otherwise, to escape being attacked by Germany in their present
+ defenceless state. What, in your opinion, should they do? Of course
+ the temptation to the unprincipled war party in Germany to attack
+ them while they are unable to defend themselves, is very great;
+ and that party must know that a war this year would be much less
+ hazardous than one next year, and so on, as each year passes.
+
+ The next question I want your advice upon is what, if
+ anything, can other Powers, and particularly England, do to help to
+ preserve peace? This is a question peculiarly within your province,
+ as the one thing to be considered in answering it, is the effect
+ that anything we do may have at Berlin.
+
+ I am not very hopeful, but I think the chances of peace will
+ be very much increased if we can tide over this year 1874.
+
+ I can see no consolation for a fresh war. I suppose Bismarck
+ would be ready to buy the neutrality of Russia with Constantinople,
+ and that France will give Russia _anything_ even for a little help.
+
+ The Emperor Alexander has told General Le Flo[8] at St.
+ Petersburg that there will not be war. Do you attach much
+ importance to this?
+
+ You will call this a _questionnaire_ rather than a letter, but
+ if you have anything to catechise me upon in return, I will answer
+ to the best of my ability.
+
+ The Lyttons' are, as you may suppose, a very great pleasure to
+ me, and they have had a great success here.
+
+No one was better fitted than Lord Odo Russell, who was a _persona
+grata_ with Bismarck, to answer these queries. The Emperor Alexander had
+been very emphatic in assuring General Le Flo on several occasions that
+there would be no war, but Lord Odo was in all probability quite correct
+in his opinion that this was no real safeguard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Odo Russell to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Berlin, Feb. 20, 1874.
+
+ I was glad after a long interval to see your handwriting
+ again, and doubly glad to find you inclined to renew our
+ correspondence. You ask: _Firstly_, What in my opinion should the
+ French do to escape being attacked by Germany in their present
+ defenceless state?
+
+ In my opinion nothing can save them _if_ Bismarck is
+ determined to fight them again; but then, is it France or is it
+ Austria he is preparing to annihilate? In Bismarck's opinion,
+ France, to avoid a conflict with him, should gag her press,
+ imprison her bishops, quarrel with Rome, refrain from making
+ an army or from seeking alliances with other Powers all out of
+ deference to Germany.
+
+ _Secondly._ What can other Powers, and particularly England,
+ do to help to preserve peace?
+
+ A Coalition is impossible; advice or interference adds to
+ Bismarck's excuses for going to war, so the only course Governments
+ can follow is to let him do as he pleases and submit to the
+ consequences, until he dies.
+
+ _Thirdly._ Do I attach any importance to the Emperor of
+ Russia's pacific assurances?
+
+ None whatever, because Bismarck is prepared to buy his
+ co-operation with anything he pleases in the East.
+
+ Bismarck is now master of the situation at home and abroad.
+ The Emperor, the Ministers, the Army, the Press, and the National
+ majority in Parliament are instruments in his hands, whilst abroad
+ he can so bribe the great Powers as to prevent a coalition and make
+ them subservient to his policy. Now, his policy, as you know, is
+ to mediatize the minor States of Germany and to annex the German
+ Provinces of Austria, so as to make one great centralized Power
+ of the German-speaking portions of Europe. To accomplish this he
+ may require another war, but it may be with Austria and not with
+ France, which he now puts forward to keep up the war spirit of the
+ Germans and to remind Europe of his powers. Besides which he has to
+ pass the unpopular Army Bill and War Budget which he failed in last
+ summer.
+
+ His anti-Roman policy will serve him to pick a quarrel with
+ any Power he pleases by declaring that he has discovered an
+ anti-German conspiracy among the clergy of the country he wishes to
+ fight.
+
+ Such is the situation, but it does not follow that we shall
+ have war before another year or two are over or more, nor need we
+ have war _if_ Bismarck can carry out his plans without it.
+
+ At present the tone of Bismarck and Buelow is quite pacific,
+ and I notice a great desire for the co-operation of England in
+ maintaining the peace of Europe generally.
+
+Lord Lyons's own opinions were in exact agreement with Lord Odo
+Russell's, and the general uncertainty as to Bismarck's intentions
+continued to preoccupy both the French and the English Governments,
+although the Emperor of Russia persisted in assuring General Le Flo that
+there would be no war, and it was assumed in some quarters that the
+German Emperor disapproved of the Bismarckian policy.
+
+The general election in England at the beginning of 1874, resulting in
+the return of the Conservative party to power, placed Lord Derby again
+at the Foreign Office in the room of Lord Granville, and the long letter
+which follows was presumably intended to enlighten him on the subject of
+French politics generally. It is, at all events, a concise review of the
+situation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Feb. 24, 1874.
+
+ I thank you cordially for your letter of yesterday, and I
+ resume with very peculiar satisfaction my diplomatic correspondence
+ with you. I wish the subject of it was as pleasant to me as is the
+ fact of its renewal; but I cannot help being more than usually
+ anxious about the prospects of Europe and of France in particular.
+ This spring and summer are the especially critical seasons for
+ France. She will be for a long time to come far too weak to indulge
+ in aggression, except indeed as a secondary ally of some stronger
+ Power, but even next year, she will not be in the absolutely
+ helpless condition which is at this moment so strong a temptation
+ to national hatreds, and to the military thirst for gold and glory
+ which prevails with a party in Germany. I am afraid the peace of
+ Europe depends entirely upon the view Bismarck may take of the
+ easiest means of bringing all German-speaking nations under one
+ rule. The wolf can always find reasons for quarrelling with the
+ lamb, and as Bismarck himself told Odo Russell, he has had a good
+ deal of experience of this kind of thing. The French lamb will not
+ be skittish, and indeed will hardly venture to bleat, for some
+ time. For my own part, I am constantly on the watch to forestall
+ questions which may make difficulties between France and any other
+ country; for if Bismarck wants war, it would suit him to be able to
+ appear to be only taking his part in a quarrel already made.
+
+ Italy is the most dangerous neighbour from this point of
+ view, and the presence of the _Orenoque_ at Civita Vecchia is the
+ ticklish point. It is a very delicate matter to touch; for if the
+ question came very prominently into notice, it might raise one of
+ the storms in the press of all countries, which are so often the
+ precursors of evil times. The ship is supposed to be at Civita
+ Vecchia to give the Pope the means of leaving Italy, if he wishes
+ to do so; and I suppose the Vatican might relieve the French of
+ embarrassment by saying that she is not wanted. In fact, if the
+ Italian Government intended to prevent the Pope's going away, they
+ would of course stop him before he got to Civita Vecchia, and if
+ they abstained (as would no doubt be the case) from interfering
+ with his movements, he could get a ship to depart in, whenever he
+ pleased.
+
+ I do not know that there is any ill-feeling in Switzerland
+ towards France, but the Ultramontane disputes give Bismarck a lever
+ to work with.
+
+ I believe the French Government have completely drawn in their
+ horns about the Armenian Patriarch question and the Protectorate of
+ the Latin Christians in the East, since Bismarck appeared on the
+ field at Constantinople.
+
+ In looking out for small beginnings of troubles, I have
+ thought of Tunis. I suppose we may lay aside all apprehension of
+ attempts of France to change the frontier or to bring the Regency
+ into more complete dependency upon her, at the present moment. I
+ find by a despatch from Mr. Wood, that the German commodore, in his
+ conversation with the Bey, insisted particularly upon the interests
+ of German subjects being put upon as good a footing as those of the
+ subjects of any other country.
+
+ I think Decazes takes the humiliating position in which
+ France, and he as her Foreign Minister, are placed, with more
+ equanimity and temper than most Frenchmen would; and so long as
+ the present, or any other Government, not absolutely unreasonable,
+ is at the head of affairs, France will be prudent in her foreign
+ relations.
+
+ Of Marshal MacMahon's seven years' lease of power, only three
+ months have elapsed; a time too short to give much foundation for
+ conjecture as to its probable duration. Both he himself and his
+ Ministers take opportunities of declaring that its continuance
+ is above discussion, and that they will maintain it against all
+ comers. There are two things against it. First, the extreme
+ difficulty of giving it anything like the appearance of permanence
+ and stability which would rally to it that great majority of
+ Frenchmen who are ready at all times to worship the powers that
+ be, if only they look as if they were likely to continue to be.
+ Secondly, there is the character of the Marshal himself. He is
+ honest and a brave soldier, but he does not take such a part in
+ affairs as would increase his personal prestige. The danger,
+ in fact, is that by degrees he may come to be looked upon as a
+ _nullite!_
+
+ The Imperialists are agitating themselves and spending money,
+ as if they were meditating an immediate coup. The wiser heads
+ counsel patience, but the old horses, who sorely miss the pampering
+ they had under the Empire, are getting very hungry, and are afraid
+ that they themselves may die before the grass has grown.
+
+ The fear of an Imperialist attempt has in some degree brought
+ back to the Government the support of the Legitimists, and in fact
+ the Comte de Chambord has quarrelled with his own party. The Fusion
+ has put an end to the Orleanist Party, as a party for placing
+ the Comte de Paris on the throne; but the question of appointing
+ the Duc d'Aumale Vice-President, in order to have some one ready
+ to succeed MacMahon in case of need, is seriously considered. I
+ suppose, however, that MacMahon would look upon this as destructive
+ of the arrangements between him and the Assembly. And then the
+ whole system depends upon the maintenance by hook or by crook of
+ a majority, which has not yet ceased to melt away, as seats become
+ vacant and new elections take place.
+
+The Duc de Bisaccia, the new French Ambassador in London, even at his
+first interview with Lord Derby, did not scruple to avow that he felt
+quite certain that the Republican form of government would not last, and
+he went on to assert that Bismarck's head had been turned by success,
+and that he aimed at nothing less than the conquest of Europe, being
+quite indifferent either to the views of his Imperial Master, or of the
+Crown Prince. Whatever the prospects of the Republic, the prospects of
+Bisaccia's own party (Legitimist) were indisputably gloomy, for the
+prevailing sentiment in France at the time was hostility to the White
+Flag and to the clerical and aristocratic influences of which it was
+held to be the emblem. The great majority of the people were Republican,
+and the most numerous party after the Republican was the Imperial, but
+the Presidency of Marshal MacMahon was acquiesced in, for the moment,
+by all parties, because it was believed to be capable of preserving
+order, because it left the question of the definitive government of the
+country still undecided, and because no party saw its way to securing
+the pre-dominence of its own ideas.
+
+The existing state of things was accounted for by the history of the
+establishment of the seven-years Presidency.
+
+When the Orleans Princes tendered their allegiance to the Comte de
+Chambord in the previous autumn, the fusion, so long talked of, was
+complete, and it was supposed that a Parliamentary Monarchy with the
+Tricolour Flag, might be established under the legitimate head of
+the Bourbons; but the Comte de Chambord struck a fatal blow to these
+hopes by his celebrated letter, and the Conservatives felt that there
+was no time to be lost in setting up a Government having some sort of
+stability. The plan which they adopted was that of conferring power
+upon Marshal MacMahon for a fixed and long period. Had a short period
+been proposed, it would have been agreed to almost unanimously; but
+this was not their object. They wished it to be apparent to the country
+that the Marshal was specially the President of the Conservative
+majority: they asked for a term of ten years: obtained seven, and
+secured from the Marshal a declaration of adherence to their views. The
+slight modification of the Ministry which ensued, resulted in placing
+the Government more completely in the hands of the party pledged to a
+monarchical form of Government, and the Ministry thus reconstituted, set
+itself to the task of resisting the progress of Radicalism and Communism
+in the country.
+
+But the suspicion of favouring the White Flag clung to the Government,
+and although the latter, following the example of the Empire, had
+installed their partisans in office, as mayors, etc., by thousands
+throughout the country, the candidates supported by the Government had,
+in almost every instance, found themselves at the bottom of the poll
+when elections took place; and the results showed that a large accession
+of votes had been received by the Republican and Imperialist parties. Of
+these the former had gained most, but the latter possessed a backing in
+the country which was inadequately represented by their numbers in the
+Assembly.
+
+It should, however, be added that there did not appear on any side a
+disposition to embarrass the Government by factious or bitter opposition
+with regard to the three departments, Finance, War, and Foreign Affairs,
+in which the practical interests of the country were most deeply
+involved. The financial policy of M. Magne[9] was generally supported;
+and with regard to votes for the Army and Navy, the Government had
+rather to resist a pressure to increase the expenditure on these heads,
+than to urge the necessity of considerable supplies.
+
+In the conduct of foreign affairs, the defenceless state of France had
+made the avoidance of an attack from Germany the one overwhelming care
+of the Government. To effect this object, to give Germany no pretext for
+a quarrel, and to make submission to the behests of Bismarck as little
+galling and in appearance as little humiliating as possible, had been
+the constant occupation of the Foreign Minister. In this effort he was
+seconded by the Assembly, and indeed every one in and out of that body,
+except a few clerical and Legitimist bigots, felt it to be a patriotic
+duty to abstain from embarrassing the Government in its relations with
+foreign Powers. Another reassuring feature in the situation was, that
+there were no symptoms of attempts to resist by force the authority of
+the Assembly, as no party seemed likely to venture to oppose by force
+a Government which disposed of the army; and the army in 1874 showed
+no prediction for any particular candidate for the throne sufficiently
+strong to overcome its habitual obedience to the Constitutional
+Government, whatever that Government might be.
+
+As an instance of the dictation practised by Bismarck towards France in
+foreign affairs, it may be mentioned that in January, 1874,[10] Count
+Arnim formally announced to the Duc Decazes that the German Government
+would not tolerate the assumption by France of the suzerainty of Tunis,
+or of a Protectorate over that country. To this Decazes humbly replied
+that there had never been the least question of anything of the kind--a
+statement which can scarcely be described as accurate.
+
+Whether Bismarck entertained any designs with regard to Tunis is not
+known, but it was in this year that Germany began to show some signs
+of interest in the Philippines and other places supposed to be of
+some colonial value. The following extract from a letter written on
+the subject by the late Lord Lytton, who was at the time Secretary
+of Embassy at Paris, is a striking instance of rare and remarkable
+political prescience.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lytton to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 27, 1874.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Odo's impression (communicated to you) that Bismarck does
+ not want colonies rather surprises me. It seems to me a perfectly
+ natural and quite inevitable ambition on the part of a Power so
+ strong as Germany not to remain an inland state a moment longer
+ than it can help, but to get to the sea, and to extend its seaboard
+ in all possible directions. Is there any case on record of an
+ inland state suddenly attaining to the military supremacy of Europe
+ without endeavouring by means of its military strength and prestige
+ to develop its maritime power? But you can't be a Maritime Power
+ without colonies, for if you have ships you must have places to
+ send them to, work for them to do, and a marine Exercier-Platz
+ for training seamen. That is why I have always thought that the
+ English school of politicians which advocates getting rid of our
+ colonies as profitless encumbrances, ought (to be consistent) to
+ advocate the simultaneous suppression of our navy. Lord Derby says
+ that though Germany may probably cherish such an ambition, she
+ will have as much seaboard as she can practically want as long
+ as she retains possession of the Duchies. But that is not a very
+ convenient commercial seaboard, and I confess I can't help doubting
+ the absence of all desire for more and better outlets to the
+ sea, so long as her military power and prestige remain unbroken.
+ Anyhow, there seems to be now a pretty general instinct throughout
+ Europe, and even in America, that a policy of maritime and colonial
+ development must be the natural result of Germany's present
+ position: and such instincts, being those of self-preservation, are
+ generally, I think, what Dizzy calls 'unerring' ones.
+
+A letter from Lord Odo Russell written about this period throws a
+curious light upon Bismarck's imaginary grievances, and the difficulties
+which he was prepared to raise upon the slightest provocation. Probably
+no Minister of modern times ever uttered so many complaints, threatened
+so often to resign, and yet wielded such absolute power.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, Nov. 9, 1874.
+
+ I found Prince Bismarck in one of his confidential moods
+ the other day, and he indulged me in a long talk about his own
+ interests, past, present, and prospective.
+
+ Among many other things, he said that his life had been
+ strangely divided into phases or periods of twelve years each.
+
+ Born in 1815, he had left home when he was twelve years old to
+ begin his studies. At 24 he inherited his small patrimony and his
+ father's debts, and entered upon the life and duties of a country
+ gentleman. At 36 (1851) his diplomatic career began, and he was
+ sent to Frankfort, Vienna, St. Petersburg and Paris. At 48 (1863)
+ he was recalled to form the present Administration, which in twelve
+ years had carried on three wars and made the German Empire. He was
+ now 60 and worn out with the responsibilities and anxieties of
+ office, and he was resolved to enter upon a new phase (of 12 years
+ he hoped) by resigning and retiring into private life--a resolution
+ he begged I would keep to myself for the present.
+
+ I said I could well understand his wish for rest, but I did
+ not believe the Emperor or the country would allow him to indulge
+ in it, as he was well enough and strong enough to govern Germany
+ for many years to come.
+
+ He replied that he felt quite strong enough to govern Germany,
+ but not to be governed himself any longer by the Emperor, whose
+ obstinacy and narrow mindedness were more than he could bear.
+
+ I said I had often heard him complain of his Court duties
+ before, but it appeared to me that he always carried his points,
+ and that after some resistance the Emperor gave way in the end and
+ followed his advice.
+
+ He replied that it was that very struggle with his Imperial
+ Master that had worn him out and that he no longer felt strong
+ enough to carry on after sixty. He then related to me a series of
+ very curious anecdotes illustrating his struggles with the Crown,
+ and what he called the want of confidence and ingratitude of the
+ Emperor.
+
+ I asked him whether anything had lately occurred calculated to
+ increase his wish for rest.
+
+ He said that his present difference with the Emperor related
+ to the new army organization. The Emperor and his generals thought
+ the sole object of the German Empire was to turn the nation into an
+ army for the greater glory of the House of Hohenzollern; whilst he
+ held that there must be some limit to the heavy strain of military
+ obligations the Crown was ever anxious to impose on the people.
+
+ I asked whether he was alluding to the Landsturm Bill, which
+ placed every German from the age of 16 to 42 at the disposal of the
+ War Department.
+
+ He replied that he did not exactly allude to that, but there
+ were other measures in contemplation, elaborated in the Emperor's
+ military Cabinet, he could not give his sanction to, and which
+ would consequently lead to another painful struggle. He considered
+ that his great task had been completed in 1870 to 1872, and that he
+ could now retire and leave the internal organization of Germany to
+ other hands. The Crown Prince, he thought, might possibly govern
+ on more Constitutional principles than his father, who, born
+ in the last century, had not yet been able to realize what the
+ duties of a Constitutional Sovereign were, and thought himself as
+ King of Prussia above the Constitution, as the Emperor Sigismund
+ thought himself above grammar when he wrote bad Latin. A danger
+ to which the Crown Prince would be exposed as Sovereign was his
+ love for intrigue and backstairs influence--'some one or other
+ always concealed behind the door or curtain.' The Prince was not as
+ straightforward as he appeared, and he suffered from the weakness
+ of obstinacy and the obstinacy of weakness due to unbounded conceit
+ and self-confidence--but at the same time he meant well.
+
+ After a good deal more talk about his family, his property,
+ and his longing for country life and pursuits, we parted.
+
+ Without attaching undue importance to Prince Bismarck's
+ oft-repeated threat of resignation, I do not suppose he would go
+ out of his way to tell me and others so, without intention. My
+ impression is that he wants to obtain something or other from the
+ Emperor which he can make conditional on remaining in office, well
+ knowing that His Majesty cannot do without him. Besides which,
+ his retirement from office would have the appearance of a defeat,
+ consequent on his failure to coerce the Pope and his legions. He is
+ not the man to admit a defeat while he lives. Time will show what
+ more he wants to satisfy his gigantic ambition.
+
+The fear of war with Germany had died away temporarily in the summer,
+and the various political parties in France were free to continue their
+struggles and to reduce the situation to almost unexampled confusion.
+The motives of the Comte de Chambord and his followers were too remote
+for ordinary human understanding, and their object appeared to be to
+bring about a crisis and a dissolution of the Assembly on the most
+disadvantageous terms to themselves. Moderate Republicans were looking
+to the Duc d'Aumale as a safeguard against the Imperialists on the one
+hand, and the Reds on the other. Republicans of various shades, and the
+Reds in particular, were coquetting with Prince Napoleon, and he with
+them. Most men and most parties appeared to have particular objects,
+which they hated with a hatred more intense than their love for the
+object of their affections. Thiers, it was believed, would have rather
+seen anything, even a restoration of the Empire, than have the Duc de
+Broglie and the Orleanists in power. Notwithstanding the fusion, the
+Legitimists would have probably preferred Gambetta (or some one still
+more extreme) than an Orleans Prince--and so on.
+
+'I cannot make head or tail of French internal politics,' Lord Derby
+wrote, at the end of the year, 'and presume that most Frenchmen are in
+the same condition. It looks as if nobody could see their way till the
+present Assembly is dissolved and a new one elected.'
+
+The beginning of the new year was signalized in Paris by the appearance
+of the Lord Mayor of London, who had been invited to attend the opening
+of the new Opera House. That functionary has always been invested in
+French popular opinion with semi-fabulous attributes, and he seems to
+have risen to the level of the occasion. 'The Lord Mayor,' wrote the
+unimpressionable Lord Lyons, 'is astonishing the Parisians with his
+sword, mace, trumpeters, and State coaches. So far, however, I think the
+disposition here is to be pleased with it all, and I keep no countenance
+and do what I have to do with becoming gravity.' A little later,
+however, he was constrained to add:--
+
+ I am afraid the Lord Mayor's head has been turned by the
+ fuss which was made with him here, for he seems to have made a
+ very foolish speech on his return to England. Strange to say the
+ Parisians continued to be amused and pleased with his pomps and
+ vanities to the end, although the narrow limits between the sublime
+ and the ridiculous were always on the point of being over passed.
+ I abstained from going to the banquets given to him, or by him,
+ except a private dinner at the Elysee; but I had him to dinner
+ here, and, I think, sent him away pleased with the Embassy, which
+ it is always as well to do, and if so, I have reaped the reward of
+ my diplomatic command over my risible muscles.
+
+It was not perhaps surprising that the Lord Mayor should have been
+thrown off his intellectual balance, for the honours accorded to him
+far surpassed those paid to ordinary mortals and resembled rather those
+habitually reserved for crowned heads. When he visited the opera the
+ex-Imperial box was reserved for his use; the audience rose at his
+entry, and the orchestra played the English National Anthem. Twice he
+dined with the President of the Republic; the Prefect of the Seine gave
+a banquet in his honour; so did the authorities at Boulogne; and to
+crown all, the Tribunal of Commerce struck a medal in commemoration of
+his visit.
+
+The one thing that was fairly clear in French politics, besides
+abhorrence of the White Flag, was the gradual progress of Bonapartism
+which was beginning to frighten Conservatives as well as Republicans,
+and the Bonapartists themselves were inclined to regret having helped
+to turn Thiers out of office, because the army was becoming more and
+more anti-Republican, and it would be much easier to turn it against a
+civilian than against its natural head, a Marshal of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Jan. 26, 1875.
+
+ Bonapartism is still in the ascendant, and certainly the
+ Assembly is doing everything to give weight to the assertion that
+ France is unfit for Parliamentary Government. No one believes in
+ a moderate Republic, as a self-supporting institution unconnected
+ with some particular individual. The 'Conservative Republic'
+ was devised for M. Thiers. The Septennate Republic, if it be a
+ Republic, would be scouted if MacMahon were not at the head of
+ it. The Comte de Chambord is impossible. The Orleanists have cast
+ in their lot with his, and besides, the Government they represent
+ being constitutional or Parliamentary, is exactly what is most
+ out of favour, with the exception of the White Flag. As I have
+ said all along, the dispute is between a very advanced Republic
+ and the Empire, and _confugiendum est ad imperium_ is becoming
+ more and more the cry of those who dread Communism. Those who have
+ personal reasons for fearing the Empire are already taking their
+ precautions. Friends of the Orleans Princes are believed to have
+ seriously conferred (not with the knowledge or consent of the
+ Princes themselves, so far as I have heard) with the Bonaparte
+ leaders, in order to ascertain what the Orleans family would
+ have to expect if the Prince Imperial returned. At any rate the
+ Bonapartist papers have been insinuating that they would be allowed
+ to stay in France and keep their property; and these insinuations
+ are of course intended to relieve tender Orleanist consciences of
+ scruples in coming round to the Imperial cause.
+
+ The officers in the army are becoming more and more averse
+ from all idea of a permanent Republic. They would willingly wait to
+ the end of MacMahon's time, but they are beginning to talk of the
+ possibility of his being so much disgusted by the way in which he
+ is worried by the Assembly, as to throw the Presidency up.
+
+ In short France is at this moment in a fear of Bonapartism.
+ It may, and very probably will, subside this time, but it differs
+ from most intermittent fevers in this, that the attacks recur at
+ shorter and shorter intervals, and increase instead of diminish in
+ intensity.
+
+Fear of the Imperialists drove Conservatives into voting with Gambetta
+and other advanced Republicans; a ministerial crisis took place; the
+Assembly gave contradictory decisions and generally discredited itself,
+and the confusion grew so great that it seemed impossible to unravel it.
+
+ 'I have spent three afternoons at Versailles,' wrote Lord
+ Lyons on February 26th, 'and have seen a Constitution made there.
+ I have seen also such a confusion of parties and principles as I
+ hope never to witness again. I found Decazes, Broglie, and a great
+ number of Right Centre deputies at the MacMahons' last evening.
+ They all, and particularly Decazes, looked to me very unhappy,
+ and indeed they did not affect to be at all satisfied with the
+ occurrences in the Assembly. Like the horse in the fable who
+ invited the man to get on his back, the Right Centre have let the
+ Left get on their backs to attack Bonapartism, and don't know how
+ to shake them off again.'
+
+The ceaseless struggles between the various political parties in France,
+which were of little interest to the outside world, were temporarily
+interrupted in the spring of 1875 by the war scare which so greatly
+agitated Europe at the time, but which subsequently became an almost
+annual phenomenon. Unfortunately, Lord Lyons was in England during
+the greater portion of this critical period, and there are wanting,
+consequently, documents which might have thrown light upon what has
+always been a somewhat mysterious episode, but it would appear that the
+symptoms of alarm on the part of the French first showed themselves
+about March 11. On that day the Duc Decazes drew the attention of the
+British Ambassador to three incidents which ought to engage the serious
+attention of those Governments who were desirous of maintaining peace
+in Europe. These were the threatening representation made by the German
+Minister at Brussels to the Belgian Government respecting the language
+and conduct of the Ultramontane Party in that country; the pointed
+communication to the French Government of this representation; and the
+prohibition of the export of horses from Germany. Prince Bismarck,
+said Decazes, seemed to become more and more inclined to revive old
+grievances and to require of foreign countries the exercise of an
+unreasonable and impossible control over the prelates and even over
+the lay members of the Roman Catholic Church, and as for the decree
+forbidding the export of horses, it was so inexplicable that it could
+only add to uneasiness. It might be easy for England, and for some other
+nations, to regard these things calmly, but to France they constituted
+a serious and immediate peril. In spite of the steps taken during the
+past year to conciliate Germany on the subject of the Bishop's charges,
+the German Government had never officially intimated that it considered
+the question to be closed, and Count Arnim had used the significant
+expression to him, that it was only closed 'so far as any question
+between you and us can ever be looked upon as closed.' He believed that
+it was only owing to the influence of other Powers, and of England in
+particular, that the danger had been averted in 1874; and he now hoped
+that the same influence would be exerted in the same way. Decazes added
+a somewhat surprising piece of information which had been imparted to
+him in January, 1874, by Prince Orloff, the Russian Ambassador, viz.
+that in that month an order to occupy Nancy had absolutely been issued
+by the German Government to its troops, and that there were strong
+grounds for believing that this order has been rescinded chiefly owing
+to influence exerted at Berlin by Russia. So far as is known, there is
+no corroboration of this story, and it would appear that Prince Orloff
+was so anxious to convince France of the goodwill of Russia that he
+thought it advisable to drag England into the question, but it was not
+surprising that France should be sensitively alive to the danger she
+incurred, if Bismarck, irritated by his Ultramontane difficulties,
+should choose to throw the blame upon the Roman Catholics of other
+countries, or should resort to quarrels with foreign nations as a means
+of diverting public opinion in Germany from inconvenient questions at
+home.
+
+Prince Hohenlohe, the new German Ambassador, who also saw Lord Lyons on
+the same day, volunteered no opinion upon the representation to Belgium
+which had excited so much perturbation, but remarked with regard to the
+exportation of horses that the 'agriculturists might have been alarmed
+by the prospect of a drain of horses for foreign countries. He had no
+reason to suppose that purchases of horses had been made in Germany by
+the French Government for military purposes; but he had heard that a
+considerable number had lately been brought there for the Paris fiacres.'
+
+It will not have escaped notice that the German Government--or rather
+Bismarck--was fortunate in always having excellent reasons available,
+either for not complying with inconvenient requests, or for explaining
+away disquieting symptoms; thus, in 1870, the insuperable difficulty to
+disarmament was the King of Prussia; during the peace negotiations, all
+harsh conditions were due to _les militaires_, and in 1875 the German
+agriculturists and the Paris cabs were responsible for any uneasiness
+that might be felt temporarily.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, March 16, 1875.
+
+ I saw Decazes last night and found him in a greater state of
+ alarm about the intentions of Germany than anything specific he
+ told me seemed to warrant. The retirement of Bismarck to Varzin
+ will not reassure the French, because they remember that he was
+ there when the war broke out in 1870.
+
+ There is observable here, and not least among the Russians, a
+ sort of impression that there is to be a movement of some kind in
+ the East.
+
+ In short, there is a great deal of vague uneasiness and fear
+ that peace is in danger.
+
+ The German Embassy here has certainly been taking great pains
+ to put it about that the prohibition to export horses has been
+ decreed solely from economical, and not from military motives.
+ That Embassy keeps up very close relations with the _Times_
+ correspondent[11] here, and his subordinates. Of course the trouble
+ it has taken has increased instead of allaying alarm. Decazes
+ constantly harps on the string of the influence of England at
+ Berlin, and the consolation it affords him to feel sure that it is
+ exercised quietly on the side of peace. The position is a painful
+ one. Without particular friendships and alliances, France is
+ absolutely at the mercy of Germany, and if she tries to form such
+ friendships and alliances, she may bring the wrath of the great
+ Chancellor down upon her instantly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, March 16, 1875.
+
+ I do not know and cannot conjecture the cause of Decazes's
+ anxiety. Nothing has passed or is passing in any part of Europe to
+ justify alarm as to an early disturbance of general peace. But I
+ hear of a similar feeling of uneasiness at Berlin; and the Russian
+ Government is credited with designs as to the nature of which no
+ two persons agree. Until we hear more, I shall be inclined to set
+ down all these rumours of wars to the time of year, and to the
+ absence of any exciting questions (so far as foreign relations are
+ concerned) to occupy men's minds.
+
+ I may tell you confidentially that Bismarck has given us
+ through Odo Russell a serious warning against the unfriendly
+ feelings of the Russian Government towards England. He may be only
+ trying to stir up jealousy, a game which he often plays, or he may
+ be sincere. I take his hint as one not to be slighted, yet not
+ infallibly trusted. Gortschakoff is no doubt much disgusted about
+ the Conference; the Czar also to some extent; and probably they
+ both feel that they had miscalculated the effect of the Russian
+ marriage on English policy. But beyond this I know no cause of
+ quarrel. Dead calm for the moment. I cannot conceive any reason why
+ you should not take your leave when you wish it. Paris is always
+ within reach if anything new turns up.
+
+It is obvious from the above that neither Lord Derby nor Lord Lyons felt
+any very serious apprehensions, and the latter was permitted to go home
+on leave at the beginning of April. On April 10, Lord Odo Russell wrote
+to Lord Derby:--
+
+ Bismarck is at his old tricks again--alarming the Germans
+ through the officious Press, and intimating that the French are
+ going to attack them, and that Austria and Italy are conspiring
+ in favour of the Pope, etc. Now he has succeeded in making the
+ Emperor and the Crown Prince believe that France is meditating an
+ invasion of Germany through Belgium! And, not knowing any better,
+ they are in despair and have ordered the War Department to make
+ ready for defence. This crisis will blow over like so many others,
+ but Bismarck's sensational policy is very wearisome at times. Half
+ the Diplomatic Body have been here since yesterday to tell me that
+ war was imminent, and when I seek to calm their nerves and disprove
+ their anticipations, they think that I am thoroughly bamboozled by
+ Bismarck.
+
+In the middle of April there appeared in the _Berlin Post_ the
+celebrated article entitled: 'Is War in Sight?' and as it was well known
+that such articles were not written except under official inspiration,
+something akin to a real panic took place, more especially when other
+German papers began to write in a similar strain. Letters from Mr.
+Adams, who had been left as Charge d'Affaires at Paris, show the
+pitiable condition of terror to which the French Government was reduced,
+and the efforts made by Decazes to obtain British support. Decazes urged
+that England ought to take an active part in protesting against the
+new theory that one nation was justified in falling upon another for
+no other reason than that the latter might possibly prove troublesome
+in the future. He said that he had protested to the German Ambassador
+against the attitude of the German Government, after all the assurances
+that it had received from the French Government, and added that if war
+took place in August, as he feared, he should advise MacMahon to retire
+with his army beyond the Loire without firing a shot and wait there
+'until the justice of Europe should speak out in favour of France.' The
+idea of openly identifying England with the French cause did not commend
+itself apparently to Mr. Disraeli.
+
+ 'I had a rather long conversation about French politics with
+ Mr. Disraeli,' Lord Lyons wrote to Mr. Adams on April 21st, 'and I
+ found him thoroughly well up in the subject. He wishes to encourage
+ confidence and goodwill on the part of France towards England,
+ but sees the danger to France herself of any such appearance of a
+ special and separate understanding as would arouse the jealousy of
+ Bismarck.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'With a little variation in the illustrations, Decazes's
+ language to you was just what he used to me before I left Paris.
+ Germany can, I suppose, overrun France whenever she pleases, a
+ fortnight after she determines to do so; and no one can tell how
+ suddenly she may come to this determination. Whether Decazes is
+ wise in perpetually crying "wolf" I cannot say. He is naturally
+ anxious to keep Europe on the alert, but I am not sure that the
+ repetition of these cries does not produce the contrary effect.'
+
+During the second half of April the tension began to diminish, but Lord
+Odo Russell, who was certainly no alarmist, felt convinced that, so long
+as Bismarck remained in office, the peace of Europe was in jeopardy,
+for his power had now become absolute, and neither the Emperor nor the
+Crown Prince were capable of withstanding him. Writing on April 24, he
+remarks: 'The prospect of another war fills me with horror and disgust,
+and if Bismarck lives a few years longer I do not see how it can be
+prevented. The Emperor's powers of resistance are over; he does what
+Bismarck wishes, and the Crown Prince, peace-loving as he is, has not
+sufficient independence of character to resist Bismarck's all-powerful
+mind and will.'
+
+A few days later the Belgian Minister at Berlin reported to Lord Odo
+Russell an alarming communication made to him by Count Moltke.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, May 1, 1875.
+
+ Since writing to you to-day, at this late hour my Belgian
+ colleague Baron Nothomb has called to tell me that he had a long
+ conversation with Moltke yesterday fully confirming what is said
+ in my despatch. Moltke added that, much as he hated war, he did
+ not see how Germany could avoid it _next year_, unless the Great
+ Powers 'coalesced' to persuade France to reduce her armaments to a
+ reasonable peace establishment.
+
+ Then Nothomb told me that Bismarck had sent Buelow to him with
+ the following confidential message: 'Tell your King to get his army
+ ready for defence, because Belgium may be invaded by France sooner
+ than we expect.'
+
+ This message Nothomb writes to Brussels to-day. He is under
+ an impression that in the event of war, Bismarck intends to occupy
+ Belgium, as Frederick the Great occupied Saxony when he suspected
+ Maria Theresa of wanting to take her revenge for the loss of
+ Silesia. This is curious, and you will probably hear more about it
+ from Brussels. I write in haste for the Messenger.
+
+The evident desire of Bismarck to fasten a quarrel upon France aroused
+the indignation of Lord Derby, who realized that the intervention of
+Russia was the best method of preventing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord O. Russell._
+
+ Foreign Office, May 3, 1875.
+
+ You seem reassured as to the immediate prospect, and the panic
+ in Paris has subsided, but great uneasiness remains. Lumley[12]
+ writes to me that the state of things seems to him most critical,
+ and the language which you report as held by Moltke is unpleasant
+ enough. Muenster[13] has not called for the last few days: when last
+ I saw him, his language about French armaments tallied exactly
+ with that which you and others report as being held by German
+ representatives throughout Europe.
+
+ Is there no hope of Russian interference to maintain peace?
+ It cannot be the interest of Russia to have France destroyed and
+ Germany omnipotent. If the Czar were to say that a new war must not
+ take place, and that he would not allow it, Bismarck would hardly
+ undertake to fight Russia and France combined. I see little other
+ prospect of averting mischief, and if it begins, where is it to end?
+
+ Even here, and notwithstanding the sympathy felt in the
+ main for the Protestant German Empire, the outrageous injustice
+ of picking a quarrel with France, because she does not choose to
+ remain disarmed, would produce its effect. There would be a great
+ revulsion of feeling; not unlike that which took place when the
+ first Napoleon had begun to show his real character and objects.
+ The English public knows little about foreign concerns, but it does
+ understand that hitting a man when he is down is not fair play, and
+ I think in the rest of Europe fear and jealousy of the predominant
+ Power would give France many adherents.
+
+ I do what I can to point this out in a quiet and friendly way;
+ but without being sanguine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ May 4. The conversation about Belgium in the House of Lords
+ last night led to no result. I think I see a growing feeling,
+ indicated by the language of the press, that the German demands are
+ not necessarily unreasonable, and that we should at least hear more
+ of the case before pronouncing judgment.
+
+ To judge by the reports which Nothomb sends to his own
+ Government, he has been thoroughly frightened, and is ready to
+ advise unconditional acceptance of German proposals. Is he disposed
+ to be an alarmist? Or has Bismarck established a personal hold over
+ him?
+
+ We are quiet at this office, busy in Parliament; the Session
+ threatens to be long, but it will not be eventful.
+
+On May 6, Lord Odo Russell reported that Count Schouvaloff, the Russian
+Ambassador in London, had just arrived at Berlin from St. Petersburg,
+and was the bearer of important tidings.
+
+ The good news he brought respecting our relations with Russia
+ filled me with delight after the dark allusions made to me here
+ at Court and by the Chancellor during the winter. As regards
+ Germany and the war rumours, Count Schouvaloff gave me the most
+ satisfactory and welcome news that the Emperor of Russia is coming
+ to Berlin on Monday next, will insist on the maintenance of peace
+ in Europe, even at the cost of a rupture with Germany, and that he
+ can reckon on the support of Austria in doing so.
+
+ How Bismarck will meet the humiliating blow of being told by
+ his allies, Russia and Austria, that he must keep the peace with
+ France, when he has proclaimed to the world that France is ready to
+ take her revenge, it is difficult to foretell. But we must not be
+ surprised if it hastens on the outburst it is intended to prevent.
+ I hope not, and do not expect it, but I shall not be surprised if
+ it does, because Austria has really joined Russia. She has become
+ an obstacle in the way of German development, which Bismarck will
+ try to remove.
+
+It had, of course, been the object of Bismarck to sow dissension between
+England and Russia, and he had taken elaborate pains to convince
+the British Government that Russia was animated by the most hostile
+feelings. Consequently the extremely frank and friendly sentiments
+expressed by Count Schouvaloff were in the nature of an agreeable
+surprise, but the effusion of the Russian Envoy was so great that he
+seems to have slightly overdone the part.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, May 8, 1875.
+
+ I did not report Schouvaloff's conversation because he was
+ going to tell you all he had to say in great detail as soon as he
+ reached London. His frankness is fascinating, but on reflection it
+ does not inspire absolute confidence. I feel at first inclined to
+ believe all he says; but when I think it over, it appears too good
+ to be true.
+
+ If all he represents himself to have said to Bismarck about
+ the power of Russia to coerce Germany under certain circumstances
+ be strictly true, Bismarck would scarcely want him to succeed
+ Gortschakoff, as he does, if he did not feel that he could make a
+ tool of him (Schouvaloff).
+
+ According to Schouvaloff, the Czar and Gortschakoff are
+ to tell Bismarck next week that a new war must not take place,
+ and that if he does not submit and agree, Russia, with the
+ concurrence of Austria, is prepared to side with France to render
+ war impossible. In all probability, their conferences will end
+ in mutual assurances of peace and good will, and we shall hear
+ no more of war rumours and French armaments until those of
+ Germany are ready; and as Bismarck is a match both for the Czar
+ and Gortschakoff, I shall not be surprised to hear that he has
+ persuaded them to let him have his own way in the end. But this is
+ mere conjecture; we shall know more about it all a week hence.
+
+ The whole of Bismarck's policy now tends to produce a
+ coalition of the peaceful Powers against Germany, and his Church
+ policy, to produce dissensions in Germany and arrest the progress
+ of unification. It is therefore evident that he seeks a conflict
+ for purposes of his own.
+
+ I may be wrong, but I cannot but think that he wants to
+ mediatize the smaller German Powers and weaken Austria so as to
+ render her alliance useless to Russia, France, and Italy.
+
+ If I understand Schouvaloff correctly, Bismarck endeavoured to
+ set Russia against us, as he attempted to set us against Russia,
+ and he seemed to expect that Bismarck would make Gortschakoff
+ various offers in return for Russian co-operation or neutrality.
+ Indeed, he insinuated that he thought Bismarck a little out of his
+ mind at times.
+
+ The importance of the Czar's language and attitude at Berlin
+ is so great that I look forward with anxious interest to the
+ results of next week's conferences. For my part I have been careful
+ to hold the language you tell me you hold at home on these matters
+ in a friendly spirit to Germany and in the interest of European
+ Peace.
+
+On the same date (May 8), the Emperor Alexander and Prince Gortschakoff
+started on the journey to Berlin from which so much was anticipated,
+and the British Government addressed a despatch to Lord Odo Russell
+which was also circulated at Paris, Vienna, St. Petersburg, and
+Rome, instructing him to use all his power to put an end to the
+misunderstanding which had arisen between France and Germany. It is
+worthy of note that when this despatch was communicated to the Austrian
+Government, that Government alone declined to instruct their Ambassador
+at Berlin in the sense desired, on the ground that it would irritate
+Bismarck.
+
+The Emperor Alexander and Gortschakoff arrived at Berlin on May 10,
+and the question of peace or war must have been decided with extreme
+rapidity, for Lord Odo Russell dined with Bismarck on that night, and
+the latter took the opportunity to express his thanks 'for the very
+friendly offer, which he highly appreciated, as a proof of good will
+and confidence on the part of Her Majesty's Government.' At the same
+time he expressed some naive surprise at the offer, maintaining that
+all his efforts tended in the direction of peace; that the war rumours
+were the work of the stockjobbers and the press, and that France and
+Germany were on excellent terms! Under the circumstances, it is highly
+creditable to Lord Odo Russell that he received this communication with
+becoming gravity.
+
+Gortschakoff who made his appearance after the dinner professed great
+satisfaction at Bismarck's language; but in conversation with Lord
+Odo Russell on the following day (May 11), Bismarck spoke with much
+irritation of Gortschakoff's intervention, which he attributed to senile
+vanity, and stated that he had refused Gortschakoff's request for a
+categorical promise not to go to war, because such a promise would have
+implied the existence of an intention which he repudiated.
+
+On May 12, Gortschakoff sent a telegram to St. Petersburg which gave
+dire offence: _La paix est assuree:_ and the Emperor of Russia requested
+Lord Odo to inform Her Majesty's Government that he felt certain of the
+maintenance of peace. Bismarck, secretly furious at the frustration of
+his plans, outwardly betrayed no ill-humour and put a good face upon his
+failure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord O. Russell to Lord Derby._
+
+ Berlin, May 15, 1875.
+
+ Although Bismarck is as civil, confidential, and amiable
+ to me as ever, I fancy that he must be frantic at our combined
+ action with Russia in favour of peace, which took him by surprise.
+ However that matters little, and he will get over it, as he wishes
+ to keep well with us. But he will seek an opportunity of paying
+ out Gortschakoff for having come the Peacemaker and Dictator over
+ Germany again.
+
+ For my part, I was delighted at the course pursued by Her
+ Majesty's Government and at the instructions you sent me, which I
+ feel sure will do good, both at home and abroad.
+
+ The old Emperor William, whose bodily health is wonderful, but
+ whose mental powers are declining, will have been surprised and
+ grieved at the Queen writing to the Czar instead of to himself.
+ Bismarck thinks it is due to an intrigue of the Empress Augusta
+ to spite him. His hatred and abuse of the Empress is a perfect
+ mania. The Crown Prince sent for me to talk the incident over. He
+ asked many questions, but was himself reserved, beyond deploring
+ Bismarck's nervous state and policy which had been the cause of
+ such useless alarm. He asked whether I saw any likely successor to
+ Bismarck if his health broke down. I said plenty would be found
+ in Germany when there was a demand for them, which Bismarck's
+ popularity at present excluded. The Prince, though reserved, was
+ very cordial and very anxious for information.
+
+ Your conversation with Schouvaloff is word for word what he
+ said to me. I note one mistake on his part. He spoke with certainty
+ of Austrian co-operation, which failed us at the last moment.
+
+ I was much impressed by the warmth and eloquence of the
+ Czar's utterances of friendship for England. He seemed really
+ to feel deeply what he said, and to wish with all his heart for
+ an alliance with us. Gortschakoff was less ardent: it is not in
+ his nature; but he was persuasive and consistent in his friendly
+ assurances. Schouvaloff's attitude and language will show whether
+ my impressions are correct or not.
+
+ Muenster's assurances to you in regard to the German army are
+ quite correct, I believe; only it is better prepared for war than
+ any other army in the world, and at ten days' notice. But when
+ Bismarck tells him to lament the alarm he has created himself, and
+ to ascribe it to Ultramontane influences in the press, Muenster must
+ feel rather ashamed of his master.
+
+ We may certainly reckon on peace for this year. Next year
+ peace must depend on the state of Bismarck's combinations for
+ the completion of his task--the unification of Germany--Russia
+ permitting. He left for Varzin this morning, which will do him
+ good; but he returns on the 27th instant to receive the King and
+ Queen of Sweden who stay three days in Berlin.
+
+ I did not mention in my official report that the Czar asked
+ me to tell him frankly, if I was at liberty to do so, whether I
+ thought Bismarck had designs on Austria. I told him what the wishes
+ of the National Party were, and what they expected of Bismarck
+ their leader, and that I believed he contemplated weakening Austria
+ to strengthen Germany. The Czar thanked me and said that although
+ suspicion had been suggested to him from many sides, he could not
+ get himself to believe in so much perfidy.
+
+Such then in brief is the story of the great war scare of 1875, a tale
+which has been told by many writers with embellishments suggested by
+either Anglophil or Russophil proclivities. Which of the two countries,
+England or Russia, contributed most towards the preservation of peace
+will probably always remain a subject of discussion, but Bismarck at
+all events never forgave Gortschakoff his vainglorious telegram, and
+he used afterwards to maintain that, whereas the English had 'behaved
+like gentlemen,' the conduct of the Russian Government came under a
+distinctly opposite category. It is a remarkable fact that in spite
+of the indisputable evidence furnished not only by the foregoing
+correspondence, but from other sources, Bismarck subsequently had the
+hardihood to assert that the war scare of 1875 was a myth invented
+partly by Decazes for stockjobbing purposes and partly by the
+Ultramontane press--even the English press being according to his
+assertions under Ultramontane influence. In the authoritative work
+'Bismarck: his Reflections and Reminiscences' it is lightly dismissed
+as an elaborate fiction. 'So far was I from entertaining any such idea
+at the time, or afterwards, that I would rather have resigned than
+lent a hand in picking a quarrel which would have had no other motive
+than preventing France from recovering her breath and her strength.'
+Busch, in his better-known narrative, is also discreetly reticent on
+the subject, and the only reference to it occurs in some notes dictated
+to him by Bismarck in 1879. 'As far back as 1874 the threads of the
+Gortschakoff-Jomini policy are to be found in the foreign press--oglings
+and advances towards an intimacy between Russia and France of _la
+revanche_. The rejection of these addresses is due rather to France
+than to Russia. This policy does not appear to have originated with the
+Emperor Alexander. It culminated in the period 1875-77, when the rumour
+was circulated that Gortschakoff had saved France from us, and when he
+began one of his circular despatches with the words, _Maintenant la
+paix est assuree_. You remember Blowitz's report in the _Times_. Read
+it again and mention the matter. His account was correct, except when
+he spoke of an anti-French military party in Prussia. No such party
+existed.'
+
+It is instructive to compare with these passages the statements made in
+the 'Memoirs and Letters of Sir Robert Morier.'
+
+The crisis was definitely passed when Lord Lyons returned to Paris,
+and he found the French overflowing with gratitude for the exertions
+of Her Majesty's Government in favour of peace. Both Marshal MacMahon
+and the Duc Decazes were profuse in their expressions, and the latter,
+in particular, said that he attached immense importance to the fact
+that the same sentiments in favour of peace had been expressed
+simultaneously at Berlin by England and Russia. At the same time, while
+much encouraged at the thought that the danger of an attack from Germany
+had been averted, he affirmed very positively that he should not on
+this account relax his endeavours to avoid giving umbrage to the German
+Government. On its being pointed out to him that it was obvious that
+the vast and increasing sums which figured in the Budget of the French
+War Department had produced in Germany a very general impression that
+France was preparing for an immediate retaliatory war, he gave the
+somewhat unconvincing assurance that a vote for clothing the reserve
+would be struck out, but would be replaced by a supplementary vote
+introduced in the winter, when a vote for clothing might seem 'natural
+and unimportant.' According to Decazes, both the Emperor of Russia and
+Gortschakoff had, on more than one occasion, used language which showed
+that they viewed with satisfaction the efforts of France to restore her
+military power, and he endeavoured to impress upon the Ambassador that
+Holland first, and then Belgium, were next to France most in danger from
+German ambition. Finally, he pointed out with great satisfaction that
+Russia had not lent an ear to the offers which had, he presumed, been
+made to her at Berlin, to forward any ambitious views she might have in
+the East, and he said that he considered this particularly important,
+because it removed the only obstacle which might have interfered
+with a cordial co-operation, on the part of the British and Russian
+Governments, for the preservation of the peace of Europe. Whether any
+such offers were made or refused is not known, but as the next few years
+were to show, Decazes's conclusion was about as faulty a one as could
+well be imagined.
+
+ 'As regards public opinion in this country,' said Lord Lyons.
+ 'I find no diminution of the conviction that at the present moment
+ a war with Germany would be fatal to France, and that very many
+ years must elapse before France will be able to undertake such
+ a war with any prospect of success. All Frenchmen are earnestly
+ desirous that their army should be as speedily as possible placed
+ upon such a footing as to give them some security against attack,
+ and some influence in the world--but few look forward to there
+ being a time when they can contend with Germany, unless they have a
+ powerful ally to fight beside them in the field.
+
+ 'In the meantime I must confess that the gratitude towards
+ England, which I hear expressed by men of all parties, far exceeds
+ anything that I could have expected. On the one hand it shows
+ perhaps the greatness of the terror from which the French have just
+ been relieved; but on the other, it is, I think, an indication of a
+ sincere disposition to accept heartily and ungrudgingly any proof
+ of good will from England.'
+
+The insurrection in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which broke out in the
+summer of 1875, and the Turkish bankruptcy which followed a little
+later, provided the French with fresh cause for apprehension, as it
+was realized that the Eastern Question was once again reopened, and
+that any differences that might arise between England and Russia would
+be to the disadvantage of France. The French, who now saw the hand of
+Bismarck in everything, believed that he had a plan of sending the
+Austrian army into the Herzegovina, and the Russian army into some other
+part of Turkey, with a view to sending the German army into France, and
+much as the Government would have liked to have done something for the
+French bondholders, and at the same time to have recovered some of the
+influence formerly enjoyed at Constantinople, it was afraid to take any
+action which might irritate the omnipotent chancellor. Perhaps this
+was just as well, as far as England was concerned. The project of a
+European Conference at Constantinople, which had been already mooted,
+did not appear in any way to be conducive to British interests. Austria
+and Russia were not in agreement as to the policy to be pursued. The
+former had every reason to fear a Slav development on the frontier.
+On the other hand, the Emperor of Russia could not, even if he wished
+it, afford to disregard the feeling of the Russians in favour of
+their fellows in race and in religion. Both Andrassy and Gortschakoff
+foreseeing that neither could obtain a solution entirely acceptable to
+opinion in his own country, desired apparently to throw a part of the
+responsibility on a European Conference. But in such a Conference Russia
+would be supreme. France and Germany would bid against each other for
+her favour. Austria would be afraid to set herself against her, and if
+England had any different views, she would always be outvoted.
+
+Attention was shortly, however, diverted to another quarter. On November
+17, Lord Derby learnt that it was absolutely necessary for the Khedive
+to procure between three and four millions sterling before the end of
+the month, and that he was preparing to sell his Suez Canal Shares.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ 10, Downing Street, Whitehall, Nov. 17, 1875.
+
+ I am not quite easy in my mind about a story I hear, to the
+ effect that the Khedive is negotiating with a French Company for
+ the sale of his interest in the Suez Canal. If the telegram has not
+ been sent to you officially, I will enclose it. Now his bias has
+ always hitherto been against the pretensions of Lesseps, and he has
+ been of use to us in keeping that rather irrepressible gentleman in
+ order. If he withdraws from the concern, and a French Company takes
+ his place in it, our position will be very unfavourably altered.
+ Have you heard anything of the negotiations in question? I really
+ think the matter very serious, and it is one of which the English
+ public will fully understand the importance.
+
+ I think I am not violating any confidence in enclosing to you
+ for your personal use only an extract from Odo Russell's letter to
+ me received on Monday which seems to throw light on the situation.
+ I can add to it nothing in the way of comment.
+
+ Your information as to the position of the French Government
+ is satisfactory. It looks as if the worst of their troubles were
+ over.
+
+ P.S.--Since I began this note I have received further details,
+ which I send you, and, I may add in strict confidence that we are
+ prepared ourselves to take over the Viceroy's interest, if it
+ cannot be kept out of French hands by other means.
+
+ I find Lord Odo's letter is with the Prime Minister, so the
+ extract I promised must wait till next messenger.
+
+The result of Lord Lyons's inquiries, which had to be made very
+discreetly, so as not to create suspicion, was the discovery that the
+Khedive was actively negotiating with a French Company, but it was
+believed that he wanted to mortgage, and not to sell the shares. Lord
+Derby's next letter to Lord Lyons shows how reluctantly he took action.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Nov. 19, 1875.
+
+ From General Stanton's[14] telegrams it appears that the
+ Khedive has no intention of selling his interest in the Suez Canal,
+ though he may be obliged to mortgage it for a time. He has promised
+ to give us notice, if, from any cause, he should change his mind,
+ and to give us the option of purchase.
+
+ I sincerely hope we may not be driven to that expedient. The
+ acquisition would be a bad one financially, and the affair might
+ involve us in disagreeable correspondence both with France and
+ the Porte. But there is a strong feeling here about not letting
+ the Canal go still more exclusively into French hands, and as we
+ contribute nearly four-fifths of the traffic, it cannot be said
+ that this jealousy is unreasonable. There are intrigues of all
+ sorts going on at Cairo, but I think we may reckon on the Khedive
+ being true to us, if not tempted too strongly. I rely on you to
+ tell me all you hear on the subject.
+
+The memorandum of Lord Odo Russell referred to by Lord Derby is a lucid
+exposition of the European situation at the time and of Bismarck's
+attitude with regard to the other Powers, more especially Russia.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Berlin, Nov. 12, 1875.
+
+ Buelow is loquacious and straightforward on most subjects; but
+ his reticence on Oriental affairs is remarkable. I have repeatedly
+ tried the experiment of talking over what the newspapers say, to
+ draw him out, but he becomes silent and embarrassed, and seeks to
+ change the subject, and when questioned, replies that he has not
+ lately received any information from Constantinople.
+
+ I have in consequence tried to find out through confidential
+ sources what it all means, and putting two and two together, I
+ make out that Bismarck feels uncertain of Russia, and does not
+ wish to be committed too soon. Since Gortschakoff assumed the post
+ of peacemaker between France and Germany, Bismarck has failed to
+ re-establish confidential relations with Russia. In regard to
+ Oriental affairs, Gortschakoff, instead of being satisfied to act
+ with his German and Austrian allies exclusively, has sought to
+ keep up an equally balanced understanding with England, France and
+ Italy: from which Bismarck suspects that Gortschakoff does not mean
+ to let him have his own way and wishes to control Germany through
+ the united action and agreement of the other European Powers. This
+ does not suit his book, and above all, he fears that Russia wishes
+ to keep on good terms with England and France; which would, in his
+ opinion, neutralize the exclusive action of the three Northern
+ Powers, over which he hoped to establish his own influence to the
+ exclusion of all other Governments. By lending his assistance to
+ Russia in the East, he calculated on Russian neutrality in regard
+ to his own plans, as was the case during the late war with France.
+
+ The joint action of Russia and England last May, in the
+ interest of peace, took him by surprise, destroyed his fondest
+ calculations, and left him isolated and disappointed to reflect
+ on the possibility of a peace coalition against Germany, which he
+ could not break up without the certainty of Russian neutrality
+ or assistance. He feels that Gortschakoff has abandoned him for
+ the time being, that he has lost the confidence of the Emperor
+ Alexander, and that while they live, there is but little hope of
+ a change of policy in Russia, favourable to his plans--viz. the
+ breaking up of Austria and the neutralization of the minor German
+ sovereignties.
+
+ Bismarck reckoned much on his friend Schouvaloff, but
+ Schouvaloff turned traitor last May, and is less German in England
+ than he was in Russia, which Bismarck cynically attributed to the
+ influence of wine and women.
+
+ Now Bismarck, I am told, affects honest indignation at the
+ manner in which Russia is deceiving and misleading Austria in
+ regard to Turkey; but in what that consists, I do not yet clearly
+ understand.
+
+ When he returns to Berlin he may possibly speak to me on these
+ subjects, and I should be glad to know whether there is anything in
+ particular which you may wish me to say, or not to say.
+
+ On the whole the present situation of affairs seems to me
+ favourable to the maintenance of peace.
+
+ Of course we must be prepared for an occupation of some
+ portions of European Turkey by Austria and Russia, but that need
+ not necessarily lead to war.
+
+ I have also endeavoured to find out what the views of
+ the National Party in regard to the East really are, and I
+ find that the breaking up of European Turkey would be received
+ with satisfaction, for the Turk has no friends in Germany. The
+ German provinces of Austria are looked upon as the natural and
+ inevitable inheritance, sooner or later, of the German Empire,
+ for which Austria might be compensated in Turkey, with or without
+ Constantinople. Some people talk wildly of giving Constantinople
+ to Greece, as less likely to be objected to by the Western Powers.
+ But even Russia might take possession of Constantinople without
+ objection on the part of Germany. Anything calculated to break the
+ influence of France in the East, which is still thought to be too
+ great, would be popular in Germany, and more especially if the
+ interests of the Latin Church could be injured by it.
+
+ England may have Egypt if she likes. Germany will graciously
+ not object.
+
+ Since May it has become manifest that Russia has the power
+ to hamper the movements of Germany and arrest her progress
+ effectually, and that Germany can undertake nothing new without
+ the passive consent of Russia. This power must be so intolerable
+ to Bismarck that he is sure to exercise all his skill in drawing
+ Russia out of the combined arms of the Great Powers, back into
+ his own exclusive embrace. This, a difference between Russia and
+ Austria about Turkey, might enable him to achieve.
+
+ Bismarck's endeavours last winter to make us suspicious of
+ Russia, and _vice versa_, are now fully explained. His failure must
+ add to the general irritation he suffers from.
+
+ The situation will become clearer when he returns to Berlin in
+ the course of the winter.
+
+Lord Odo Russell's view of the situation tallied with what Gortschakoff
+had said to Decazes, Thiers, and other people at Vevey, earlier in the
+year. The preservation of peace seemed, therefore, to rest largely on
+Russia, and it was unfortunate that the Eastern Question presented
+itself in a form which certainly favoured Bismarck's efforts to create
+differences between Russia and Austria, and between Russia and England.
+
+Further inquiries in Paris with regard to the Khedive's action seemed to
+confirm the view that he was seeking to mortgage the shares, but to whom
+they were to be mortgaged was unknown. On November 27, there arrived
+through Lord Tenterden, Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office, the
+intelligence that Her Majesty's Government had bought the shares.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Tenterden to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, Nov. 25, 1875.
+
+ Lord Derby is ill and at home. I am not sure therefore whether
+ he is writing to you to-night to tell you about the Suez Canal.
+ General Stanton telegraphed that Lesseps (supposed to be backed
+ by French Government) was offering four millions sterling (fr.
+ 100,000,000) for the Khedive's shares, but that the Khedive would
+ sell them to England for the same sum. Thereupon he was instructed
+ to offer this amount, and the Khedive accepted this morning. The
+ contract was signed to-day, as we have just heard by telegram.
+ Messrs. Rothschild advance the money on the security of the shares,
+ L1,000,000 in December, and the rest by instalments, the Khedive
+ to pay 5 per cent. on the shares while they remain without bearing
+ interest (the interest being hypothecated for the next twenty
+ years).
+
+ Her Majesty's Government are to apply to Parliament to take
+ the bargain off the Rothschilds' hands.
+
+ Practically, therefore, subject to Parliament's assent, Her
+ Majesty's Government have bought the shares.
+
+ I am writing in the greatest hurry but the above is a correct
+ outline of the case.
+
+ I suppose the French will make an ugly face.
+
+ P.S. It has all been kept very secret so far, so pray be
+ supposed to be ignorant till Lord Derby tells you.
+
+The action of Her Majesty's Government was taken none too soon, for
+as Lord Lyons reported, the shares very nearly fell into the hands of
+the French. On November 26 the purchase of the shares was publicly
+announced, and on the following day Lord Derby had an interview with the
+French Ambassador on the subject.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, Nov. 27, 1875.
+
+ I have seen d'Harcourt. He came to hear what I could tell him
+ about the Suez affair, and I told him the whole story exactly as it
+ is.
+
+ He says that there will be some soreness in France, and I am
+ afraid he is right. You know the facts, and I need not therefore
+ repeat them. The points which I dwelt on were these:
+
+ We did not wish that the Khedive would sell, nor was there on
+ our part the slightest desire to alter the _status quo_. But we
+ could not help his selling, and as he had decided on doing so, we
+ took the only effectual steps to prevent the possibility of the
+ shares falling into hands whose possession of them might not be
+ favourable to our interests. The suddenness of the whole affair was
+ not our doing. If we had delayed, other purchasers would have come
+ forward. We had to take the opportunity as it offered itself or
+ lose it altogether.
+
+ It is not in the power of the British Government to act
+ as Continental Governments can, through third parties--banks,
+ financial companies, and the like. What we do, we must do openly,
+ and in our own names, so that Parliament may judge of the whole
+ transaction. This I said in answer to a remark made by d'Harcourt,
+ that the act would have had less political significance if done
+ through some company, or otherwise, and not directly in the name of
+ the State.
+
+ We hold even now a minority of the canal shares. The question
+ for us is not one of establishing an exclusive interest, but of
+ preventing an exclusive interest from being established as against
+ us.
+
+ I have always expressed my opinion that the best arrangement
+ for all the world would be the placing of the Canal under an
+ International Commission, like that of the Danube; and I think so
+ still. I knew, I said, that the French Government were not prepared
+ to entertain any such idea, and I therefore did not put it forward;
+ but if France and other Governments altered their way of thinking,
+ I did not think any difficulties would be made by England.
+
+ M. d'Harcourt expressed some fear, or at least thought that
+ some would be felt, lest the Khedive should be unable to pay his
+ promised L200,000 a year, and we in consequence should use some
+ means to coerce him, which would practically establish England in
+ authority in Egypt. I assured him that nothing was further from our
+ thoughts. We wanted the passage through Egypt as free for ourselves
+ as for the rest of the world, and we wanted nothing more.
+
+The purchase of the Suez Canal shares has always been surrounded
+with much glamour and mystery, but in reality it seems to have been
+a perfectly straightforward and business-like proceeding, to which
+no reasonable objection could be taken. So far from being a profound
+political _coup_ long calculated in advance, the action of Her
+Majesty's Government was totally unpremeditated, and as far as Lord
+Derby was concerned, it was undertaken with reluctance, and under the
+conviction that England was making a bad bargain. So little confidence
+did Lord Derby feel, and so averse was he from incurring any further
+responsibility in Egypt, that he unhesitatingly declined a new
+proposal of the Khedive that he should sell to the British Government
+his contingent interest in the profits of the Suez Canal above five
+per cent., and informed the French of the fact. The British public,
+which warmly approved the transaction, seems to have been a better
+judge of the Foreign Secretary's action than he was himself. The four
+millions' worth of shares acquired by the British Government represented
+nine-twentieths of the entire amount, and it is interesting to compare
+these figures with the estimate put upon the value of the Canal by
+Lesseps. On July 11, 1874, the latter called upon Lord Lyons and said
+that two persons from England had sounded him about the sale of the
+Canal; one a member of the English branch of the Rothschild family, and
+the other a Baron Emile d'Erlanger, a well-known banker living in Paris.
+
+ The Rothschild was no doubt Nathaniel,[15] M.P. for Aylesbury,
+ who was here in the beginning of June. Lesseps said that on being
+ pressed by him to state a sum, for which the Canal might be
+ purchased, he had said a milliard (L40,000,000) and he declared
+ that although this sum had startled even a Rothschild, it was only
+ a fair one. His object with me seemed to be to give the impression
+ that the shareholders would not sell the Canal for any sum.[16]
+
+Although the French could hardly be expected to approve of the action
+of the British Government, which, if it had occurred some years earlier,
+would have caused a storm of indignation, they were, under existing
+circumstances, forced to accept it with tolerable equanimity, as it was
+of no use to add a coolness with England to their other difficulties;
+and, in addition, they gained a great deal by the rise which took place
+in Canal shares and Egyptian securities. Lesseps professed himself to
+be delighted and Bismarck sent a message to say that the policy adopted
+by Her Majesty's Government had met with the support of the German
+Government.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: French Military Attache at Berlin before the war of 1870.]
+
+[Footnote 8: French Ambassador at St. Petersburg.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Finance Minister.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Lord Lyons to Lord Granville, Jan. 16, 1874.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Blowitz.]
+
+[Footnote 12: British Minister at Brussels.]
+
+[Footnote 13: German Ambassador at London.]
+
+[Footnote 14: British Consul-General at Cairo.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Now Lord Rothschild.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Lord Lyons to Lord Derby, July 11, 1874.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE EASTERN QUESTION
+
+(1876-1878)
+
+
+In January, 1876, the gradual spread of the insurrection in Turkey
+led to the concoction by the three Imperial Powers of the so-called
+'Andrassy Note,' and the great question was whether England would
+consent to take part in its presentation, in view of her traditional
+attitude towards Turkey. Lord Derby, in a letter to Lord Lyons, stated
+that Bismarck was very anxious that we should do so, and explained that
+although 'one can trust none of these Governments, it is as well to give
+them credit for acting honestly until the reverse is proved,' and he was
+therefore in favour of such a course himself. In a letter[17] addressed
+to Mr. Disraeli, asking for his views on the subject, Lord Derby
+remarked that: "It is too late to stand on the dignity and independence
+of the Sultan; a Sovereign who can neither keep the peace at home, nor
+pay his debts, must expect to submit to some disagreeable consequences."
+Lord Lyons, on being consulted, concurred with Lord Derby's views.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 14, 1876.
+
+ I hardly see how England is to avoid supporting the Andrassy
+ Note. If we stand aloof we shall stand alone. If our secession
+ produces no effect and the Turks still accept, we shall be in
+ the same foolish position France was in 1840; with this serious
+ inconvenience, that if the Andrassy plan fails in pacifying the
+ Herzegovina, we shall be blamed for the failure, as having caused
+ it by breaking up the unanimity of Europe. If the Turks do not
+ accept, they will be ready enough to throw the responsibility upon
+ us, and to call upon us to get them out of the scrape into which
+ they will get with the other Powers. I think that by consenting we
+ should leave the Powers least excuse for attacking Turkey, or at
+ all events, least excuse for pushing on without consulting us. I
+ should not be for qualifying our support too much, for, if we do,
+ the failure of the plan, which is in my opinion more than probable,
+ will still be attributed to us, and a support, given as it were
+ against our will, and restricted to the least possible amount, will
+ be treated very much as opposition. I say all this because you ask
+ me to tell you what I think: but there are two important elements
+ for forming an opinion which I lack. I mean a knowledge of public
+ opinion in England, and a knowledge of the real feelings of the
+ three Empires towards each other.
+
+ The despatch from Odo Russell looks as if Bismarck was
+ preparing for the possibility of a quarrel with Russia. Ever since
+ 1870 he has been very naturally trying to turn every opportunity
+ of dividing England from France to account. But since you joined
+ Russia in insisting upon peace last year, and still more since
+ the purchase of the Suez Canal shares, he has no doubt formed a
+ higher opinion of England, and conceived the idea that she still
+ has the will and the means to play a foremost part in European
+ politics. Like everybody else, he feels sure that if there is a
+ quarrel between Russia and Germany, France will side with Russia.
+ In order to prevent his enemy being all powerful at sea, he must
+ have the English fleet not merely neutral, but on his side. The
+ only advantage he can offer to England is support on the Eastern
+ Question, and it is on this question that he would have the best
+ chance of embroiling her with Russia. What part he means Austria to
+ play, I find it more difficult to guess. That he intends some day,
+ and by some means, to annex German Austria to the German Empire I
+ make no doubt, but I suppose he is in no hurry to add so large a
+ Roman Catholic and Southern population to the electors of the Diet
+ of the Empire.
+
+ The worst service we could render France at present would
+ be to set up a separate understanding with her in opposition to
+ Germany.
+
+The French Government was desperately anxious that England should not
+separate herself from the other Powers, partly from fear that such
+action would cause European complications, and partly because it was
+particularly desirous of getting credit with Russia for having brought
+English opinion round to Russian views. Her Majesty's Government finally
+decided to join in the Andrassy Note, although it would appear from Lord
+Derby's language, that the Cabinet were not unanimous on the question.
+
+Meanwhile French internal politics remained in the same confused and
+unsatisfactory state which had prevailed for so long. The divisions
+amongst the Conservatives had made Monarchical Government in any form
+impossible, and yet they refused to acquiesce, even temporarily, in the
+moderate form of Republic which had been established, and seemed bent
+upon doing all they could to exchange their King Log for a King Stork
+in the shape of a Red Republic. The elections which took place in the
+beginning of the year 1876 resulted in large Republican majorities both
+in the Senate and in the Chamber, and in the case of the former, this
+result was singularly unfortunate for Marshal MacMahon, as it deprived
+him of the power of forcing a dissolution. A letter from Lord Lyons to
+the Prince of Wales, who was on his way back from India, summarizes the
+French internal situation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, March 7, 1876.
+
+ I cannot give your Royal Highness a very satisfactory
+ account of French politics, although I do not take so gloomy a
+ view of them as many Frenchmen do. The large number of advanced
+ Republicans in the new Chamber of Deputies, the not inconsiderable
+ number of Ultra-Radicals, and the complete defeat of the Moderate
+ Conservatives in the Elections not unnaturally frighten the upper
+ classes of Frenchmen. But in fact so many of the members are quite
+ new men, that one cannot foresee how parties will group themselves.
+ The Chambers meet to-morrow, and in about a month's time it will
+ be possible to form an opinion as to how things are likely to go.
+ So long as Marshal MacMahon is at the head of the State and of the
+ army, there can be no fear of any serious disturbance of material
+ order; and if he is at the same time firm and conciliatory with the
+ new Chamber, and willing to take a Ministry from the more moderate
+ members of the majority, he will very probably be rewarded by
+ finding how tame demagogues can become in office. I understand the
+ Marshal insists upon having Ministers of War and Foreign Affairs
+ whom he knows and in whom he has confidence, but that he is willing
+ to let the other Departments be filled by men taken in the ordinary
+ way from the majority.
+
+ So far we have not this year been disturbed, as we were
+ last spring, by rumours of war, and agriculture and commerce are
+ flourishing in France, and the revenue goes on increasing.
+
+ Of the Egyptian Financial Question Your Royal Highness
+ will learn all particulars on the spot. Neither that, nor the
+ Herzegovina question are settled at this moment, but we must hope
+ that they are on the eve of being settled.
+
+One of the new features in the French political situation was the
+recovery by Gambetta of his former influence, and as he was now a person
+of considerable influence, Sheffield was utilized for the purpose of
+eliciting his views. The late Mr. George Sheffield, who acted as Lord
+Lyons's private secretary for over twenty years, was a well-known
+figure in the political and social world of Paris, and included in
+his acquaintance most people both there and in London who were worth
+knowing. Not only did he enjoy much personal popularity, but as he was
+known to be completely in Lord Lyons's confidence, he was the recipient
+of much confidential information, and generally believed to be a model
+of discretion. One of his peculiarities was that, in spite of much
+practice, he spoke very imperfect French with an atrocious accent, but
+this circumstance never appeared to prejudice him in any way, and it
+may incidentally be noted that the possession of what is called a good
+French accent is a much overrated accomplishment in France itself.
+Frenchmen rarely wish to listen; they desire to talk themselves and
+to be listened to; to them, as a rule, a foreigner is a foreigner and
+nothing more, and whether he speaks French well or ill, they seldom
+notice and rarely care.
+
+Gambetta, having secured a listener in the person of Sheffield, was no
+doubt delighted to expound his views on the situation. First of all,
+speaking on the subject of Bonapartist successes at the elections, he
+said that Bonapartism would die out as soon as it was realized that a
+moderate Republic was firmly established. He expressed great delight at
+the fall of Thiers (Thiers had once described him as a _fou furieux_),
+and said that under him no real self-acting Republic could ever have
+been formed, that it would have fallen to pieces at his death, and
+indeed that the best thing Thiers could do for the Republic would be to
+die. For Marshal MacMahon's entourage he had a great dislike, but for
+the Marshal himself much respect, and he aspired to be Prime Minister
+under him--a post to which he considered that he was fully entitled,
+but which the Decazes, Broglie, the Marshal's secretaries and the
+Marechale and her friends would do their best to prevent him obtaining.
+He professed confidence in being able to keep the extreme Radicals in
+order; said that the Red Flag was as obnoxious to him as the White Flag;
+that he was not inclined to grant a general amnesty to the Communists,
+and that he would not agree to the re-establishment of the National
+Guard. He also professed himself to be in favour of Free Trade, and
+asserted that the commercial Treaty concluded by Napoleon III. accounted
+for many of the Bonapartist successes.
+
+Gambetta's aspiration of serving under the Marshal was never fulfilled,
+the above-mentioned entourage being presumably too strong for him; but
+the upper classes in France continued to look forward to the future
+with undiminished apprehension. French capital, reversing the present
+process, began to pour steadily into England, and it was stated that the
+rich Radicals were not the last in sending their money abroad.
+
+ 'Marshal MacMahon's position,' wrote Lord Lyons at the end
+ of March, 'does not improve. He has so little political knowledge
+ or ability that, as events have shown, he exercises little or no
+ personal influence in politics. There is also a jealousy springing
+ up with regard to Emmanuel d'Harcourt and other people about him
+ who are supposed to direct his political conduct. The officers
+ now at the head of the army would follow the Marshal very far in
+ any Conservative direction, but it may be questioned whether they
+ would submit patiently to being placed under a Radical Minister
+ of War--Gambetta for instance. It is the Marshal's political
+ intelligence that is doubted. No one has a word to say against his
+ disinterestedness, his honour, or his courage.'
+
+Marshal MacMahon, a simple and amiable soldier, who knew nothing about
+politics, was credited with an overwhelming admiration for the capacity
+of his private secretary, Emmanuel d'Harcourt. Upon one occasion, the
+question of applying for the extradition of a criminal who had fled to
+America was being discussed in his presence. 'Well,' said the Marshal,
+'we must telegraph at once to San Francisco.' 'Pardon, M. le Marechal,'
+interposed d'Harcourt, 'Washington, not San Francisco, is the capital of
+the United States.' The Marshal was so astounded at the profundity of
+his private secretary's knowledge that he was only able to ejaculate:
+'_Ce diable d'Harcourt! il sait tout!_'
+
+Many stories were told of his engaging simplicity of character, of
+which the following will serve as an instance. Upon one occasion he was
+inspecting a military academy, and was informed that there was present
+a young Arab chieftain of distinguished lineage to whom it would be
+desirable to address some words of encouragement. The young man was
+brought up, whereupon the following brief colloquy ensued:--
+
+ Marshal: '_Ah! c'est vous qui etes le negre?_'
+
+ Arab Chief: '_Oui, M. le Marechal._'
+
+ Marshal: '_Eh bien, mon garcon, continuez!_'
+
+By a curious combination of circumstances, Marshal MacMahon, with his
+inadequate political and intellectual equipment, was still able for some
+time to fill the place of a constitutional sovereign, and virtually the
+French were living under a constitutional Monarchy, with an Executive
+possessing large powers, rather than under a Republic. This state of
+things, however, could not last for long, and it seemed as if the choice
+lay between the youthful Prince Imperial and the establishment of a
+really Radical Republic.
+
+In one respect the French had every reason to congratulate themselves,
+namely, upon the re-organization of their army, and some of the
+political consequences which were likely to result from this increased
+and increasing military strength are pointed out in the following letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Sept. 26, 1876.
+
+ As soon as General Conolly finishes his visits to the Autumn
+ Manoeuvres and makes his reports, it may perhaps be desirable for
+ me to send you some observations on the political consequences of
+ the great progress the French Army is making. All the officers of
+ Foreign Armies and the English officers especially who have been
+ out with the French troops this autumn, seem to agree in regarding
+ the improvement as being undoubted and very considerable. In short,
+ it may not unreasonably be expected that in about three years from
+ this time, the French Army will be in such a state, that France
+ will count for as much or nearly as much, in the balance of power
+ in Europe, as she did before 1870.
+
+ The different phases of public opinion since the peace of
+ 1871 may be described as follows. At first, rage and mortification
+ produced a wild and unreasoning cry for revenge. This was followed
+ by a depression almost amounting to despair. In this state of
+ things the rumours of an intended attack by Germany in 1875
+ produced nearly a panic. Since that time hope and confidence have
+ gradually returned. The general sentiment now is that France is
+ safely 'biding her time.'
+
+ Under the influence of this sentiment, the French acquiesce
+ patiently in the present apparent eclipse of French power; they
+ disapprove of any attempt on the part of the Government to put
+ itself prominently forward in European politics; they desire to
+ preserve peace and tranquillity in Europe at almost any price; they
+ wish to disarm suspicion, and to be allowed three or four years
+ more to recruit their strength. Their policy consequently is to
+ adjourn as far as possible all questions.
+
+ Their ultimate object in all they do, is to recover their lost
+ Provinces; but however confident they may be of recovering in a
+ few years their old position in the world, I do not believe that
+ they contemplate, as the immediate result, an attack upon Germany.
+ I do not think that they at all foresee a time at which they could
+ run the risk of making such an attack singlehanded. What they do
+ intend, is to put forward with vigour their own views with regard
+ to the numerous questions they now leave more or less in abeyance,
+ and to contract if possible foreign alliances on equal terms.
+
+ One of the questions with regard to which they will be
+ disposed to change their tone very considerably will be that of
+ Egypt.
+
+ Another may possibly be that of the Newfoundland Fisheries, if
+ we do not succeed in effecting some sort of settlement of it in the
+ meantime.
+
+ A third may be the extension of their possessions in Cochin
+ China, and of their protectorate of Annam.
+
+ With regard to alliances, that which they will first seek
+ will no doubt be the alliance of Russia, and in a case of great
+ emergency, they would make great sacrifices of Western interests to
+ obtain it.
+
+ They will desire to keep on good terms with England, so far
+ at all events as to avoid throwing her into the arms of Germany,
+ but as they are not likely to conceive hopes of obtaining effectual
+ assistance from England towards recovering Alsace and Lorraine,
+ they will not be so eager for an English as a Russian alliance.
+
+ Another contingency to be kept in view is that a new President
+ or a new Dynasty, desirous of consolidating themselves by a little
+ military glory, may be led to direct an attack upon whatever
+ quarter it may be easiest to do so.
+
+ I will not however go on with mere speculations of this kind.
+ Of the truth of the conclusions to which I have come, I entertain
+ very little doubt. In two or three years France will not be in the
+ same accommodating frame of mind in which she is now, and will
+ have very much more powerful means than she has now of enforcing
+ attention to her wishes. All questions therefore in which the
+ influence of France is hostile, should be settled as quickly as
+ possible. The restoration of the strength of France may be found
+ useful in redressing the balance of power, but, anyhow, it should
+ be taken into account in all political calculations.
+
+It was not long before these anticipations were justified, but for the
+present, relations between England and France remained on a friendly
+footing, no doubt much to Bismarck's displeasure, who, at this period,
+was continually urging us to take Egypt and not to do anything else.
+As a matter of fact, if we had seized Egypt in 1876, it would not have
+had the immediate effect of embroiling us with France. On the contrary,
+all those who had a pecuniary interest in Egypt thought that they would
+gain by our taking possession of the county, while the great majority
+of Frenchmen looked upon the thing as inevitable, and thought it better
+to put a good face upon the matter. Any contradiction of the supposed
+English designs upon Egypt, however sincere and positive, met with no
+credence at all.
+
+There is an instructive extract on the subject, contained in a letter of
+Lord Derby of December 6, 1876.
+
+ It is evidently useless to say that we don't want Egypt and
+ don't intend to take it: we must leave our friends to be convinced
+ by the event. I have no doubt that everybody out of France would
+ be glad that we should seize the country. Russia would like it, as
+ making us an accomplice in her plans. Germany would like it still
+ more, as ensuring our being on uncomfortable terms with France
+ for some years to come. Italy would see in it a precedent and a
+ justification for seizing Tunis; Spain, the same, in regard to
+ Morocco. But you may be assured that we have no such designs and
+ are not going to run into adventures of this kind.
+
+There can be no possible doubt as to Lord Derby's sincerity; indeed,
+he was so constitutionally averse from an adventurous foreign policy,
+that a year or two later, Lord Salisbury said of his ex-colleague
+that he could never have brought himself to annex the Isle of Man. It
+is interesting to note that, in the above forecast of international
+brigandage, Tunis and not Tripoli was allotted to Italy, the designs of
+France in the former direction not apparently being suspected.
+
+Before the end of 1876 the experiment of trying to work the institutions
+of a Constitutional Monarchy in France under an elective chief
+magistrate had very nearly come to a deadlock. The Left were determined
+to get real power into their hands and not to allow themselves to be
+thwarted by the conservative tendencies of the Marshal and his personal
+friends. On the one hand, the Marshal stoutly maintained that he would
+have Ministers of his own choice in the Departments of War and Foreign
+Affairs, whereas the Left, so long as they had a majority in the
+Chamber of Deputies, were, under Constitutional Government, clearly
+entitled to decide the matter. But the question was complicated, because
+the Marshal, as well as the Ministers, was in a position to resort
+to resignation of office, and a severe Ministerial crisis ensued.
+Ultimately, the Marshal succeeded in keeping his Minister of War and
+his Minister for Foreign Affairs, but he was forced to accept, as Prime
+Minister, M. Jules Simon. The latter, although an able and conciliatory
+man, had been a member of the Revolutionary Government of National
+Defence, and having been forced to yield so far to his opponents, it
+seemed not improbable that the Marshal before long would be obliged to
+have recourse to Gambetta himself. Gambetta, as has been shown, had
+lately become much more moderate in his views, but in the opinion of
+many people he still represented the Red Spectre, and it was believed
+that his assumption of office would mean Communism, Socialism, equal
+division of property, judges appointed by election for short periods,
+the prohibition of marriage, and the suppression of religion. The
+desire of the Bonapartists was that the Government should fall into
+the hands of the extreme Left, in the hope that the people, from fear
+of the above contingencies, would clamour for the Empire; but what
+was more remarkable was, that many Orleanists as well as moderate and
+timid Conservatives wished to drive the Marshal to a dissolution in
+the hope of a reaction. There could have been no better proof of their
+short-sightedness and incapacity, for the mass of the electors were not
+in the least likely to make fine distinctions, and if really afraid of
+the Republic would certainly vote for nothing short of the Empire.
+
+The Conference which had assembled at Constantinople in the autumn in
+the hope of settling the Eastern Question, with Lord Salisbury as one of
+the British representatives, broke up in January, 1877, and it became
+clear that war between Russia and Turkey was unavoidable. Lord Derby,
+who was the reverse of sanguine by temperament, had never entertained
+any hopes of its success, and was quite determined that, whatever
+happened, there should be no British intervention. 'I am amused,' he
+wrote to Lord Odo Russell,[18] 'by your description of the Russo-German
+suspicions entertained against us; these fellows make us act as they
+would act in our place. They can neither deal straightforwardly
+themselves, nor give anybody else credit for doing so.
+
+'If you are asked what steps England is going to take next, your true
+answer should be "none." We shall wait, say little, and pledge ourselves
+to nothing.'
+
+The break up of the Conference filled the French with alarm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 5, 1877.
+
+ It is believed here that Bismarck is determined to produce at
+ least such a scare as he did two years ago, if not to do more. The
+ idea provokes some anger, but more fear. Nevertheless, the danger
+ is greater now than it was last time; for although France is very
+ far from being ready for even a defensive war, she does feel so
+ much stronger than she did in 1875, as not to be willing to bear
+ quite as much from Germany as she would have borne then.
+
+ The impressions prevalent here are:
+
+ That Bismarck is very much disappointed by the result of the
+ Constantinople Conference, which he had hoped would have ended by
+ setting all Europe by the ears.
+
+ That he is very much irritated by the cordiality which existed
+ between the English, French, and Russian Plenipotentiaries, and by
+ the considerable part taken by Chaudordy in the proceedings.
+
+ That he is very much annoyed by the number of Socialist votes
+ given in the recent German elections, and is eager to destroy Paris
+ as the hotbed of socialism.
+
+ That he wants a cry to make the Germans pay their taxes
+ willingly.
+
+ That he looks with an evil eye upon the material prosperity of
+ France.
+
+ That he considers the Exhibition of 1878 as a sort of defiance
+ of Germany, and is ready to go great lengths to prevent its taking
+ place.
+
+ These are French views, not mine; but I do agree with the
+ conclusion which the greater and the wiser part of the French
+ nation draw from them: namely that it behoves France to be more
+ than ever prudent and cautious, and more than ever careful not to
+ give Germany any pretext for a quarrel.
+
+ France is certainly not at all likely to oppose Russia in
+ anything that country may undertake in the East; but she is still
+ less likely to give her any military assistance there. She might
+ not be able to resist the bait, if Russia held it out, of an
+ offensive and defensive alliance against Germany, but in that
+ case she would more than ever want her own forces on this side of
+ Germany. This contingency, however, is too improbable to be worth
+ considering.
+
+ It is quite true that France has a large force on her Eastern
+ Frontier, and that she is hard at work there, but considering the
+ difficulty of guarding that frontier, such as it has been left by
+ the Treaty of 1871, her objects may well be supposed to be purely
+ defensive.
+
+ Lord Salisbury is to arrive this evening and to go on to
+ London without stopping.
+
+It is interesting to note that Lord Salisbury, while at Constantinople,
+formed a very poor opinion of the capacity of Sultan Abdul Hamid--an
+opinion which he must have had occasion to revise later on. 'Salisbury
+reports ill of the new Sultan; calls him a poor weak creature, from whom
+no help is to be expected. But his judgment is the result of a single
+interview.' So wrote Lord Derby to Lord Odo Russell.
+
+The French representative, Chaudordy, had been very active; his zeal
+had alarmed his own countrymen, and was supposed to have aroused
+the indignation of Bismarck, but one of the singular features of
+the Constantinople Conference seems to have been the action of the
+representatives of the small Powers such as Spain, Belgium, and Holland,
+who did their utmost, and not entirely without effect, to spirit the
+Turks up to resistance. In March there was much coming and going at
+Paris on the part of Ignatieff and Schouvaloff, who were thought to be
+endeavouring to secure what Russia wanted without war, and the former
+proceeded on a special mission to London, but the negotiations with the
+Turks broke down, and war was declared before the end of April. Letters
+from Lord Derby describing the state of feeling in England dwell upon
+the action of Gladstone, who, according to Schouvaloff, 'was much more
+Russian than the Russian Government,' and whose language was, 'only
+suited to a Panslavonic Society.'
+
+The outbreak of the war between Russia and Turkey was extremely
+distasteful to the French for various reasons. They were convinced that
+it had been instigated by Bismarck, and that it would result in the
+overwhelming preponderance of Germany on the continent, and were equally
+convinced that it would lead to a great extension of English influence
+in the Mediterranean including an occupation of Egypt; consequently,
+Decazes, who was anything but a straightforward politician, and anxious
+beyond everything to hunt with the Russian hounds, and run with the
+English hare, was constantly expressing fears that if an English
+force was sent to the East, the opportunity would at once be seized
+by Bismarck for falling upon France. A congenial opportunity for this
+intriguer arose over the question whether Egypt should be called upon to
+render pecuniary and military assistance to Turkey, and an unsuccessful
+attempt was made to persuade the Khedive that if he refused to comply,
+he would be protected. By these means Decazes would have secured the
+treble advantage of making himself agreeable to Russia, of pleasing the
+French bondholders, and, to a certain degree, of thwarting England in
+Egypt. Unluckily for him, the scheme miscarried; but in spite of ardent
+professions of neutrality, he contrived to render services to Russia
+which were of some considerable service.
+
+He used his influence to obtain a loan for her in Paris; his agents in
+Egypt supported the Russian threats to blockade the Suez Canal, and
+the effect of the Franco-Russian understanding was to force Germany to
+make greater sacrifices in order to retain the friendship of Russia by
+furthering Russian policy in the East. One of the methods by which the
+Germans sought to ingratiate themselves with Russia took the remarkable
+form of insisting (as the British Ambassador at Constantinople pointed
+out) that Russian subjects who remained in Turkey during the war, should
+not only be entitled to remain there undisturbed, but permitted to enjoy
+all the privileges of the capitulations, this being apparently the
+German conception of neutrality.
+
+The double game which Decazes was playing was not, however, popular in
+France. It was felt that his intrigues with Russia tended to throw
+England into the arms of Germany, and his enemies asserted that he
+was too fond of speculation to be a thoroughly satisfactory Minister.
+However, an internal political crisis of an exceptionally important
+nature in May diverted French attention from all foreign questions for
+the time being.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, May 16, 1877.
+
+ The Marshal has been getting more and more uncomfortable about
+ M. Jules Simon's giving way in the Chamber of Deputies to the more
+ advanced Left, and now, as you will have learnt from my telegrams,
+ he has turned him out. It is believed that if matters came to
+ extremities, the Marshal will bring out a thoroughly reactionary
+ Ministry which he has _in petto_. The Duc de Broglie, Prime
+ Minister, General Ducrot, Minister of War, and so on. This would
+ necessitate a dissolution, for which the consent of the Senate
+ would be necessary. But it is very doubtful whether the country is
+ ripe for anything of the kind, and whether the result might not be
+ the return of a still more radical Chamber than the present; and
+ then either the Marshal must retire and hand the Government over to
+ Gambetta or some one still more advanced in opinion, or make a real
+ _coup d'etat_ by means of the army.
+
+ However he will no doubt try to form a Ministry rather more
+ Conservative than the last and still able to get on somehow with
+ the present Chamber of Deputies; but this will be difficult.
+
+ One of the Marshal's grounds of dissatisfaction with M. Jules
+ Simon was that he would not, or could not, get from the Chamber
+ powers which would enable the Government to restrain the press from
+ attacking Germany in the dangerous manner in which it has written
+ against that country lately.
+
+The action of the Marshal in turning out Jules Simon, who was supported
+by a majority in a recently elected Chamber, and replacing him by the
+Duc de Broglie, who was extremely unpopular, might well be described
+as a very strong measure. Decazes, who was supposed to be in the plot,
+remained in office, and there was therefore not much probability of a
+change in foreign policy; but it was evident that there were now only
+two real parties in France--the Republicans and the Bonapartists. The
+possible restoration of the Empire filled with dismay Lord Derby, who
+considered that the last six years had witnessed a great purification
+both of public and private life in France, and that if the French were
+going back to a 'Government of adventurers, adventuresses, and priests,'
+it would be a grave misfortune for Europe; and he was most anxious to
+let it be known that there was no sympathy in England for Bonapartist
+intrigues.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, May 18, 1877.
+
+ There are of course among the Right, many who, wisely or
+ unwisely, rejoice that Marshal MacMahon has broken with the Left,
+ but there is hardly any one who does not think the moment ill
+ chosen, the reasons assigned insufficient, and the mode adopted
+ unskilful. Decazes is represented, or misrepresented, as having
+ been at the bottom of the whole thing.
+
+ He came up to me last night, and asked if I had not something
+ to say to him about the sentiments he had expressed to me with
+ regard to the dangers to English interests in Western Europe. He
+ also expressed anxiety to know how the question of the wine duties
+ was getting on in England. He is, I suppose, anxious to have
+ something to show that he is successful in cultivating intimate
+ relations with England.
+
+ While he seems so desirous of frightening us about Holland,
+ he shows no inclination to admit that we have any interests at
+ all in the East. In fact his plan seems to be to involve us in a
+ quarrel with Germany, while he keeps safely aloof: to curry favour
+ with Russia by taking to himself the credit of keeping our forces
+ out of the East; to prevent any increase of our power in the
+ Mediterranean, and to be well with us, but, if possible, better
+ still with Russia. Still, on the whole, I am glad he remains in.
+ I should not have been sorry to have Broglie himself as Minister
+ for Foreign Affairs, but we might have a much more embarrassing
+ Minister than Decazes, and he is easy going and conciliatory in
+ most matters. Only we must not be surprised if he repeats to
+ Russia, and Russia repeats to Germany, anything likely to impair
+ our relations with Germany.
+
+ The other Ministers would almost seem to have been chosen
+ for the express purpose of defying the majority of the Chamber.
+ Broglie, of whom I have a high opinion, is especially unpopular.
+ I suppose the notion has been to put as far as possible
+ representatives of all shades of the Right into the Cabinet, in
+ order to be able to form a coalition strong enough to obtain a vote
+ in the Senate for dissolution. It is not certain that such a vote
+ could be carried, the Conservative majority in the Senate being
+ only 2 or 3 on ordinary occasions.
+
+Decazes took advantage of the occasion actually to suggest a secret
+alliance with England for the protection of Holland and Belgium, and
+stated that if it were ever signed, he should communicate to no single
+person except the Marshal himself. It is hardly credible that he could
+have been in earnest in making this suggestion, for not only are Foreign
+Secretaries not in the habit of making secret treaties unknown to their
+chiefs and colleagues, but Lord Derby was the last person who would be
+likely to enter into an enterprise of this description. In the meanwhile
+Bismarck, as an impartial friend, was warning Lord Odo Russell that
+Decazes was only waiting for an opportunity to throw England over, in
+order to prove his devotion to Russia, and there was little doubt as to
+which alliance he would prefer if he could have his choice.
+
+Exercising his right, Marshal MacMahon prorogued the Chambers, and it
+being foreseen that there would be a general election in the autumn, his
+Government set to work at once in preparing for the fight by getting
+rid of as many Republican functionaries as possible, in accordance with
+well-established custom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, May 25, 1877.
+
+ Neither the private history of the dismissal of Jules Simon,
+ nor the attitude of the successful party, is calculated to give one
+ good hope for the future.
+
+ The Marshal is supposed to have been mainly influenced by M.
+ de St. Paul, a Bonapartist and intimate friend of his, of whom
+ he sees a great deal; by Monsignor Dupanloup, Bishop of Orleans;
+ by the aides-de-camp and people about him, and (it is whispered)
+ by Madame la Marechale. Fourtou may have been in the plot, but I
+ believe Broglie was taken by surprise. Decazes wanted to get rid
+ of Jules Simon and Martel, but to put temporarily in their places
+ some members of the Left, who would have got on for a time with
+ the Chamber. Jules Simon had proved a complete failure as Prime
+ Minister; he had neither the confidence of the Marshal nor even
+ that of the Cabinet, and he had lost all influence in the Chamber.
+ He would very soon have fallen of himself if he had been left alone.
+
+ The language of the Right tends to accredit the supposition
+ which will be most fatal to them in the country. They speak and
+ act as if the question was one between the aristocracy and the
+ canaille. In fact they wound the sentiment of equality which is
+ the strongest political and social sentiment in France, and
+ consequently the present crisis is beginning to be looked upon as
+ the last struggle of the old society against the new.
+
+ As regards the great question as to what is to be done when
+ the Marshal finds himself finally defeated by the Chamber, the
+ party now triumphant talk of the use of military force. The Marshal
+ has often declared to his friends that nothing shall induce him to
+ resort to an extralegal use of force, but the wilder spirits of the
+ party say that if the Marshal will not use the army, a general will
+ be found with less scruple, and they hint at Ducrot. But this would
+ be falling into the most fatal of all systems, that of military
+ _pronunciamentos_. The Marshal himself might do a great deal with
+ the army, and would probably keep it together, but it does not
+ by any means follow that any one general seizing power in Paris
+ would be submitted to by the rest. It is believed that even now,
+ General Berthaut, the Minister of War, was with difficulty induced
+ to remain in office, and yielded only to the Marshal's special
+ request, on condition that he should be relieved in the autumn.
+
+ It is however to be hoped that all this talk about military
+ _coups d'etat_ is simply talk; and that we shall get out of this
+ difficulty quietly at last. In the meantime the upper ten thousand
+ in Paris are indulging themselves in all sorts of illusions, and
+ the Paris shopkeepers are dreaming of the restoration of a Court
+ and of a great expenditure on luxuries.
+
+The Chambers met again in June, and although the country was perfectly
+quiet, the scenes which took place in the Chamber of Deputies were a
+sufficient indication of the fury with which the politicians regarded
+each other. The violent and disorderly conduct was chiefly on the side
+of the Right, there being a certain number of Bonapartists who provoked
+disturbances with the object of discrediting Parliamentary Government as
+much as possible.
+
+On the other hand even the moderate men on the Left began to talk
+of revolutionary measures to be adopted when they got back into
+power again, such as the suspension of the irremovability of judges,
+the impeachment of Ministers, and the dissolution of religious
+congregations. On June 22, the dissolution was voted by the Senate
+by a majority of twenty. It was decided that the elections should be
+held in three months' time, and both parties made their preparations
+for an uncompromising fight, Marshal MacMahon beginning the campaign
+with an order of the day to the army which smacked disagreeably of a
+_coup d'etat_, not to say a _pronunciamento_. Subsequently, having been
+assured of the support of the Comte de Chambord--a somewhat questionable
+advantage--he proceeded on an electoral tour in the South.
+
+The general election took place in October, and resulted in the crushing
+defeat of the Marshal and his Ministers in spite of the labours of
+prefects, magistrates, mayors, policemen, and priests, who had all been
+temporarily converted into electioneering agents. The exasperation of
+parties reached an almost unprecedented point, and Decazes admitted
+that the country was in a state of moral civil war. The partisans of
+the Government talked of a second dissolution, of proclaiming a state
+of siege during the new elections and conducting them with even more
+administrative vigour than the last. The Republicans announced their
+determination to annul the elections of all the official candidates and
+to impeach the Ministers and even the Marshal himself, if he did not
+retire or name a Ministry having their confidence. As for the Marshal
+himself, he found little support at this crisis from the monarchical
+parties, except on the part of the Orleanists, who saw that he must
+be kept in at all hazards; but the Orleanists had recognized that
+France, for the moment at least, was Republican, and their press owned
+openly that to persist in Personal Government instead of reverting to
+Constitutional Government was to march to certain disaster. The Marshal,
+in fact, found himself confronted with two alternatives: either he must
+accept Gambetta's demand to submit or resign; or he must run the risk of
+getting rid of his difficulties by means of a _coup d'etat_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 26, 1877.
+
+ The prospect does not grow clearer, though I see, or at all
+ events like to fancy I see, a cooling down of the fury which
+ prevailed a week ago.
+
+ The Marshal is supposed to be a man of one idea, and his one
+ idea at the present moment is said to be that he is bound to remain
+ at his post.
+
+ This idea might lead him to name a Ministry from the majority,
+ but then he would have to dismiss all the Fourtou prefects, whom he
+ solemnly promised to stand by.
+
+ On the other hand, the idea might carry him on to a _coup
+ d'etat_.
+
+ The plan devised by his opponents, and indeed by some of his
+ friends, for getting him out of the scrape, is that the Senate
+ should refuse to support him in extreme measures, and that he
+ should then declare (which would indeed be true) that he had never
+ promised to stay in opposition to both branches of the Legislature.
+
+ Communications which have been going on between the Elysee
+ and the Duc d'Audiffret Pasquier, the President of the Senate, are
+ said to have shown that the Senate cannot be depended upon either
+ to vote a second dissolution, or to carry on the Government in
+ conjunction with the Marshal, and without the Chamber of Deputies.
+
+ I register as rumours, strongly requiring confirmation, that
+ the Marshal has summoned the Chasseurs d'Afrique to reinforce the
+ garrison of Paris; that in consequence of disagreements between
+ Grevy and Gambetta, the Republicans offer the Presidency of the
+ Republic to General Chanzy, the Governor-General of Algeria; that
+ the more moderate Liberals have hopes of bringing in the Duc
+ d'Aumale as President, if MacMahon should actually retire.
+
+ As the population is disarmed and there is no National Guard,
+ there can be no need to increase the numbers of the garrison of
+ Paris. If any fresh troops were really brought up, it would be from
+ mistrust of the spirit of those already here.
+
+ Gambetta must have departed very far from his usual political
+ tact, if he has set up claims in opposition to Grevy. Grevy would
+ be quite alarming enough, and to establish the doctrine that the
+ President must be a general would bring France to the level of a
+ South American Republic.
+
+ It would be a curious result of an election, in which the
+ Orleans or Right Centre Party has met with a signal defeat, that an
+ Orleans Prince should be placed at the head of the State.
+
+The proper course for the Marshal to have adopted was to have accepted
+the position of a Constitutional President; to have appointed a
+Ministry which would have obtained a majority in the Chamber; and to
+have restrained it from excesses by the exercise of his legitimate
+authority, and by means of the power of the Senate. Instead of this,
+however, he first attempted to form a Ministry of the same colour as
+the old one; then tried to meet the Chamber with his old Ministers, and
+finally fell back upon perfectly unknown people who carried no weight
+at all, and who professed to represent no party. To this Ministry the
+Chamber refused to pay any attention, and after many threats in the
+Elysee organs to violate all laws; to collect and spend money without
+the sanction of Parliament, to suppress newspapers, and to proclaim
+a state of siege, the Marshal surrendered ignominiously in December,
+and accepted a Ministry in which M. Dufaure was President of the
+Council, and M. Waddington, Minister for Foreign Affairs. Thus, what
+should have been a natural and proper consequence of the elections was
+converted into an humiliating defeat, and there had been such a series
+of solemn declarations, none of them adhered to, that all confidence
+in the Marshal had disappeared. Of the more important members of the
+new Government, M. Dufaure was a lawyer with Conservative leanings. M.
+Waddington, who had been educated at Rugby and Cambridge, was intimate
+with Lord Lyons and the Embassy generally, but it was doubtful whether
+his connection with England would prove an advantage, as he might
+find it necessary to demonstrate that he was not too English. M. Leon
+Say, the Minister of Finance, was supposed to be a Free Trader; and
+M. de Freycinet, who was destined to take part in many subsequent
+administrations, had been Gambetta's Under-Secretary of State for War,
+and was looked upon as Gambetta's representative in the Cabinet.
+
+On December 17, MacMahon gave Lord Lyons his version of the history of
+the crisis.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Dec. 18, 1877.
+
+ I went to the weekly evening party at the Elysee last
+ Saturday. The Marshal took me aside, saying: 'I want to tell you
+ why I did it.' He proceeded to tell me that he had been led to
+ remain in office and make a Parliamentary Ministry, by a warning he
+ had received from abroad that if he retired, or if he established
+ a clerical Ministry, war would be the inevitable consequence.
+
+ So far the Marshal: what follows may be mere gossip.
+
+ On the afternoon of December 12, the Marshal had quite
+ determined _d'aller jusqu'au bout_; either to obtain from the
+ Senate a dissolution of the Chamber of Deputies, or to give in his
+ resignation. He was in consultation with General Rochebouet, who
+ was at the time Prime Minister, about drawing up a message in this
+ sense, when a letter was brought in, the bearer of which sent in
+ a message begging that the Marshal would receive him at once. The
+ letter was either written by the German Emperor, or at all events
+ it convinced the Marshal that the bearer was sent to give him a
+ message direct from His Imperial Majesty. The Marshal accordingly
+ received him alone, and he said he was a Prussian officer who had
+ been sent by the Emperor to entreat the Marshal to remain at the
+ head of the Republic, at all risks, and on any conditions; and
+ not to establish a Government which could be represented as being
+ clerical. The message is said to have represented that the Emperor
+ himself was most anxious for peace, but that he should not be able
+ to restrain 'other people,' if a clerical or a radical Government
+ were allowed to be established in France.
+
+ This sounds so like gossip that I should hardly have thought
+ it worth while to repeat it, if it had not tallied rather curiously
+ with the statement the Marshal himself volunteered to make to me
+ about his motives.
+
+ The 'other people' are supposed to be neither more nor
+ less than one other person--Prince Bismarck--and the message is
+ represented as having been sent by the Emperor William without the
+ knowledge of the Chancellor, or of the German Ambassador here.
+
+ Prince Bismarck's enemies, and they are of course numerous
+ enough here, like to argue from appearances that he has quite lost
+ the confidence of the Emperor, and some of them, who profess to
+ have peculiar means of obtaining information, say that he made
+ three conditions with the Emperor, as those on which alone he could
+ continue to serve him. 1st, that he should have _carte blanche_ in
+ the Government; 2nd, that the Empress should reside at Coblentz
+ or Baden rather than at Berlin; and 3rd, that certain people, of
+ whom he gave a list, should be removed from Court. As a natural
+ consequence, Bismarck's illness is attributed to his not having
+ obtained the consent of his Imperial Master to his conditions; and
+ it is said that he will not recover until his terms are complied
+ with. This story of the conditions appears to me to be a very
+ outrageous one, and I am quite unable to say whether there is any
+ admixture of truth in it. Those who recount it, love to draw from
+ it prognostications of the fall of the Great Chancellor.
+
+Whether the story of the Marshal's mysterious visitor was true or not,
+his defeat marked a decisive epoch in French internal politics; the
+Republic was now firmly established and cannot be said to have been in
+any dangers since, unless the vagaries of the impostor Boulanger be
+excepted.
+
+Ever since the beginning of the war between Russia and Turkey, Lord
+Derby had continually asserted that it was practically no concern
+of ours, and that he was quite determined not to be drawn into any
+intervention whatsoever. But as the Turkish resistance collapsed, and
+as it became more and more evident that there was nothing to prevent
+the Russians from exacting any terms they chose, unless some form of
+intervention took place, Her Majesty's Government decided to call
+Parliament together. Lord Derby was anxious to explain that this action
+had no sinister significance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Dec. 21, 1877.
+
+ You are not unlikely to be asked the meaning of Parliament
+ being called together earlier than usual. The explanation is
+ simple. We see a growing excitement on the question of the war; we
+ are menaced by an agitation friendly but troublesome, having for
+ object to drive us into war, and with a counter movement on the
+ other side. We think that much useless talk will be stopped; the
+ real opinion of the country be tested, and the Ministry relieved
+ from the annoyance of perpetual criticism which it cannot reply
+ to, if every peer and M.P. can say what he has got to say at
+ Westminster, rather than at a county dinner or borough meeting.
+
+ Those who have confidence in us will not be sorry to hear our
+ views explained by ourselves; those who have not, will have no
+ further opportunity of talking mysteriously about the country being
+ committed to this, that, or the other, without Parliament having a
+ voice in the matter. For it is clear that if we meant to act on our
+ own responsibility, and leave Parliament no choice except to ratify
+ or to condemn what we had done, we should not shorten by one-half
+ the interval that remains during which only such action is possible.
+
+ It is possible that there may be in France some renewal of
+ suspicions as to English designs on Egypt. If so, you may dispel
+ them by the most decided language you can use. We want nothing and
+ will take nothing from Egypt except what we have already, and what
+ other Powers share equally with us. We shall continue to work in
+ harmony with the French, and hope and expect the same from them.
+
+Lord Derby was the most cautious and unenterprising of men, and he
+already perhaps felt some suspicions as to the soundness of his
+colleagues in the Cabinet; but the assurance to be given to the French
+Government with regard to Egypt seems, on the face of it, somewhat
+gratuitous, if not rash. The situation in Turkey might have resulted in
+our being forced to go to Egypt at short notice, and only five years
+later he, Lord Derby, found himself a member of a Liberal Government
+which had been forced to adopt that very course.
+
+When the British Parliament met in January, the war was already
+practically ended, and the commissioners were treating for an armistice
+and for the preliminaries of peace. The Queen's Speech announced that
+although neither the Russians nor the Turks had infringed the conditions
+on which the neutrality of England depended, it might be necessary
+to ask for money and to take precautions, and on January 23, the
+Mediterranean fleet was ordered to pass the Dardanelles and to proceed
+to Constantinople. This action brought about the resignation of both
+Lord Derby and Lord Carnarvon, but upon the countermanding of the order
+to the fleet, Lord Derby resumed office. On January 28, the basis of the
+peace negotiations having been communicated, the Government asked for
+a vote of six millions, and in consequence of alarming intelligence,
+received from Mr. Layard the British Ambassador at Constantinople, the
+fleet was again ordered definitely to proceed to that city. Political
+excitement reached its climax, and light-hearted Jingoes, quite
+incapable of realizing the inadequacy of British military resources,
+proclaimed their readiness to fight any possible adversary.
+
+If it eventually became necessary for England to take active steps to
+secure her interests in the East, it was quite clear that no assistance
+whatever could be expected from France. M. Waddington took an early
+opportunity to assure Lord Lyons most emphatically that France wanted
+nothing for herself, and that she desired no acquisition of territory
+either in the Mediterranean or elsewhere; but whilst he disclaimed any
+desire of this nature, he showed in a most unmistakeable manner that
+an occupation of Egypt by England would create a bitter feeling in
+France which would long impair the friendly relations between the two
+countries. Speaking most confidentially, M. Waddington said that it was
+all important to France that England and Russia should not be involved
+in hostilities, and that France should not be left _tete-a-tete_ with
+Prince Bismarck, whether the latter played the part of an enemy or a
+tempter. In fact, the French Government, like its predecessor, was
+disquieted by a notion that Bismarck intended to propose to France
+some arrangement respecting Belgium and Holland, which would dismember
+those States, assigning of course to Germany the lion's share of the
+spoils, and it seemed to be apprehended that France would be called
+upon to choose between acquiescing in such an arrangement or incurring
+the active enmity of Germany. The fear of the French that they might
+become involved was so strong that Waddington was alarmed even at the
+idea of committing his Government to the British declaration as to
+the invalidity of treaties concluded without the participation of the
+Powers; but, in spite of this timorous spirit, and although the Treaty
+of San Stefano was not signed until March 3, Lord Derby informed Lord
+Lyons on February 2, that, the support of Austria having been obtained,
+Her Majesty's Government were determined to secure a Conference, and
+it was hoped that Italy and France would also exercise at least a
+benevolent neutrality. The uncertainty of the position was shown in Lord
+Derby's language with regard to Constantinople. 'I hardly know what will
+happen if the Russians insist on showing themselves at Constantinople.
+It is not a case we could make a _casus belli_ of, but I think it would
+in that case be desirable that the Neutral Powers should be present
+too--that is their fleets--both as a demonstration, and to keep order
+if necessary. The war being over, such a proceeding could not be
+misconstrued, as it certainly would have been before. All this, however,
+is uncertain.'
+
+Judging by subsequent experiences, Lord Derby would have spent a
+long time in securing the presence of the International fleets at
+Constantinople, and would have experienced still more trouble in
+persuading them to take any action. The Russians fortunately stopped
+short of Constantinople, and a Conference being now a practical
+certainty, Lord Lyons was invited to act as the British representative.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Derby to Lord Lyons._
+
+ February 6, 1878.
+
+ The Conference will probably come off, and it may come off
+ soon, though there is a chance of delay from differences as to the
+ place of meeting.
+
+ I find the feeling of the Cabinet unanimous, and I fully share
+ it, that you are the fittest person to attend the Conference on
+ our behalf. Indeed, I know of no one in whom I should have equal
+ confidence for a duty of that kind. Nothing has been said to the
+ Queen, but I have no doubt of Her Majesty's consent.
+
+ May I ask you if, considering the importance and difficulty
+ of the work, you will be prepared to sacrifice your personal
+ convenience so far as to accept the office if offered? I fear the
+ sacrifice will be considerable, but let up hope that the result
+ will repay your trouble.
+
+To most people, an invitation of this character, conveyed in so
+flattering a manner, would have had an irresistible attraction; but Lord
+Lyons was one of those persons to whom notoriety was indifferent, if not
+obnoxious, and who much preferred to confine himself to doing his own
+business in a practical and unostentatious spirit. He, however, felt it
+his duty to accept, hoping vainly all the time that the Conference would
+never take place at all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 8, 1878.
+
+ I wish to offer you my best thanks for your letter of the day
+ before yesterday. Your proposal to appoint me to represent England
+ at the Conference is very flattering in itself, and nothing could
+ be more gratifying than the terms in which it is made.
+
+ You were so kind as to speak of the sacrifice of my personal
+ convenience, but that consideration I will set entirely aside.
+ There are feelings of much greater weight which make me shrink from
+ the task, and it appears to me to be a task peculiarly difficult,
+ and one of which the result is, to say the least, extremely
+ doubtful. I may say, too, without any affectation of modesty, that
+ I do not think myself well qualified for it.
+
+ Still these are after all personal considerations which I
+ ought not to allow to interfere with any public duty which I may be
+ called upon to discharge. If therefore the Queen and the Government
+ should determine upon entrusting this mission to me, I should
+ undertake it heartily and zealously, and do my best to justify
+ their confidence.
+
+ Of course nothing can be settled until we know the rank and
+ number of the Plenipotentiaries of other Powers, the place of
+ meeting, and other particulars, which may have a material influence
+ in the selection of the Representative or Representatives of Her
+ Majesty.
+
+ If however the progress of events should ultimately lead to my
+ being chosen, I should be very grateful if you would allow me the
+ opportunity of conferring with you upon various matters, before any
+ definite arrangements are made. There is one to which I attach so
+ much importance that I will mention it at once. I trust that you
+ will allow me to choose myself the staff to accompany me on the
+ occasion. My efficiency and comfort would depend mainly on this.
+
+Apart from a disinclination to leave his own work, Lord Lyons probably
+considered that the outlook for England at a Conference was by no
+means reassuring. The issue of the Conference really depended upon the
+military position in which England and Austria would apparently stand,
+should the Conference itself break up _re infecta_, and at the end of
+February the English position looked to be none too favourable, for
+it depended upon the fleet having access to the Black Sea. If we were
+able to stop the Russian communications by sea, the Russians would be
+at the mercy of Austria by land, supposing Andrassy's boasts to be
+well founded; but we had no absolute security against the Russians
+occupying Gallipoli at any moment, and no semblance of a security of
+their not occupying the Black Sea exit of the Bosphorus, for the Turks
+were at their mercy, and, as pointed out by Mr. Layard, they were quite
+capable of making any arrangement with Russia, since they considered
+that they had been betrayed and abandoned by England. Neither, it might
+be added, was there any security that Austria would stand firm, for
+there was always the chance of her being bought off with Bosnia and the
+Herzegovina.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Derby._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 26, 1878.
+
+ As to the Conference itself all seems more than ever in doubt.
+ Unless the Austrians are determined to go to war and are visibly
+ ready, and unless we are equally determined and equally ready on
+ our side, and unless the Russians are convinced of this, there can
+ be no chance of their making any concessions. Then, what will the
+ Austrians want? To bolster up the Turks, to waste energy in trying
+ to place under them again this or that district delivered by the
+ Russians, would be a very losing game. There must, I suppose,
+ be some new Principality or Principalities. If anything like a
+ national feeling and a national Government can be established in
+ them, their danger will be from Russia, and Russia will become
+ their natural enemy, unless they are thrown into her arms by a
+ hostility on the part of Austria, which will make them feel that
+ Russia alone is their defence against Turkey. Then there are the
+ Straits, and the difficulty of placing the Turks, or whoever is
+ to hold them, in a position to guard them against a Russian _coup
+ de main_ at least. Ignatieff seems to be already working the
+ connection between Egypt and the Porte, with a view to getting
+ money out of Egypt for Russia. I am inclined to think that the more
+ radically Egypt is severed from the Porte, and the less our free
+ action with regard to it is hampered by collective guarantees or
+ collective Protectorates the safer we shall be.
+
+The correctness of these views has since been amply demonstrated by the
+history of the Balkan States. The opinion about Egypt, however, was
+probably not at all to the taste of Lord Derby, who appeared to rejoice
+in divided responsibility.
+
+Lord Lyons himself was summoned to London early in March in order to
+confer with the Government respecting his procedure at Berlin, and
+judging from his letters to various correspondents, the course which Her
+Majesty's Government proposed to adopt was in a state of considerable
+uncertainty. It was, however, a source of much satisfaction to him that
+he would have the co-operation of Lord Odo Russell, who was an intimate
+friend, and in whose judgment he felt complete confidence. He also got
+his way about his staff, which was to include amongst others, Malet,
+Sheffield, and Mr. (now Sir William) Barrington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Odo Russell._
+
+ London, March 13, 1878.
+
+ My only comfort about this awful Congress or Conference is
+ that you will be my partner in it. I hope, if it does come off
+ after all, that we may get over it without doing harm to our
+ country or to ourselves. I wanted them to set me aside and take
+ advantage of the transfer to Berlin to put it into your hands;
+ and I still think this would be the best plan; but they say that
+ after their announcement of my appointment to Parliament, they
+ cannot cancel it. Sir Robert Peel has moved a resolution that I am
+ not a fit person to represent England at the Conference. I shall
+ console myself if he carries it. He grounds his motion upon 'my
+ well-known opinions.' I suppose he takes my opinions from a wholly
+ unauthorized and incorrect account of them which appeared in a
+ letter in the _Daily Telegraph_ yesterday. Some people suppose he
+ wrote the letter himself in order to have a peg to hang his motion
+ on. I don't think your difficulties at the Conference will arise
+ from strong preconceived opinions of mine. I shall try and get our
+ instructions made as precise as possible. Could you give me some
+ hints as to the particular points which should be decided before we
+ begin? You will know how far certain solutions in our sense will be
+ feasible or not. It is worse than useless that we should be told to
+ aim at impossibilities, and have to yield: though there may be of
+ course conditions, which if not admitted, will render it necessary
+ for us to retire from the Conference altogether.
+
+ I am sure you will be the greatest help and comfort to me, and
+ I hope I may be a help to you. Please tell me anything you wish me
+ to do or say here.
+
+Lord Odo Russell appears to have been equally in the dark as to the
+intended policy of Her Majesty's Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Odo Russell to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Berlin, March 16, 1878.
+
+ The feelings you express concerning the Conference are so
+ entirely my own that I need say no more, and only hope that Lord
+ Derby will give you a better qualified assistant than I can be with
+ regard to Oriental Affairs, of which I do not really know enough to
+ be of any use to you or to the country, beside such authorities as
+ Ignatieff, Lobanoff, Calice, Radowitz, Busch, etc., etc.
+
+ You ask if I could give you some hints as to the particular
+ points which should be decided before you begin.
+
+ I would do so with the greatest pleasure, if I only knew what
+ the policy of Her Majesty's Government is likely to be in Congress.
+ All I know about it at present is contained in Lord Derby's
+ despatch of May 6, and as far as Constantinople and the Straits are
+ concerned, I fancy Russia will be conciliatory.
+
+ You ask further how far certain solutions in our sense will be
+ feasible or not.
+
+ I wish I could answer your question, but can only beg of
+ you to tell me first whether we accept the consequences of our
+ neutrality, or whether we contest them: whether we are going
+ to reject the Turko-Russian Treaty, as we rejected the Berlin
+ Memorandum, or whether we are going to accept now what we refused
+ then.
+
+ Russia is now in possession of Turkey. Germany supports Russia.
+
+ France and Italy have no wish to quarrel with Russia or
+ Germany, and will not offer any serious opposition to the
+ Turko-Russian Treaty.
+
+ Austria may object to two things: the proposed limits of
+ Bulgaria, and the prolonged occupation of Russian troops.
+
+ If Russia is well disposed, she will consent to a smaller
+ Bulgaria and to a shorter occupation.
+
+ If she doesn't, Austria must choose between a diplomatic
+ defeat, a compromise, or war to turn Russia out of Bulgaria.
+ Bismarck will exert all his personal influence in favour of a
+ compromise to keep the three Emperors' Alliance together before
+ Europe in Conference assembled.
+
+ The annexation of Armenia and the war indemnity are questions
+ which Russia will scarcely consent to submit to the Congress at all.
+
+ What then is our attitude to be? Please let me know as soon as
+ you can, and I will do my best to answer your questions.
+
+ If we go in for Greek interests we shall have the cordial
+ support of Germany and Austria, I think--but Greek interests are
+ in direct opposition to Turkish interests, if I am not greatly
+ mistaken.
+
+ On hearing of your appointment I wrote to you to congratulate
+ myself and to beg of you to grant us the happiness of taking up
+ your quarters at the Embassy, and also to advise you to bring a
+ numerous and efficient staff, as I have not hands enough at Berlin
+ for an emergency.
+
+The letters of Lord Odo Russell at this period show that he was
+completely in the dark as to the intentions of Her Majesty's Government,
+and that he was quite unable to get any answer as to what was to be
+their policy with regard to the Treaty of San Stefano. He himself was
+convinced that the three Empires had already settled what the result of
+the Congress was to be, and that they simply intended to communicate it
+to Greece, Roumania, and other Powers for whom they wished to manifest
+their contempt, such as France and England, _a prendre ou a laisser_.
+Under these circumstances, it became doubtful whether it was worth
+while for England to go into a Conference at all and court unnecessary
+humiliation, serious as the responsibility would be if such a course
+were decided upon.
+
+There can be no doubt that much of the prevailing uncertainty was due to
+Lord Derby, who with great difficulty had contrived to keep pace with
+his more enterprising colleagues, and whose over-cautious temperament
+had prevented the adoption of any really definite policy. But Lord
+Derby, unable to stand the shock of seeing a few thousand Indian troops
+sent to the Mediterranean, resigned office on March 28, and the advent
+of Lord Salisbury at the Foreign Office marked a new departure in
+British Foreign Policy.
+
+Lord Salisbury's circular of April 1, 1878, was intended to show that
+the Treaty of San Stefano threatened the interests of Europe, and
+that the whole, and not parts of it, as proposed by Russia, should be
+submitted to the Congress. It pointed out that the creation of a big
+Bulgaria, stretching over the greater part of the Balkan Peninsula,
+and with ports on the Black Sea and the AEgean, would give Russia a
+predominant influence; that the proposed annexations in Asia Minor would
+give Russia control over political and commercial conditions in that
+region, and that the exaction of an indemnity which it was impossible
+for Turkey to provide, would enable Russia either to exact further
+cessions of territory or to impose any other conditions which might be
+thought advisable. The logic was sound, and at all events Lord Salisbury
+succeeded in producing a definite British policy, which his predecessor
+had signally failed to do.
+
+When Lord Lyons returned to Paris at the beginning of April the question
+of whether there was to be a Congress or not was still in suspense.
+French opinion was rather more in favour of England on the Eastern
+Question than had been expected, but there was no sign of anything more
+than passive sympathy, and Waddington, who was particularly sensitive
+on the subject, intimated, not obscurely, that the good will of France
+depended upon England not acting independently of her in Egypt. It
+looked, in fact, as if England would be left to bell the cat, although
+Lord Salisbury's circular, as was generally admitted, had immensely
+raised British prestige on the continent. The suspicion felt in France
+as to Russian intentions was shown by the failure of agents of the
+Russian Government to negotiate a loan at Paris for thirty millions
+sterling, and Lord Salisbury's letters in the early part of April show
+that, while there were symptoms of yielding in Europe, there appeared to
+be no prospect of those concessions with regard to Asia Minor to which
+Her Majesty's Government attached great importance.
+
+On the whole, the French Government was apparently anxious to act as
+far as possible with England, without committing itself too much, since
+the idea of a Russian naval station in the Mediterranean was highly
+obnoxious; but Waddington was hampered, amongst other causes, by the
+proceedings of Gambetta, who was disporting himself in some of the
+European capitals with the object of forming, or appearing to form,
+relations with foreign statesmen, which would enable him to put forward
+a claim to become eventually Minister for Foreign Affairs. Waddington
+always in private repudiated responsibility for what Gambetta said
+or did, but the latter was now so important a personage that it was
+necessary to keep on good terms with him and to submit to a patronage
+which must have been irksome to French Ministers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, April 24, 1878.
+
+ The negotiations for the simultaneous withdrawal of the fleet
+ and army from Constantinople proceed very slowly. We are making
+ no difficulties, but the Russians cannot make up their minds about
+ details, and are probably trying to screw some concessions out of
+ the luckless Turks. I shall be very glad to see the arrangement
+ succeed, because our fleet is doing no possible good there at this
+ moment. Whatever value it had, disappeared as soon as the peace was
+ signed. But as the Russians seem to be afraid of it, we must make
+ the most of it. Possibly, in their secret hearts, they entertain
+ very much the same opinion as to the position of their armies.
+
+ The general negotiations do not improve. Russia gives me the
+ impression of a Government desperately anxious for peace, and
+ driven on by some fate towards war. Andrassy undoubtedly means to
+ have Bosnia; but whether he will be satisfied with that I am not
+ so certain. It is a possible policy for him to throw the Danube
+ over altogether; to secure an outlet for his produce by a railway
+ to Salonika, and to accept a simultaneous extension southward in
+ parallel lines of Austrian and Russian possession--whether in the
+ form of actual territory, or of vassal states. In that case, he
+ will throw us over, and his course will be easy enough if he can
+ square the Hungarians. But that may be a difficulty. Do you gather
+ any information about his objects?
+
+ Is it your impression--as it is mine--that the French are
+ supremely anxious to push us into war?
+
+Lord Lyons's reply to these inquiries gives the reasons why the French
+views with regard to an Anglo-Russian conflict had undergone an
+alteration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, April 26, 1878.
+
+ I owe you many thanks for your letter of the day before
+ yesterday.
+
+ You ask me whether it is my impression that the French are
+ extremely anxious to push us into war.
+
+ Confidence in their returning military strength, and the
+ apparent success of their endeavours to conciliate Germany have
+ calmed their fears of Bismarck. They are no longer nervously
+ desirous that the forces of England should be kept in the west,
+ as a necessary check upon the great Chancellor's supposed designs
+ upon Holland, upon Belgium, or upon France herself. On the other
+ hand, they have given up counting upon Russia as an ally against
+ Germany, and have abandoned Decazes's policy of courting her and
+ espousing her interests. The result of all this is that they are
+ willing enough that the main force of England should be employed at
+ a distance from home.
+
+ They have been reassured about Egypt, and they think that if
+ England is engaged in hostilities with Russia, she will be less
+ disposed and less able to interfere with France or to separate from
+ her in Egyptian affairs. They have lost their great fear, which was
+ that England, instead of opposing Russia, would seek a compensation
+ for herself in the annexation of Egypt. Thus another of the reasons
+ which made them desire that England should abstain from all action
+ has disappeared.
+
+ There are, moreover, the patriots, who look far ahead, who do
+ positively desire that England should go to war with Russia. Their
+ calculation is that Austria and Italy would sooner or later be
+ drawn into the war on the English side, and that then, Germany and
+ Russia being isolated, France might join the rest of Europe against
+ them, and recover Alsace and Lorraine. These are said to be the
+ views of Gambetta and his friends.
+
+ There is, however, one feeling which pervades the great
+ mass of Frenchmen. They wish England to take the chestnuts out
+ of the fire for them. They are quite determined not to go to war
+ themselves for anything less than Alsace and Lorraine, but they do
+ wish to exclude Russia from the Mediterranean, and they are very
+ willing that the danger and the burthen of effecting this should be
+ incurred by England.
+
+ With these views their newspapers go on patting us on the
+ back, and may continue to do so, as long as we seem to be ready to
+ act alone; but they would change their note, if they saw any risk
+ of France being drawn into the war with us, until _after_ Austria
+ and Italy had joined us.
+
+ I know of nothing to confirm Odo Russell's information that
+ in return for the consent of Germany and Russia to exclude Egypt,
+ etc., from the deliberations of the Congress, Waddington engaged to
+ support Germany and Russia in everything else. What appeared on the
+ surface was that this exclusion was made openly by France a _sine
+ qua non_ of her attending the Congress, that she communicated the
+ condition simultaneously to all the Powers, and did not at all ask
+ for the assent to it as a concession. If there is only Bismarckian
+ authority for the bargain stated to have been made by Waddington
+ with Germany and Russia, I think it _merite confirmation_. The one
+ object of Bismarck seems always to be to sow dissensions between
+ France and any other Power that she may seem to be approaching.
+
+ Notwithstanding the Comte de St. Vallier's assertion to Odo
+ Russell, Mr. Adams is quite certain that it was M. de St. Vallier
+ himself who reported to Mr. Waddington that Odo had communicated
+ to the Emperor William, Prince Bismarck, etc., a telegram from Mr.
+ Adams on the subject of the sympathies of France with England.
+ In fact Mr. Waddington who is an old schoolfellow and friend of
+ Mr. Adams, read to him parts of the private letter from M. de St.
+ Vallier in which the report was contained, and indeed one of the
+ phrases he cited from the letter was _le telegramme Adams_ as the
+ source of the communication made by Odo Russell.
+
+ The Prince of Wales arrived this morning and I have been all
+ the afternoon at the Exhibition with him, which obliges me to write
+ in such haste, that I cannot be brief.
+
+ I have just seen Hobart Pasha, who goes on to England
+ to-morrow morning and will try to see you.
+
+ I doubt whether Waddington or the Austrian Ambassador here get
+ any information about Andrassy's real views and objects.
+
+ The Russians seem to be hard at work trying to make the
+ execution of the Treaty of San Stefano a _fait accompli_. _Beati
+ possidentes._
+
+Lord Salisbury's suspicions as to the pressure being put upon the
+unfortunate Turks by the Russians were confirmed by an interesting
+letter from Mr. Layard to Lord Lyons, in which the much-denounced Abdul
+Hamid appears in quite a new light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Constantinople, May 1, 1878.
+
+ I am not surprised that Waddington should care nothing about
+ Armenia. The question is a purely English one, but to us a vital
+ one. The Treaty of San Stefano puts the whole of Asia Minor
+ virtually at the mercy of Russia and insures her influence over
+ Mesopotamia and perhaps ultimately over Syria, which would probably
+ not be pleasant to the French. This immense addition to the power
+ of Russia in Asia, and the command that she obtains, if the Treaty
+ be carried out, of routes to India and Central Asia, is a matter
+ of serious import to England. But probably there is no European
+ Power which does not envy us the possession of India, and would
+ not secretly rejoice at the prospect of our losing it. I believe
+ this feeling to be particularly strong with Frenchmen. But if we
+ intend to preserve our Empire as it now is, we must be prepared to
+ deal with this question of Russian aggrandisement in Asia Minor and
+ drive them back. Our only way of doing so, is by making use of the
+ Mussulman population. The idea of an autonomous Christian Armenia
+ to form a barrier to Russian advance is one of those absurdities
+ which are cropping up daily amongst our sentimental politicians,
+ who know nothing of the matters upon which they pretend to lay down
+ the law.
+
+ The Grand Duke Nicholas, before going, made an ultimate
+ attempt to bully the Sultan into surrendering Shumla, Varna and
+ Batoum; but His Majesty held firm and His Imperial Highness failed
+ to get a promise out of him on the subject. It is curious that
+ whilst our ignorant and unscrupulous newspaper correspondents are
+ systematically writing down the Sultan and denouncing him as a poor
+ weak creature incapable of having an opinion of his own, he has
+ shown far more firmness than any of his Ministers. Had it not been
+ for him, it is highly probable that the ironclads would have been
+ given over to the Russians, and more than probable that the Grand
+ Duke would have been allowed to occupy Buyuk Dere and the entrance
+ to the Bosphorus. The Russians threaten to seize Varna, Shumla
+ and Batoum by force, but I much doubt whether they will venture
+ to do so, as right is not on their side. Shumla and Varna are not
+ to be given up to Russia, but to the Bulgarian Principality when
+ constituted: and the arrangements for the final settlement of the
+ Russian frontier in Asia are to be made within six months of the
+ conclusion of the 'definitive' not the 'preliminary' Treaty.
+
+ I am anxiously waiting to hear whether the simultaneous
+ withdrawal of our fleet and the Russian forces can be arranged. It
+ is of the utmost importance to the Turks to get the Russians away
+ from San Stefano, but I cannot understand how the Russians could
+ consent to give up so advantageous a position, unless they found
+ that if they remained there they would be exposed to considerable
+ danger from a joint attack by the English fleet and the Turkish
+ forces.
+
+Layard, who was a fighting diplomatist, and possessed the rare quality
+of knowing what he wanted, had long chafed at the irresolute action
+of the British Government, and was all in favour of making a resolute
+stand against Russian aggression. Throughout the war, he had continually
+complained of the apathy and indecision of the British Cabinet, and
+attributed these deficiencies to divided counsels and to the advanced
+age of Lord Beaconsfield. Now, with Lord Salisbury installed at the
+Foreign Office, he plucked up hope again.
+
+ 'Salisbury,' he wrote to Lord Lyons, 'seems to know what he
+ wants--which is a great contrast to his predecessor. If he is firm,
+ we shall, I think, triumph in the end, and remove a great danger
+ from Europe and ourselves. Were it not for that double-dealing,
+ untrustworthy fellow Andrassy, we might perhaps accomplish all
+ that we require without war. Andrassy's proceedings give rise to a
+ strong suspicion that the secret understanding between the three
+ Emperors still exists. The Sultan is persuaded of it, and I have
+ found that his instinct in such matters is usually right.'
+
+On May 11, Lord Salisbury wrote to Lord Lyons saying that Count Muenster
+(German Ambassador in London) had assured him that the object upon
+which the French were bent in the Mediterranean was Tunis. 'Do you
+hear anything of the sort?' he asked Lord Lyons, and added the highly
+important statement: 'It is of course an extension of French territory
+and influence of which we should not have the slightest jealousy or
+fear. But I am not assuming in any way that the Porte would wish to give
+it up. I should only like to have your opinion how far France would wish
+to have it.'
+
+To this Lord Lyons replied:--
+
+ Ever since I can remember, the Italians have suspected the
+ French, and the French have suspected the Italians of designs upon
+ Tunis. Bismarck's mention of it at this moment is probably only
+ one of his usual devices to sow distrust of France. I have never
+ found that the acquisition of Tunis recommended itself to French
+ imagination, and I don't believe it would be taken as anything like
+ a set-off against English acquisitions in Egypt or Syria. I believe
+ our principal interest in Tunis arises from its being a source
+ of supply of provisions to Malta. When Decazes wished to set us
+ against the supposed Italian designs upon it, he used to talk of
+ its being dangerous to us to have Malta in a vice between Sicily
+ and an Italian Tunis, but it never seemed to me that the peril was
+ very clear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ England is very popular here at this moment, and the Prince of
+ Wales's visit has been a principal cause of this, but the French
+ have no intention to fight with us or for us. They back us up in
+ asserting the sanctity of Treaties, and they certainly desire that
+ the _status quo_ may be maintained in the Mediterranean, until
+ France is a little stronger.
+
+It will be remembered that only a few years earlier the German
+Government had informed the French Government through Count Arnim that
+it would not tolerate the establishment of anything in the nature of
+a French Protectorate in Tunis; so that if the French were now really
+entertaining any designs of that nature, it was pretty obvious that it
+could only be the result of a hint from Berlin. The question of Tunis,
+however, was shortly overshadowed by greater issues. On May 16, Lord
+Salisbury transmitted to Paris a long document which formed the basis
+of the so-called Anglo-Turkish Convention. The proposals embodied
+subsequently in the convention were contained in a private letter to
+Mr. Layard, dated May 10, and the latter was directed not to proceed
+with the negotiations until further instructions were received, as the
+necessity for the convention depended upon the nature of the reply which
+Count Schouvaloff was to bring back from St. Petersburg. Whatever may
+have been said at the time in denunciation of the occupation of Cyprus
+and the Asia Minor Protectorate, it can hardly be denied that Lord
+Salisbury had a good case logically, as is shown by the following letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 22, 1878.
+
+ Until I see Schouvaloff to-morrow I shall know little of the
+ probabilities of our acting on that private letter to Layard of
+ last week, of which I sent you a copy. If, however, we do so, it
+ seems to me that we have a very good logical case--Is logic any use
+ in diplomacy?--against any objections the French may raise.
+
+ By the Tripartite Treaty of April 25, 1856, we had a right to
+ call on them to help us in restraining Russia from appropriating
+ Turkish territory. They have loudly and constantly asserted that
+ no military action is to be expected on their part. In Europe we
+ can meet the consequences of that desertion by the help of Austria,
+ Greece, the Rhodope mountaineers and others. But in Asia we are
+ abandoned wholly to ourselves. The French have left us to face and
+ guard against the consequences of that Russian encroachment which
+ they undertook to join with us in resisting. Does it lie in their
+ mouth, if we say that such encroachments, if persisted in, require
+ special precautions? that we cannot turn the Russians out by
+ ourselves, and that abandoned by our ally, who should have made the
+ task easy to us, we have no choice except to mount guard over the
+ endangered territory and take up the positions requisite for doing
+ so with effect? I do not see what answer the French would have.
+
+ But you will probably reply that my reasoning is idle trouble,
+ because logic is of _no_ use in diplomacy.
+
+The French would have had no real cause for complaint if they had
+discovered the contents of the proposed Anglo-Turkish Convention, for
+as Lord Salisbury had already pointed out, he had been careful 'to turn
+the eyes of desire away from Syria,' the only portion of Asia Minor in
+which France was interested; but Waddington had been making declarations
+against any of the Powers helping themselves to Turkish territory, and
+although these declarations were meant only to apply to Bosnia and
+Herzegovina, he would probably have used much the same language if he
+had learnt that England was thinking of occupying any portion of the
+Turkish Empire. Logic may not be of much use in diplomacy, but it is
+of still less use in influencing public opinion, and an appeal to the
+Tripartite Treaty, after it had been set aside so long, would have come
+rather late in the day. As, however, the necessity for providing for
+British interests and British safety in Asia was indisputable, Lord
+Salisbury was justified in contending that those Powers who disliked the
+only methods which were within our reach, should give us such help as
+would enable us to dispense with them.
+
+Upon the return of Schouvaloff from St. Petersburg, it turned out,
+as Lord Salisbury had anticipated, that Russia was prepared to make
+concessions in Europe, but scarcely any in Asia. Layard was, therefore,
+directed to negotiate the Anglo-Turkish Convention.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, May 29, 1878.
+
+ I send you two memoranda, or rather two separate versions
+ of the same paper, which will explain fully the nature of the
+ propositions which Schouvaloff brought back to me, and the extent
+ to which we have been able to accept his proposals. The upshot of
+ the matter has been that the Czar yields substantially all we want
+ in Bulgaria and as to the Greek provinces, but sticks to his text
+ as to Montenegro, Bessarabia, and the Armenian conquests, except
+ Bayazid.
+
+ I have informed Schouvaloff that against these Asiatic
+ acquisitions it will be necessary for us to take precautions; and
+ while taking from him a formal engagement that Russia will not
+ extend her position in Turkey in Asia, we shall ourselves give to
+ Turkey a guarantee to the same effect. We shall accept these terms
+ as soon as he receives from St. Petersburg authority to take them
+ in the redaction on which we have ultimately agreed. At the same
+ time we have taken our measures to secure ourselves against the
+ consequences of the Asiatic advance. Layard received on Saturday
+ telegraphic directions in the sense of the private letter which I
+ addressed to him a fortnight ago, and of which I sent you a copy,
+ and with great vigour and skill he procured the signature of an
+ agreement on Sunday last. We do not intend that this fact shall be
+ made public until the Congress, as the agreement is made wholly
+ conditional on the retention of Batoum and Kars. But whether we
+ shall succeed in these good intentions remains to be seen. Our past
+ performances in that line do not justify any very sanguine hope.
+
+ As there seems no chance of the Porte ceding Bosnia, and as
+ it is necessary to keep Austria with us in the Congress, we have
+ offered to support her in any proposal she makes in Congress on the
+ subject of Bosnia, if she will support us in questions concerning
+ the limits of occupation and organization of Bulgaria. It is not
+ necessary to tell Waddington this, but, as we have advanced a step
+ since he last asked us the question, it is important to avoid
+ language inconsistent with it.
+
+One cannot help suspecting Lord Salisbury's sense of humour as being
+responsible for the stipulation, that, if the Russians abandoned to the
+Turks their conquests from them in Asia Minor, the occupation of Cyprus
+should come to an end and the Anglo-Turkish Convention become null
+and void. On the following day (May 30), the so-called Anglo-Russian
+agreement was signed, and the enterprising Mr. Marvin, who had been
+temporarily employed at the Foreign Office on the cheap, handed it over
+to the _Globe_ newspaper, thus creating a political sensation of the
+first order.
+
+The agreement with Russia being now completed, and an invitation to the
+Congress in suitable terms having been accepted, Lord Beaconsfield and
+Lord Salisbury decided to go to Berlin themselves, instead of sending
+Lord Lyons.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ June 5, 1878.
+
+ I feel that I owe you many apologies for my rudeness in not
+ writing to you on Saturday night to announce to you the decision
+ of the Cabinet--and to thank you for the very kind and cordial
+ way you had placed yourself at our disposition in the spring to
+ perform what was a very ugly duty. The Cabinet was rushed to the
+ decision which it took, partly by the consideration to which you
+ advert, that the threads of the last two months' negociations were
+ more completely in our hands than by any process of communication
+ they could be in yours--but also by the fact that we have dangerous
+ questions looming at Paris--and we cannot afford to have you absent
+ from your post.
+
+ My excuse for my negligence is the prosaic one that I had
+ not a moment of time. The agonies of a man who has to finish a
+ difficult negociation, and at the same time to entertain four
+ royalties in a country house can be better imagined than described.
+
+ The Convention at Constantinople has been signed with
+ expression of lively gratitude on the Sultan's part. I am sorry
+ that your impressions of the mood in which the French are likely
+ to receive the news when published, are still so gloomy. However,
+ we must hope for the best. We have assembled a powerful fleet at
+ Portsmouth and we shall have six or seven first-rate ironclads to
+ do what may be necessary in the Mediterranean, besides smaller
+ ships. And our relations with Bismarck are particularly good. So I
+ hope our friends at Paris will confine themselves to epigram.
+
+ If we can, we shall keep the matter secret till we get at
+ Congress to the part of the Treaty of San Stefano (Art. XIX) which
+ concerns the Asiatic annexations. I do not know whether d'Harcourt
+ has any inkling, but ever since his return from Paris his manner
+ has changed.
+
+Lord Lyons hailed the decision of Lords Beaconsfield and Salisbury as a
+'deliverance from a nightmare which had weighed upon him since March,'
+and found a sympathizer in Lord Odo Russell, who had never expected
+much good from the Congress if the Three Emperors' League was revived,
+and who doubted whether the British public would be contented with an
+amended San Stefano Treaty. The probable action of Waddington, who
+was to be the French representative at Berlin, is foreshadowed in the
+following letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, June 4, 1878.
+
+ I am very glad that you and Lord Beaconsfield have determined
+ to go yourselves to the Congress. The matters to be treated are too
+ grave to be left to subordinates, and they could hardly be treated
+ properly by any one who had not had a minute acquaintance day by
+ day with the recent communications with Russia and Austria.
+
+ Waddington will, I think, be a satisfactory colleague in some
+ respects, but in others I am afraid you will have difficulties with
+ him. His English blood and his English education tell both ways.
+ On the one hand, he is more straightforward than most Frenchmen;
+ he understands and shares many English feelings, and he sees the
+ force of English arguments, or perhaps I should rather say, of
+ arguments put forward in an English way. But, on the other hand, he
+ feels strongly the necessity of guarding against the tendency in
+ France to suspect him of an English bias. He will be disposed to
+ join in resistance to exaggerated Russian pretensions with regard
+ to Roumelia and the Danube. His personal sentiments are strongly
+ in favour of Greece. He has a certain sympathy with Christian as
+ against Mussulman, but he does not carry this to an immoderate or
+ unpractical extent. There is, however, one point on which you may
+ find him very stiff. He is most strongly opposed to any change in
+ the relative position of the Great Powers in the Mediterranean,
+ and he would, I am afraid, be quite as unwilling to see England
+ extend her influence in that sea, as he would be to see Russia do
+ so. It is in order to prevent any alteration in the _statu quo_ in
+ the Mediterranean, more than from any other reason, that he has
+ made the participation of France in the Congress conditional on
+ the exclusion of all questions not directly arising out of the war
+ between Russia and Turkey, and has positively mentioned Syria and
+ Egypt as countries to be excluded from the discussion. He would
+ not perhaps be disinclined to let these questions come up, if he
+ thought he should obtain the support of other Powers in resisting
+ any change made outside of the Congress.
+
+ At any rate, public feeling in France would probably be too
+ strong to allow him to acquiesce in any redistribution of territory
+ or influence in favour of England. But I expressed my opinion on
+ this point so fully to you and Lord Beaconsfield in the interview I
+ had with you just before I left England, that I have nothing more
+ to say about it. The horrible event[19] which took place at Berlin
+ the day before yesterday has, however, thrown so strong a light
+ upon one phase of French opinion, that I feel bound to direct your
+ attention to it. It seems very shocking that while the Emperor
+ William is suffering from the wounds so wickedly inflicted, people
+ here should be speculating upon the consequences of their being
+ fatal, but so it is. The French believe that the maintenance of
+ the present military system in Germany depends upon the Emperor
+ William, and that even if His Majesty's successor had the same
+ determination as His Majesty himself to keep it up, public opinion
+ in the country would make it impossible for him to do so. What
+ foundation there may be for this supposition, I do not pretend to
+ determine; but that it influences the French is certain. Anything
+ which makes them believe the life of the Emperor to be precarious,
+ diminishes the restraint which the fear of Germany imposes upon
+ them, and renders them more stiff in asserting their own views and
+ pretensions, and less averse from contemplating the possibility of
+ supporting them by more than words.
+
+ There are, in my opinion, strong arguments to be brought in
+ favour of our taking measures to be in a position to resist Russia
+ by our own means, if other Powers will give us no help in doing
+ so; but as you said in a former letter, logic is perhaps not of
+ much use in diplomacy, and seems to me to be of still less use
+ in influencing public opinion. I doubt our logic doing much to
+ reconcile the French to our exercising a separate protection over
+ Turkey in Asia, or occupying a Turkish island in the Mediterranean.
+ I am afraid you will think I have become more nervous than
+ ever, and more prone to the common error among diplomatists of
+ exaggerating the importance of the country in which they are
+ themselves stationed, but anyhow I have not seen any reason to
+ change my views as to the feelings prevalent in France.
+
+ The Parliamentary session at Versailles is about to close.
+ Thanks to the Exhibition, it has been a very tranquil one, but we
+ must be on the look-out for squalls when the Chamber meets again
+ in the autumn. Gambetta has hitherto restrained his followers from
+ opposing the Ministry, and from proposing radical measures, but it
+ is doubtful whether he will be able, even if willing, to restrain
+ them after the end of the Exhibition. Some unexpected incident
+ might even produce a crisis before. At any rate the elections of
+ a portion of the Senate, which will take place early next year,
+ may remove the check which the Conservative majority in that House
+ has hitherto put upon the Chamber of Deputies. The Marshal does
+ not talk of making any more attempts at resisting the will of the
+ majority, but I understand that he does not talk very seriously of
+ retiring as soon as the election is over.
+
+ It may perhaps be worth while to mention that Waddington finds
+ the influence of Gambetta over the Government very irksome, and is
+ not fond of having it alluded to.
+
+The Congress met at Berlin in the middle of June, and the awkward
+question of whether Waddington should be informed of the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention or not was debated. Lord Lyons knew perfectly well that the
+French would be furious when they heard of it, and that the greater the
+surprise, the greater would be their indignation. The lines laid down
+for Waddington's guidance at the Congress were that France desired:
+
+1. Peace.
+
+2. Neutrality.
+
+3. The necessity of the consent of all the Powers to any modifications
+of the Treaties.
+
+4. The exclusion of Egypt, Syria, the Holy Places, and other topics
+foreign to the Russo-Turkish War.
+
+These points were certainly not favourable to England receiving any
+support from France in defending her menaced interests in Asia Minor,
+as the absolute neutrality of France was the point most insisted upon.
+In fact France was so obviously anxious to stand aloof, that one
+suggestion was made that she should be asked to co-operate with us in
+Asia Minor on the assumption that such co-operation was sure to be
+refused. This, however, was considered to be too hazardous a course,
+and it was eventually decided to say nothing to Waddington for the time
+being, lest he should make the Anglo-Turkish Convention an excuse for
+not attending the Congress at all. The secret, unlike the Anglo-Russian
+agreement, seems to have been well kept, and cannot have been known to
+the Russians, or they would have utilized it for the purpose of sowing
+discord between the British and French representatives. Finally, on July
+6, Lord Salisbury told the whole story to Waddington in a private letter.
+
+In this letter Lord Salisbury pointed out that, as far as the Russian
+annexations in Asia Minor were concerned, we were in a completely
+isolated condition, since Austria was only willing to take part in
+restoring the Porte to a certain independence in Europe, while France
+had clearly intimated that she had no intention of engaging in war for
+the purpose of maintaining the stipulations of the Treaty of 1856. The
+result was that England was compelled to act alone, as her interests
+were too great to allow the _status quo_ in Asia Minor to be completely
+destroyed, and consequently the onerous obligation of a defensive
+alliance with Turkey had been undertaken in order to provide against
+future Russian annexations beyond the frontier assigned under the
+present negotiations at Berlin. As this engagement could not be carried
+out from such a distance as Malta, the Sultan had made over Cyprus to
+England during such period as the defensive alliance might last. The
+conditional nature of the Convention, and the restraint shown by Her
+Majesty's Government in rejecting more tempting and advantageous offers
+are dealt with in the following passages.
+
+ We have entered into an agreement which is now embodied in a
+ formal Convention at Constantinople, that whenever the Russians
+ shall, for whatever reason, return to their Asiatic frontier as
+ it existed before the last war, we will immediately evacuate
+ the island; and that intermediately we will annually pay the
+ Sultan whatever is ascertained to be the surplus of revenue over
+ expenditure.
+
+ I am telling Your Excellency no secret when I say that we have
+ been very earnestly pressed, by advisers of no mean authority, to
+ occupy Egypt--or at least to take the borders of the Suez Canal.
+ Such an operation might have been very suitable for our interests
+ and would have presented no material difficulties.
+
+ No policy of this kind however was entertained by Her
+ Majesty's Government. We had received an intimation from the French
+ Government that any such proceeding would be very unwelcome to the
+ French people, and we could not but feel the reasonableness of
+ their objection under existing circumstances.
+
+ We have therefore turned a deaf ear to all suggestions of that
+ kind.
+
+ We have been likewise recommended to occupy some port on the
+ coast of Syria, such as Alexandretta, but we felt that, however
+ carefully guarded, such a proceeding might, in the present
+ condition of opinion with respect to the Ottoman Empire, be
+ construed as indicating an intention to acquire territory on the
+ mainland of Western Asia; and we did not desire to be suspected
+ of designs which will be wholly absent from our thoughts. We have
+ therefore preferred to accept from the Sultan the provisional
+ occupation of a position less advantageous indeed, but still
+ sufficient for the purpose, and not exposed to the inconveniences
+ I have mentioned. How long we shall stay there I cannot tell. But
+ I think there is just ground of hope that the Russians will find
+ in a short time that the territory they have acquired is costly
+ and unproductive; that the chances of making it a stepping-stone
+ to further conquests is cut off, and that they will abandon it as
+ a useless acquisition. In that case our _raison d'etre_ at Cyprus
+ will be gone and we shall retire.
+
+ I have adopted this form of conveying the matter to you, as
+ the Convention being entirely within the Treaty competence of
+ the two Powers, requires no official communication. But it would
+ have been inconsistent with the feelings of friendship existing
+ between our two countries, and with my gratitude for your courteous
+ procedure towards me personally, to have allowed you to hear it
+ first from any other source.
+
+There can be little doubt as to the identity of the 'advisers of no
+mean authority,' for Bismarck had been urging upon England for some
+time the occupation of Egypt, obviously with the main intention of
+creating discord with France, and Her Majesty's Government deserved all
+the credit claimed by Lord Salisbury for resisting these overtures. It
+is, however, somewhat difficult to follow Lord Salisbury's reasonings
+for preferring Cyprus to Alexandretta. It was plain that the occupation
+of either of these places would cause irritation, and as subsequent
+events have shown, Cyprus has never been of much use to us, and besides
+being crushed under the burden of the tribute annually paid to the
+Turkish Government, is inhabited chiefly by Greeks who do not appear to
+thoroughly appreciate British rule. Alexandretta, on the other hand,
+might, under our control, have developed into a highly important seaport
+and become the starting-place for the Bagdad railway; whereas, as a
+matter of fact, it has now practically passed into the hands of the
+Germans.
+
+M. Waddington did not remain long in sole possession of his exclusive
+information, for on July 8, the Anglo-Turkish Convention was made
+known to the world, and the general impression produced was that Lords
+Beaconsfield and Salisbury had effected a brilliant _coup_. In France,
+however, the news caused quite unjustifiable indignation, and the
+prudent Lord Lyons telegraphed to Lord Salisbury on July 10, advising
+him to get the final acts of the Congress signed as quickly as possible,
+lest Waddington should be directed to come away without putting his name
+to anything.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 12, 1878.
+
+ Your telegram of last night was a great relief to me, but I
+ shall not feel quite happy till I hear that all is actually signed.
+ I am happy to find that Gambetta and the Ministerial Parties, who
+ are violent on the subject of the Convention, are not having things
+ all their own way in the press. No newspaper can be said to defend
+ England altogether, but the more sensible papers are against any
+ active opposition on the part of France. Gambetta and Waddington
+ are not friends, and Gambetta will no doubt attack Waddington and
+ try to upset him. This may lead to serious difficulties in France.
+
+ It is no use to shut one's eyes to the fact that at this
+ moment, there is a great and general irritation in France against
+ England. It is too soon to foresee what turn public opinion will
+ take eventually, but at the present moment, we must not forget to
+ take this irritation into account in our dealings with this country.
+
+The general feeling was so unsatisfactory, that he felt compelled to
+write to Mr. Knollys[20] urging that the Prince of Wales, who was acting
+as President of the British Section of the International Exhibition,
+should postpone a contemplated visit to Paris, and enclosing articles
+in the press of an abominable character directed against His Royal
+Highness. Irritation over the Anglo-Turkish Convention was not confined
+to one party, but existed in every class from the _haute societe_
+downwards. The Conservatives and their press utilized it as a means
+of attacking the Republic, complained of the effacement of France,
+and asserted that she had been duped by her former ally, while the
+Republican opposition, headed by Gambetta, charged Waddington with
+having made a shameful surrender to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 16, 1878.
+
+ The first explosion of French wrath, on the appearance of
+ the Convention of the 4th of June, was even more violent than I
+ anticipated. It was well that you had the Minister for Foreign
+ Affairs under _your_ influence, and at a distance from that of
+ the excited spirits here. Now the first force of the eruption is
+ spent and the lava cooled down. I am afraid only on the surface,
+ but any way, it must be the surface which cools first. At all
+ events the strong language is in great measure abandoned. In the
+ first place, as no one now recommends any immediate action on the
+ part of France, the French are beginning to see that they cut a
+ sorry figure by barking without biting. In the second place, they
+ conceive that the alliance of the Three Empires is as close as
+ ever, and they think that if they quarrel with England, they will
+ be giving a triumph to Bismarck and find themselves face to face
+ with him without any friend on their side. Lastly, I would fain
+ hope that some of them are beginning to take a really reasonable
+ view of things, and to see that we had absolutely nothing left for
+ it, but to act for ourselves, as they would not or could not help
+ us.
+
+ Still we shall have some trouble with them, and shall probably
+ find them for some time suspicious, jealous, and hard to deal with.
+
+ Egypt may be our first difficulty. With or without a hint
+ from home, French agents there will be seeking to trip us up. It
+ seems to me that our task there will be a delicate one. On the one
+ hand, it will no doubt be desirable to soothe French vanity as far
+ as possible; but, on the other hand, anything like a defeat or a
+ retreat in Egypt, might very much impair the prestige which the
+ position which we have taken with regard to Asia has given us.
+ I wish Rivers Wilson had already been installed as Minister of
+ Finance when the Convention of the 4th June was made public.
+
+ Another ticklish question is that of the Newfoundland
+ Fisheries. I am very anxious to know what, if anything, passed
+ between you and Waddington on the subject at Berlin. The present
+ moment does not seem a very happy one for resuming negotiations,
+ and at all events it might be well to keep the matter, if possible,
+ in the calm atmosphere of London, and at a distance from the heat
+ of the political weather here.
+
+ I have been indirectly in communication with Gambetta, and
+ have reason to hope he is being brought, or is coming of himself,
+ round about the Convention. What I am immediately afraid of is
+ his nevertheless trying to upset Waddington. I should regret
+ Waddington's fall on all grounds, and it would be extremely awkward
+ to have a successor in the office brought in on the pretext that
+ Waddington had not been stiff enough with regard to England. The
+ candidates for his place are said to be Freycinet, the present
+ Minister of Public Works, who was Gambetta's Sub-Minister for War
+ in 1870 and 1871; M. Duclerc, one of the Vice-Presidents of the
+ Senate, who passes for a moderate man, but who has no knowledge of
+ foreign affairs, and Gambetta himself. I suppose, however, Gambetta
+ would be an impossibility with the Marshal, and that he himself
+ would feel that he was compromising his prospect of greater things
+ hereafter, by taking a subordinate office now.
+
+M. Waddington, upon his return from Berlin, realizing doubtless that his
+position had been shaken, though from no fault of his own, intimated
+his intention of writing a despatch in which Her Majesty's Government
+would be called upon to give to the French certain assurances with
+regard to Egypt and Tunis. As it was desirable that this request should
+not be made in too peremptory a manner, he was exhorted to make his
+communication in such a way as would make it easy for Her Majesty's
+Government to return a cordial answer. The difficulty about giving the
+assurances was pointed out by Lord Salisbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Foreign Office, July 20, 1878.
+
+ What M. Waddington said to you is very much what he said to me
+ at Berlin, though the lurid touches about war have been filled in
+ afterwards.
+
+ The precise answer to be given to his promised despatch must
+ of course depend very much on the terms in which it is framed. But
+ he may be certain that we shall answer it not only with the desire
+ of cultivating to the utmost possible extent our good relations
+ with France, but also with the aim of making his own personal task
+ more easy, as far as it is in our power to contribute to that
+ result.
+
+ The matter to which he has called your attention, as he did
+ ours at Berlin, was difficult to make the subject of binding
+ assurances, because the contingencies under which those assurances
+ would receive a practical application are difficult to foresee.
+
+ If France occupied Tunis to-morrow, we should not even
+ remonstrate. But to promise that publicly would be a little
+ difficult, because we must avoid giving away other people's
+ property without their consent, and also because it is no business
+ of ours to pronounce beforehand on the considerations which Italy
+ would probably advance upon that subject. In the same way, with
+ respect to Egypt, we have stated distinctly more than once that we
+ do not entertain any intention of occupying it; and that statement
+ we are perfectly willing to renew. But, having done that, and
+ having expressed our anxiety to work with France in Egypt, we
+ have said as much as would be seemly or possible. We can hardly
+ pledge the Khedive as to what he means to do, without in reality
+ assuming a voice in his concerns which we do not, according to any
+ international right, possess.
+
+ These considerations make me rather anxious that M. Waddington
+ in his proposed despatch should avoid putting categorical questions
+ which we might not be able to answer precisely as he wishes,
+ and yet which we could not avoid answering without seeming to
+ exhibit precisely that coolness which he very properly and justly
+ deprecates, and any appearance of which we are as anxious as he is
+ to avoid. I think that his despatch--if I might suggest it--would
+ more properly take the form of a statement, in general terms, of
+ the territorial points on the African coast in which France takes
+ an interest, leaving us to make such assurances as we think we can
+ properly give, and which we will certainly make as cordial as we
+ can.
+
+ To French influence in Egypt we do not offer any objection;
+ and we have never taken any step calculated to oust it. But any
+ detailed engagements as to questions of administration could
+ not be taken without imprudence; for each step must be taken as
+ the necessity for it arises. The two great points are to keep
+ the Khedive on the throne, and to get the financial obligations
+ satisfied. For these objects, the two countries will, I hope,
+ co-operate heartily.
+
+ I am a little anxious as to the form he gives his despatch,
+ for if he makes it too peremptory, he may produce that very
+ appearance of estrangement which it is our common object to avoid.
+
+ I will write to you more fully about the Newfoundland
+ Fisheries when I have had time to study the papers. My
+ conversations with him have put me fully in possession of the
+ French case. I am not so certain that I know all the points of the
+ English case.
+
+An opportunity fortunately occurred of conciliating one personage who
+might have given a great deal of trouble, and afforded an instance of
+the influence which can occasionally be brought to bear upon advanced
+democrats when judiciously applied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 21, 1878.
+
+ The Prince of Wales leaves Paris for London to-night. As his
+ arrival at Paris to attend the English concerts at the Exhibition
+ had been publicly announced, I did not think that it would be
+ advisable that it should be postponed, but I have been a little
+ nervous about it. So far however there has been no contretemps, and
+ the visit has been politically useful.
+
+ The Prince invited Gambetta to breakfast with him yesterday.
+ It was His Royal Highness's own idea, but I thought it judicious.
+ I have not the least doubt that if the Prince of Wales had not
+ been civil to Gambetta, the Russian Embassy would have asked any
+ Grand Duke who came here to show him particular attention, in order
+ to bring him over to Russia. The success of such a manoeuvre has I
+ think been effectually guarded against.
+
+ Gambetta appears to have spoken to the Prince strongly in
+ favour of an alliance between France and England--to have declared
+ himself more or less reconciled to the Convention of June 4th--and
+ to have spoken in the most disparaging terms, not so much of the
+ Foreign Policy of Russia, as of the institutions, the Government,
+ and the administration of that country. I hear from other quarters
+ that Gambetta was extremely pleased with the interview. I am
+ assured also that the Prince of Wales acquitted himself with great
+ skill. The Prince thought, and so did I, that it was better that
+ I should not be at the breakfast. The Embassy was represented by
+ Sheffield. The occasion of the invitation to Gambetta was his
+ having been very obliging and useful in matters connected with the
+ Exhibition.
+
+ To-day Waddington met the Prince of Wales at luncheon at the
+ Embassy.
+
+ So far, then, things look well, but I am assured the calm
+ does not extend far below the surface. Gambetta has the southern
+ temperament, and his language is a good deal influenced by the
+ impression of the moment. He has postponed, but he has not really
+ given up, his attack on Waddington. He will still, if he continues
+ in his present mood, try to turn him out in October, when the
+ Chambers reassemble.
+
+ The thing which would have most effect in reconciling the
+ French to our acquisition and protectorate, would be to make them
+ practically advantageous to the holders of Turkish and Egyptian
+ Bonds.
+
+When M. Waddington eventually presented his despatch, or rather
+despatches, for there were two, they were apparently found
+unobjectionable in tone; but on the ground that the one referring to
+Tunis was not 'couched in more diplomatic language,' it was suggested to
+him that he should rewrite it in language more suitable for publication
+subsequently; this he declined to do, but promised not to publish it at
+all. The chief object presumably of these communications was: in the
+first place to obtain assurances from England with regard to Egypt,
+and in the second place to make Lord Salisbury's statement about Tunis
+appear as an invitation to the French to appropriate that country. M.
+Waddington, quite naturally, did not wish it to be thought that he had
+come back empty handed from Berlin at a time when the Great Christian
+Powers were helping themselves liberally at the Turk's expense.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 24, 1878.
+
+ Waddington's two despatches were left with me yesterday. They
+ are very friendly in tone and will not, I think, be difficult to
+ answer. The answers however must be delayed some days, as the
+ Cabinet does not meet till Saturday.
+
+ Intermediately, I demur a little to the quotations that he
+ makes from my conversation. The general tenor is quite accurate,
+ but his vivacious French by no means renders the tone of my
+ communication, and what is of more importance, to the rights and
+ claims of other Powers, Turkey and Italy especially. What I told
+ him was that if a state of things should arise in which there was
+ no other obstacle to his occupying Tunis but our objection, that
+ objection would not be made. I made the observation for the purpose
+ of showing him that we had no Mediterranean aspirations--and did
+ not desire to disturb the balance of power in that sea. Our eyes
+ were bent wholly on the East. But he makes me talk of Tunis and
+ Carthage as if they had been my own personal property and I was
+ making him a liberal wedding present.
+
+ I do not know whether he will be inclined to put his
+ quotations from my conversations into a more general form. I think
+ it will save the possibility of misunderstanding later; and will
+ also dispense with the necessity of a correction on my part, as he
+ has reported the general drift and terms of my observations with
+ perfect fidelity.
+
+The reception of the Anglo-Turkish Convention in France may be said to
+have been the first of a series of difficulties which unfortunately
+impaired the relations between France and England during many years,
+but which have now happily almost entirely disappeared. The irritation
+aroused in France was completely unjustified, and almost incapable of
+explanation, unless the secrecy which surrounded the negotiation of the
+Convention may be considered an adequate cause. No French interests were
+prejudicially affected; and the maintenance of secrecy really relieved
+France from a considerable difficulty, for a premature disclosure might
+have prevented the participation of France in the Congress; but oddly
+enough, the Anglo-Turkish Convention appeared to be the only matter
+relating to the Congress in which the French took any interest, and
+so much indignation did some patriots show that it was even seriously
+suggested that by way of inflicting a surprise upon England, France
+should seize Chios, or Rhodes, or Crete. In fact, at one time, Crete
+appeared to possess considerably greater attractions than Tunis, in
+spite of the latter's proximity to Algeria.
+
+Probably the real explanation of this display of temper was that the
+French felt their strength to be returning, and were in no mood to
+put up with what they erroneously considered to be a slight, whether
+intentional or unintentional.
+
+One frantic jeremiad from Constantinople over the Treaty of Berlin may
+be quoted before the subject is dismissed. Layard, who had been already
+greatly scandalized by the publication of the Anglo-Russian agreement,
+wrote:--
+
+ What do you think of the Treaty of Berlin? It appears to
+ me that if ever an apple of discord was thrown amongst nations,
+ this is the one. I see in it the elements of future wars and
+ disorders without number, and an upsetting of all the principles
+ of justice and right which have hitherto governed the relations
+ and intercourse of states. Force and fraud have triumphed, and
+ when Turkey has been completely destroyed and cut up under the new
+ system, it will probably be applied with similar successful results
+ to other countries. Russia has gained, with the assistance of
+ Germany, all and more than she wanted, and the interests of England
+ and of other Powers were sacrificed in order to enable Bismarck
+ to recruit his beery stomach by drinking some mineral waters.
+ It is all very well to sit round a green table and to cut up an
+ Empire on a map. It is a very different thing to put what has been
+ so easily settled into execution. I anticipate no end of trouble
+ and bloodshed for years to come in this unhappy country. We have
+ not yet recovered here from the effect of the publication of the
+ unfortunate memorandum which so completely destroyed the great and
+ commanding position that we had acquired.
+
+There is not much here about Peace with Honour.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 17: Jan. 7, 1876.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Jan. 24, 1877.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Nobiling's attempt to assassinate the German Emperor.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Now Viscount Knollys.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+M. GREVY'S PRESIDENCY
+
+(1878-1879)
+
+
+The event in 1878 which aroused more interest in France than the Berlin
+Congress or anything else, was the holding of the great Exhibition
+in Paris, which not only demonstrated to the world the recovery of
+France from the disasters of 1870-71, but had the beneficial effect
+of improving Anglo-French relations. It was universally acknowledged
+that nothing had contributed more to the success of the Exhibition
+than the hearty co-operation given from first to last by England, and
+in this connection the services rendered by the Prince of Wales were
+of conspicuous value. His Royal Highness had come to Paris early in
+the year to press forward the preparations of the British section; he
+was present at each important phase of the Exhibition; he attended
+unremittingly at the office of the British Royal Commission, and was
+assiduous in transacting business there with the French Exhibition
+authorities as well as with the British and Colonial Commissioners and
+exhibitors. These visible proofs of the Prince's interest in their great
+undertaking were by no means lost upon the French, and the judgment and
+tact which he displayed, whenever opportunities arose for impressing
+upon the French people the cordial feeling entertained by himself and
+by his country towards France, produced an excellent political effect.
+
+The Exhibition naturally threw upon the Embassy an immense amount of
+extra labour, consisting largely of social work, and one of the most
+brilliant social functions of the year was a ball at the British Embassy
+attended by the Prince and Princess of Wales, at which the various
+hostile sections of the French political world met, on that occasion
+only, in temporary harmony.
+
+The general success of the Exhibition and the prominence of English
+participation inspired Queen Victoria with the desire to pay a very
+private visit to Paris, accompanied by Princess Beatrice and a small
+suite, towards the beginning of August. So anxious was she to maintain
+secrecy that the only person in England to whom her intention was
+confided, was Lord Beaconsfield, and Lord Lyons was enjoined not to say
+a word about it to any one, but to inform her confidentially whether she
+could visit the Exhibition without being mobbed; whether the heat was
+likely to be intense; and whether there was any danger to be apprehended
+from Socialists--the term Socialist doubtless including, in the Royal
+vocabulary, Anarchists, Terrorists, and Revolutionaries in general.
+Incidentally, too, she expressed a wish to hear the Ambassador's opinion
+of the Treaty of Berlin.
+
+Lord Lyons answered the first queries satisfactorily, but it was
+characteristic of him that, even to his sovereign, he declined to commit
+himself to an opinion on the policy of his official chief. 'Lord Lyons
+was always of opinion that Your Majesty's Representative at the Congress
+should be a Cabinet Minister, and he rejoiced very much when he heard
+that Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury had been appointed. He has no
+detailed or authentic information of the proceedings of the Congress,
+but so far as he can judge at present, he has every hope that the
+results will be satisfactory to Your Majesty.'
+
+A long series of letters followed, and after much hesitation, the
+Queen finally abandoned her intention, the prospect of hot weather
+apparently proving to be too great a deterrent. One singular incident in
+the correspondence, which was conducted with much secrecy, was that a
+letter from Lord Lyons went all the way to New York before reaching its
+destination at Balmoral--an error for which some one presumably suffered.
+
+During the autumn and winter of 1878, constant discussions took
+place between the English and French Governments on the subject of
+questions connected with Egypt and Tunis, and it was again thought
+at one time that a French _coup_ was in contemplation as a reply to
+the Anglo-Turkish Convention. The New Year was signalized by the
+denunciation of the Commercial Treaty. In announcing this intelligence,
+Lord Lyons said that his only surprise was that the existing Treaty had
+lasted so long, and that he did not consider it advisable to make any
+attempt to conceal annoyance about it. The treaty of 1860 had been made
+from political motives, and our best chance of being decently treated
+commercially lay in the dislike of the French to placing themselves on
+bad terms with us. 'This is the policy Gambetta avows. As for any Free
+Trade feeling in France, that is absolutely a broken reed for us to lean
+upon.'
+
+In January, 1879, senatorial elections took place which resulted in
+large Republican gains, and it seemed probable that the existing
+Moderate Ministry might not last much longer. It was generally expected
+that when the Chambers met, there would be a great struggle on the
+part of the advanced Left for all the lucrative and important posts,
+and there were the usual fears of mob rule which prevailed whenever
+a partial or entire change of Ministry was imminent. The prospect
+of losing Waddington as Foreign Minister drew from Lord Salisbury a
+characteristic expression of regret: 'I suppose M. Waddington is likely
+to be a transitory phenomenon, if the papers are to be believed. I am
+sorry for it; for he suits us much better than some converted Legitimist
+with an historic name, whose policy I suppose will be a compound of
+Louis XIV. and 1791.'
+
+Waddington was not to go yet, however, and Lord Lyons complained that
+he made his life a burden to him in connection with the proceedings
+of the British Consul General at Tunis--an aged official who did not
+view the spirited French policy there with any friendly eye, and whose
+removal the French Government ardently desired. As a general massacre of
+aged official innocents was contemplated shortly by the British Foreign
+Office, a somewhat ignominious compromise was offered in the shape of
+an early retirement of this particular official under an age limit. The
+French intentions with regard to Tunis had by this time become quite
+evident, and the unfortunate Bey found it extremely difficult to prevent
+excuses being found for active intervention in the shape of naval
+demonstrations and so forth; it being well known that Marshal MacMahon
+and other military men were extremely eager to annex the country at the
+first opportunity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 14, 1879.
+
+ I should be very sorry to do anything disagreeable to the
+ French with regard to Tunis. It is the place about which they are
+ most susceptible at this moment, and the irritation they would feel
+ at any interference with them there, would overpower, at all events
+ for the time, all considerations of the general advantages of being
+ well with England.
+
+ When I said that I saw no reason for hiding any displeasure we
+ might feel at the denunciation of the Commercial Treaties and at
+ the manner in which it was done, I meant that we should not abstain
+ from direct expressions of dissatisfaction at the thing itself.
+
+ My notion is that if we take it too quietly, the
+ Protectionists will be able to make the Chambers believe that they
+ can do what they like about the Tariff, and need not fear any
+ resentment from England. I think that if it can be managed, it
+ will be advisable to put it out of the power of the ministers to
+ say that the denunciation has been well received by the English
+ Government, and has produced no bad impression upon it. In order to
+ effect this, I should be glad that something unmistakable on the
+ point should be said in a written communication. If, as I suppose,
+ Montebello's[21] answer to your note declares that the intention
+ is to denounce the Treaties one and all, then the rejoinder which
+ you must make in order to _prendre acte_ of the denunciation
+ would afford a natural opportunity of expressing annoyance and
+ apprehension. This is what was in my mind when I wrote.
+
+ There are many members in the Chamber who would deprecate
+ anything likely to produce coolness between France and England,
+ and it is not desirable to leave the Protectionists the means
+ of asserting that there is no danger that a restrictive tariff
+ would do this. But the feeling is a vague one, and it would be
+ weakened by endeavours to define it sharply, or to appeal to it too
+ pointedly.
+
+ Gambetta holds that the true policy of France is to cultivate
+ the friendship of England and not to loosen the tie of France upon
+ her by instructions injurious to her commerce. He is in particular
+ very much afraid of the feeling in favour of the Empire which would
+ be revived in the wine-growing districts, if under the Republic the
+ English wine duties became less favourable to French wines.
+
+ The game of the Protectionists is to put the duties in the
+ general tariff as high as they dare, without provoking retaliation;
+ and the general tariff once passed, to declare that it is the
+ latest expression of the will of the country, and that the
+ Government has no right to relax it by treaty, unless by way of
+ barter, in return for great concessions made to France.
+
+ In the mean time matters may possibly in some measure
+ be modified, as regards commercial policy by changes in the
+ Government, but the modification in this respect would scarcely be
+ very great.
+
+ The 'groups,' as they are called, of the Left have been
+ endeavouring to get the ministers to negotiate with them before
+ the Chambers met. They want, now the Chambers have met, to reduce
+ the Ministers to absolute dependence on Parliamentary Committees.
+ The Ministers are acting properly and constitutionally. They
+ decline to be dictated to by groups and committees, and they intend
+ to announce their programme from the Tribune, and to call for a
+ vote of confidence or want of confidence, from both Chambers.
+ Waddington, when I saw him yesterday, was very confident of
+ success. They have found it necessary to sacrifice the Minister
+ of War, who, among other defects was entirely inefficient in the
+ Tribune, but Waddington did not anticipate any other changes in the
+ Cabinet. He said that Gambetta had promised the Government his full
+ and cordial support.
+
+ To pass from Paris, or rather from Versailles to
+ Constantinople, I will give you for what it may be worth, a story
+ which has been brought to the Embassy by a person who has sometimes
+ shown himself to be well informed with regard to what is passing
+ at the Porte. He affirms that a compact has been made between
+ Khaireddin and Osman Pashas to dethrone Sultan Abdul Hamid and set
+ aside the Othman family altogether as effete and half insane. This
+ being done, a member of a family established at Konia is, according
+ to my informant, to be declared Sultan.
+
+ I have often heard of the Konia family as having a sort of
+ pretention to the throne, as descending from Seljuk Sultans or some
+ other dynasty overthrown by Othman or his successors.
+
+ Abdul Hamid does not generally leave his Grand Viziers in
+ office long enough for them to be able to mature a 'conspiracy
+ against him.'
+
+In January a prolonged struggle took place between the Ministry and the
+Left, chiefly over the burning question of Government officials, and
+the alleged unwillingness to introduce really Republican measures; and
+before the end of the month Marshal MacMahon and his Prime Minister,
+M. Dufaure tendered their resignations. It was well known that the
+Marshal was anxious to take this course, and he followed the advice of
+his friends in choosing, as his reason for resigning, his inability
+to concur in a measure which deprived some officers of high rank of
+their military commands. When, therefore, he was confronted with the
+alternative of signing the decree removing his old companions in arms,
+or of resigning himself, he replied that Ministers would have to look
+out for another President, and M. Grevy, a comparatively moderate
+Liberal, was elected in his place by a large majority. The 'transitory
+phenomenon,' M. Waddington, however, remained in office and indeed
+became head of a new Administration, but it was felt that this
+arrangement was merely temporary. Power had really passed into the hands
+of Gambetta, and although he contented himself, for the time being, with
+the Presidency of the Chamber of Deputies, there was nothing to prevent
+him from establishing himself in office, whenever he should think that
+the opportune moment had arrived; since, unlike the Speakership in
+England, the Presidency of the Chamber is looked upon in France as the
+road to the highest Ministerial rank.
+
+In consequence of the election of a new President of the Republic in
+the person of M. Grevy, the question arose as to whether the Foreign
+Representatives should receive fresh credentials, and the action of
+Prince Bismarck in this connection caused fresh discord amongst leading
+French politicians. When M. Waddington was at Berlin, he had made a
+very favourable impression upon the Chancellor, and as he himself
+subsequently informed me, Bismarck had taken great pains to be civil
+to him, and to manifest that especial confidence which takes the form
+of abusing other people--notably Prince Gortschakoff. He now took the
+opportunity to inform M. Waddington that he entertained such remarkable
+esteem for him, that he had advised the Emperor to dispense with any new
+letter of credence, a proceeding which infuriated Gambetta and disposed
+him to upset Waddington at an early date. 'Altogether there seems an
+impression,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'that the new Ministry will not last
+long. Gambetta does not like either Grevy or Waddington. Waddington has
+yet to show that he has the staff of a Prime Minister in him. He has
+not hitherto been a very ready or a very effective speaker. He is
+even said to have a slight English accent in speaking French. I don't
+believe any one ever perceived this who did not know beforehand that he
+had had an English education. But this English education certainly has
+had the effect of preventing him having exactly French modes of thought
+and French ways, and thus he is not always completely in tune with the
+feelings of his hearers in Parliament.'
+
+[Illustration: _J Russell & Sons, Phot._
+
+_William Henry Waddington_
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD]
+
+It was a common charge made against the late M. Waddington by his
+opponents that he spoke French with an English, and English with a
+French accent. As a matter of fact, he was a perfect specimen of a
+bilinguist, and would have passed as a native of either nation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Feb. 11, 1879.
+
+ Fournier's[22] vagaries are becoming very dangerous, but we
+ are in a state of anarchy here. The Ministry is composed in general
+ of men of respectable character and respectable abilities; but
+ there is no one of them who has hitherto obtained any great hold
+ on the Chambers or on the country. Their proper game would be to
+ try and form a Liberal-Conservative party of the Centre Gauche,
+ the Centre Droit, and the Gauche Republicaine, with whose support
+ and that of the country at large, they might keep the Ultra Reds
+ in check. Hitherto they have not shown that there is stuff enough
+ in them for this, but then they have hardly had a chance. They
+ have made a weak compromise on the Amnesty Question, but if they
+ get a good majority on that question, they might start afresh and
+ show what is in them. So far they are looked upon by most people
+ as warming pans for Gambetta and his followers: and I have been
+ assured that some of the French Representatives abroad do not
+ hesitate to communicate with Gambetta behind Waddington's back.
+
+ I must confess that, contrary to my wont, I am rather gloomy
+ about the state of things here. The relaxation of the efficiency
+ of the police is undeniable. This was one of the symptoms of the
+ decay of the Empire. The Gendarmerie is being tampered with. Recent
+ measures seem to increase the opportunities for disturbances, and
+ diminish the means of dealing with them. I do not see where, in
+ the present Government, resistance to disorder is to come from in
+ an emergency. But I will not croak. Waddington and his colleagues
+ may steady themselves in office and restore authority yet, but they
+ have not much time to lose.
+
+ Waddington would be the safest Minister we could have in
+ Eastern Affairs, if he made his subordinates abroad obey him.
+ Gambetta might be more friendly in commercial matters and more
+ ready to be an active ally in the East, but he would expect a
+ recompense in the West, and might be a dangerous friend who would
+ require careful 'watching.'
+
+Poor M. Waddington's prospects were not improved by a trivial but
+untoward incident in the Chamber. In the course of one of his first
+speeches as Prime Minister 'a great deal of laughter is said to have
+been produced by his dropping some of the sheets of his written speech
+over the edge of the Tribune, and having to wait till they were picked
+up'--an incident which serves to show the more generous spirit of the
+British politician, since a recent Prime Minister was in the habit of
+delivering soul-stirring orations by the same method, without evoking
+any disrespectful criticism on the part of his opponents.
+
+Towards the end of February a crisis in Egypt rendered it necessary for
+the British and French Governments to have recourse to joint action for
+the purpose of protecting their interests.
+
+As the result of a Commission of Inquiry in 1878, the Khedive Ismail,
+who had long boasted that Egypt was practically a European state,
+accepted the position of a Constitutional Ruler, with Nubar Pasha as
+his Prime Minister, Mr. Rivers Wilson[23] as Minister of Finance, and a
+Frenchman, M. de Blignieres, as Minister of Public Works. It was in the
+highest degree improbable that a man of his intriguing and ambitious
+character would submit permanently to any such restraint, and before
+long he succeeded in working upon the disaffection of those persons
+whose privileges were threatened or affected by European control, to
+such an extent that, by organizing a military riot, he was able to force
+Nubar Pasha to resign on February 20, 1879. At the same time he demanded
+much greater powers for himself, including the right to preside over the
+Cabinet, and to have all measures submitted to his approval--demands
+which were strongly resisted by his European Ministers, who invoked the
+support of their Governments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 21, 1879.
+
+ I have just received your telegram announcing your concurrence
+ in Waddington's draft instructions to Cairo, and I shall
+ communicate it to him forthwith.
+
+ Waddington seemed quite firm on the point of not allowing
+ the Khedive to resume his personal power, and would no doubt be
+ ready to join in any practical steps for that purpose; but in
+ the meantime it may be feared that His Highness is consolidating
+ his resumption of power. Waddington looks upon the whole affair
+ as a simple manoevre of the Khedive to upset the new system of
+ government. It does not in fact seem likely that so arrant a
+ coward would have risked his own precious person, if he had not
+ had a pretty good understanding with the rioters. Public opinion
+ in France would, I think, support Waddington in taking strong
+ measures. There does not seem to be any one but Nubar of position
+ enough to be a Prime Minister of any independence; Waddington
+ seemed fully aware that if the Khedive is present at the council of
+ Ministers, no Egyptian Minister will open his lips.
+
+ Godeaux telegraphed last night that order having been
+ restored, the presence of a ship of war at Alexandria might not be
+ necessary, but Waddington thought on the contrary that it would
+ be 'essential in order to produce a salutary impression on the
+ Khedive, and keep him in some check.'
+
+Nubar Pasha was regarded as English and anti-French, and his fall was,
+therefore, received at Paris with some degree of complacency; but the
+feeling was not sufficiently strong to make the Government hold out
+against his restoration to office, should that be considered necessary
+for the purpose of checking the Khedive, and the tendency was to make
+no suggestions and to wait for the lead of England, it being understood
+that both Governments were resolved not to consent to any change of the
+political system in Egypt.
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 1, 1879.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As to Egypt, I gather from your telegram to-day that
+ Waddington looks on our message to Vivian[24] as in the nature of
+ an ultimatum, and he is puzzled what we are to do next if it should
+ be rejected. We do not in the least look on it as an ultimatum, and
+ it is not so phrased. We may well receive either from the Khedive
+ or the Agents some alternative proposal which may be discussed,
+ and perhaps hammered into an acceptable arrangement at least for
+ a time. But in any case our position cannot be worse here than if
+ we had acquiesced at once in the results of the conspiracy against
+ Nubar; while the chances are that it will enable us to arrive at
+ some plan for partially curbing the Khedive, which at all events
+ shall partially disguise the check we have undoubtedly received.
+ The causes are obscure. It is evident there has been imprudence. I
+ wish I could be quite satisfied there has been perfect loyalty.
+
+Writing a day or two later, Lord Salisbury explained that he was in some
+difficulty, as Mr. Vivian and Mr. Rivers Wilson held different opinions.
+The former wanted to conciliate the Khedive by not forcing upon him the
+restoration of Nubar, while Mr. Rivers Wilson strongly insisted upon his
+return. Lord Salisbury himself was inclined to the latter course because
+'otherwise the Khedive will be like a horse who has succeeded in beating
+his rider, and will never be safe for that rider to mount again,' but
+eventually decided against it. From the following letter it looks as
+if the retirement of the hapless British Representative at Tunis was
+intended as a peace offering to the cause of Anglo-French joint action
+in Egypt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 6, 1879.
+
+ It is better always to get the credit of one's good actions,
+ which are naturally few. Will you kindly tell M. Waddington in the
+ most unofficial way in the world that----having returned himself as
+ 67 years of age (he entered the service 55 years ago, and therefore
+ must have begun his public labours at a precocious age) we have
+ suppressed the Consulate General of Tunis, and that there will
+ henceforth be a man on reduced salary, a consul or agent, after the
+ close of this month.
+
+ I think the French will find difficulties enough with Italy if
+ they ever try to increase their influence in Tunis; but that is no
+ affair of ours. We have hot water enough elsewhere without desiring
+ to boil any in Tunis.
+
+ One good turn deserves another, and I hope Waddington will
+ feel himself bound to keep his agents from Anglophobia in Turkey.
+
+ The Egyptian compromise will do very well for the time. It
+ seems doubtful whether Nubar is worth anything now. An Oriental
+ does not easily pluck up a spirit when he has once been beaten, and
+ Nubar is reported to have told friends in England that he knew that
+ whenever the Khedive had done with him there was a cup of coffee
+ waiting for him.
+
+The compromise referred to took the form of a new Egyptian Ministry
+containing the two English and French representatives, and nominally
+presided over by the Khedive's eldest son, Prince Tewfik. The
+experiment, however, of trying to keep a Ministry in office in spite of
+the opposition of the chief of the State did not last long, for in April
+the irrepressible Khedive dismissed his Ministers and installed Cherif
+Pasha as Prime Minister. This spirited action caused M. Waddington
+much perplexity, as he did not believe that French public opinion
+would allow him to take a slap in the face quietly from the Khedive.
+The French bondholders were too influential to think of throwing them
+over, and then there was the Credit Foncier, a more or less Government
+establishment, which no French Government could allow to come to grief.
+There was a keen desire to maintain the concert between England and
+France on Egyptian affairs, but if the bondholders suspected that
+England was likely to be lukewarm on their behalf, there was a strong
+probability that the French Government might be forced to act alone
+in the enforcement of French claims. Lord Salisbury on his side was
+naturally reluctant to be identified with the bondholders' cause.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 10, 1879.
+
+ I see by your telegrams which have arrived to-day that M.
+ Waddington suggests as a means of coercion against the Khedive that
+ MM. Rothschild should refuse to pay him the balance of the loan.
+ Mr. Rivers Wilson had made the same suggestion to the Baron. But
+ the latter, in a message sent yesterday through his son, repudiated
+ any idea of such a proceeding as dishonourable, and attributed the
+ suggestion to momentary excitement.
+
+ With respect to the second idea, the only question is whether
+ the Sultan will ever summon up courage to take such a step, and
+ if he does, whether he can enforce it. If it can be done quite
+ smoothly, _perhaps_ it would be the best course; but I speak with
+ some doubt.
+
+ It may be quite tolerable and even agreeable to the French
+ Government to go into partnership with the bondholders; or rather
+ to act as sheriffs' officer for them. But to us it is a new and
+ very embarrassing sensation. Egypt never can prosper so long as
+ some 25 per cent. of her revenue goes in paying interest on her
+ debt. We have no wish to part company with France: still less do we
+ mean that France should acquire in Egypt any special ascendency;
+ but subject to these two considerations I should be glad to be free
+ of the companionship of the bondholders.
+
+M. Waddington's 'second idea' evidently referred to the deposing of the
+Khedive by means of the Sultan; but his difficulty lay in the old French
+jealousy of the Porte exercising influence over the internal affairs
+of Egypt, and during the reign of Sultan Abdul Aziz the consequence of
+that influence had certainly been a constant drain of money from Cairo
+to Constantinople. One suggestion was that the Sultan should summon the
+Khedive to come to Constantinople to do homage, a ceremony which he
+had never yet performed, and a refusal to obey would have made him a
+rebel in the Sultan's eyes; but the objection to this course was that
+the Khedive might, if he went, take large sums of money with him and so
+propitiate his suzerain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 16, 1879.
+
+ Waddington's policy is not very intelligible. I suppose it
+ is a compromise between a sense of the danger of doing anything
+ strong, and of the necessity of satisfying the Credit Foncier.
+ In the despatch which you will receive we have done our best to
+ accommodate ourselves to Waddington's view, without taking up a
+ wholly untenable position.
+
+ There is one thing which it is necessary not to forget, though
+ I could not mention it in the despatch. We have very different
+ audiences to please; and though we may agree upon the actual
+ intimation to be given to the Khedive and the Sultan respectively,
+ the argument leading up to those communications cannot in both
+ cases be precisely the same. We must lay stress on separate points,
+ and the argument derived from the Khedive's application for a
+ European Minister must be treated differently by the two Powers,
+ as the circumstances were not similar. We should therefore avoid
+ identic notes, though we may make a concerted representation.
+
+ The communication to the Porte had better be indiscreetly
+ communicated to the Khedive's agent there, who is an intelligent
+ man. It may only result in producing a very heavy payment to the
+ Porte. But that, under existing circumstances, will itself be of
+ advantage.
+
+ I suppose that Waddington means to upset the Ottoman Bank
+ project as a retort for the failure of Tocqueville's.
+
+ What does he think of Martino's share in the recent Egyptian
+ crisis? Italy is likely to be a plague to all of us.
+
+In France there was a violent party, more or less supported by Gambetta,
+which desired to send some energetic Agent to Egypt who would bully
+the Khedive successfully. Unfortunately, such energetic agents were
+extremely likely to quarrel with their British colleagues, whereas M.
+Waddington, who was peaceably disposed, wished to appoint quiet and
+unobtrusive representatives who would work harmoniously, and implicitly
+follow their instructions. There was, however, some excuse for the men
+of action, as a very well-founded suspicion prevailed in Paris that the
+Russians, and even the Germans, were busy at Rome inciting the Italians
+to make trouble for England and France at Cairo. Moreover, Gambetta and
+his friends believed, probably with reason, that the Khedive would never
+have gone so far in defying England and France if he had not felt that
+he was backed up by other Powers, as well as by Italy.
+
+Mr. Vivian, the British agent in Cairo, who had been summoned to London,
+returned to his post at the end of April bearing a note, the gist of
+which was, that the two Governments, in view of the iniquities of the
+Khedive, 'reserved to themselves an entire liberty of appreciation
+and action in defending their interests in Egypt, and in seeking
+the arrangements best calculated to secure the good government and
+prosperity of the country.' In other words, the Khedive was warned that
+he had better be careful; but there was, so far, no hint of deposition.
+
+In Lord Salisbury's letter to Lord Lyons, enclosing a copy of the above
+note, there is an interesting personal opinion on the question of
+governing Orientals by Europeans. 'With all these Oriental populations I
+suspect that the _role_ of Europeans should in the main be confined to
+positions of criticism and control. They can only govern after absolute
+conquest, and then expensively. The difficulty of governing without
+conquest is, of course, enormously increased when two nationalities have
+to be provided for, and two Governments to be consulted.'
+
+The period following the return of Mr. Vivian to his post was marked
+by a violent and entirely unreasonable campaign against England in the
+French press, it being thought, for some unknown reason, that France had
+been abandoned, and M. Waddington took the somewhat unusual course of
+sending a message to Lord Salisbury through Mr. Rivers Wilson, instead
+of communicating in the ordinary manner.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 21, 1879.
+
+ On Monday Rivers Wilson sent me word that he had a message
+ to deliver to me from Waddington. Accordingly I asked him to come
+ and see me yesterday to deliver it. It was to the effect that
+ Waddington was willing and anxious to move the Porte to dethrone
+ the Khedive, if England would join in this step. I represented
+ that there were three difficulties. The Sultan might not assent:
+ if he did, the Khedive might not yield. If the latter did yield,
+ the successor might be either feeble or bad, and we should be
+ called upon to support him in one case, and replace him in the
+ other. To the first objection Wilson replied that Waddington had no
+ apprehensions as to the Sultan's consent; to the second he (Wilson)
+ and every person who knew Egypt well, did not doubt that the moment
+ a Firman was issued, the Khedive would fall; as to the third, he
+ could only say that Prince Tewfik was a compendium of the cardinal
+ virtues.
+
+ If Waddington did not communicate his proposal to you, I am
+ obliged to consider what possible motive he could have had for
+ taking this circuitous route, unless he meant to disavow the offer
+ later on. If he says nothing to you about it, it may be worth while
+ to sound him.
+
+ If there were no France in the way, I should be disposed to
+ give no reply to the Khedive's note we received by the last mail,
+ or at least only to say that since the dismissal of the English
+ Minister, the Khedive's finance had become so hopelessly tangled,
+ partly owing to his extravagance, partly to the conflict with
+ other Powers into which the decree of April 22nd has brought him,
+ that we must reserve our judgment with respect to all questions
+ of financial control till the position of affairs had become
+ more intelligible. I think that on some such plea as that we
+ might stand by and look on for a few months till the Khedive
+ has knocked himself to pieces, which he inevitably will do. The
+ fiscal condition is now so hopeless that I am rather grateful to
+ the Khedive for refusing to put it into the hands of an English
+ Minister. I doubt whether any European can now undertake it
+ without discredit, until the country has gone into liquidation.
+ The disproportion between the debt and the revenue--joined to
+ the difficulties which have now been raised by the action of the
+ courts and the attitude of the other Powers, makes effective or
+ even humane government hopeless till there has been a bankruptcy.
+ But then that would not suit a purely Bourse policy like that of
+ France. We must take notice of this difference of the French view,
+ and we may have to modify our policy accordingly; for we cannot
+ allow France to go on alone, and we will not part company with her
+ if we can possibly help it. But in this state of our relative views
+ and wishes, it is already for us to wait, and for her to propose.
+ If left alone, our disposition would be to find an excuse for
+ waiting, and if we move it will be because France is urging us. We
+ should therefore naturally wait till France made a proposal to us,
+ and should be inclined to cross-examine her as to what will be
+ her next move after that, in the various contingencies which may
+ result from the course they propose. I think, however, you might
+ open communications by mentioning, quite unofficially, how much
+ pain the articles in the _Republique Francaise_ and the _Debuts_
+ have given us. To ordinary papers we should of course have paid no
+ attention; but one of them is, or was till very recently, edited
+ by a gentleman in the French Foreign Office; the other is in part
+ the property of a Minister. We are utterly unable to understand on
+ what foundation the reproaches rest that we have shown reserves
+ and hesitations in the pursuit of the joint Egyptian policy. On
+ the contrary, if we had occupied towards France the position which
+ Servia occupies towards Russia, our compliance could hardly have
+ been more exact. But this outbreak of causeless wrath justifies us
+ in asking what France wants, and what she complains of.
+
+ You will of course say as much of this, or as much more as
+ you may think wise. But it may be as well to show that we are
+ not insensible to this attempt to work Parliament against us
+ by revelations or communications on matters which the French
+ Government themselves have charged us to treat as confidential.
+
+The attacks on England in the French press were not inspired, as Lord
+Salisbury supposed, by the French Foreign Office, but by Gambetta, who
+desired a strong policy in Egypt and seized the opportunity to fall upon
+Waddington. The latter, however, by this time had made up his mind as to
+what should be done.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 22, 1879.
+
+ As you will have seen by my telegram, what Waddington said
+ to me yesterday was, that there appeared to him to be only two
+ alternatives with regard to the Egyptian question--to depose the
+ Khedive or to establish a Control. He talked a good deal more
+ about the Control than the deposition; but when I asked him if
+ this meant that the Control was the alternative he preferred, he
+ declined to express any preference for the one or the other. If we
+ are to wait until he has devised measures (and this is what he told
+ me he was about) for establishing an efficacious control we need
+ not fear being called upon to act in a hurry. I quite agree with
+ you that we cannot let France go on alone in Egypt; for if we do,
+ she may go lengths which will produce something a great deal more
+ dangerous than a mere coolness between us. French power and French
+ feeling are very different from what they were some years ago,
+ when the French would have let us do almost anything we chose in
+ Egypt, if we would have taken care of the interests of the French
+ bondholders.
+
+Nothing can be plainer than Lord Salisbury's desire to act in concert
+with France, and to have regard to French interests in Egypt, but the
+constant attacks made upon British policy and the persistent hostility
+of French agents, not only in Egypt, but elsewhere, rendered the task
+anything but easy. Gambetta's hostility was partly due to the fact that
+he was an enthusiastic Phil-Hellene, and considered that not enough was
+being done for Greece in the way of procuring for her accessions of
+territory at the expense of Turkey. It is as well to point out that,
+whereas the Turks had been compelled to cede territory to States with
+which they had been at war, they were at this time being pressed to cede
+territory to Greece because that Power had remained at peace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ June 6, 1879.
+
+ The recent course of the French newspapers which have the
+ credit of being inspired by Gambetta and Leon Say is certainly a
+ puzzle. Looking over the course of negotiations between us and
+ Waddington on Egypt, I should find it very difficult to say which
+ of the two Governments had pulled the other on, and which had
+ dragged the other back. As far as any important negotiations go,
+ I should say that we had been a shade more in favour of active
+ measures than the other side. The two newspapers in question
+ are evidently well informed; and therefore their assumption
+ that we have prevented the French from acting must be put on
+ for a purpose; what purpose it is difficult to say. The most
+ obvious solution--bearing in mind the English friendships of the
+ two statesmen concerned--is that the whole movement is meant
+ to operate on English internal politics, and not on European
+ politics at all: and this view is supported by the use which has
+ actually been made of the controversy here. The incident is common
+ enough in diplomatic history: but it has always been bitterly
+ resented by the Government which is the subject of that species
+ of attack. But in this case there is some doubt as to how far
+ Waddington is implicated. Nothing is more difficult to deal with
+ than a 'Marionette Government,' because the marionettes are not
+ responsible, and you cannot get at the man who pulls the strings.
+ There is one spot in the diplomatic battlefield--almost the only
+ one--where we have been exposed to risk, and have consequently
+ been anxious--the Balkan Peninsula: and on this we have been
+ systematically opposed by France. Ring, Coutouly and Fournier have
+ played us every kind of trick. But all the time, nothing could
+ have been more unexceptionable than Waddington's language and
+ instructions. So it is with this newspaper warfare. The secondary
+ agents, who are popularly supposed to act from inspiration are
+ undisguisedly hostile. Waddington's demeanour all the time is
+ imperturbably friendly. Is it helplessness, or bad faith? The
+ question is one of considerable practical importance: for if we are
+ to measure the co-operation of France by the action of Fournier and
+ Gambetta, we shall do wisely to retire, gently but effectually,
+ from a perilous partnership. And it is impossible to ignore this
+ aspect of the case in considering the precise line to be pursued in
+ the two pending questions of Greece and Egypt.
+
+ Our object in Egypt, ever since we promised some four years
+ ago not to take it, is to see that our own interests are not
+ injured and that French interests receive adequate, but not
+ excessive consideration. If, however, Gambetta means mischief, it
+ may be wise for us to seek the protection of English interests
+ only, and leave the French to take care of themselves. This would
+ be done by pushing forward the other Powers. Their interference
+ would be fatal to Egyptian solvency, and consequently to
+ French bondholders. But it would be as fatal a bar to French
+ preponderance as the plan of duplicating all appointments, and
+ as none of these great Powers are naval, we could look after
+ the Canal just as easily if they were masters in Egypt, as
+ under the present Anglo-French system. If the French are really
+ friends, the Anglo-French system may be maintained in spite of
+ many inconveniences in order to cement that friendship. But if
+ Gambetta and Fournier are to be taken as the directing force in
+ French politics, the Anglo-French system is merely a make-believe,
+ and will only draw us into a succession of crises in which we
+ shall probably be outwitted. This dilemma merits very careful
+ consideration. Greece is a less important and more transitory
+ affair. In order to avoid division in the Congress we went rather
+ further than we thought quite wise; and we have no wish to go
+ further still. Of course, abstractedly, it would be much better
+ that all the Hellenic populations should be under a Hellenic ruler.
+ But Turkey is still a fact of which account must be taken; and the
+ danger of Turkey resisting is very serious. The fact that Greece
+ has not won this territory as prize of war, nor earned it as the
+ consideration of any service done, but is to gain it merely by her
+ skill in singing diplomatic dithyrambics, appears to irritate the
+ Turks intensely. It is not our present policy to adopt a course
+ which shall induce the Sultan to listen to the Russian proposals
+ which are so freely placed before him. We would not therefore,
+ in any case, take a leading part in pressing the cession on him.
+ But we doubt extremely the wisdom of exciting anew the Moslem
+ fanaticism, by demanding a town to which the Albanians attach so
+ much importance as Janina. However, in this question we should
+ have been a good deal influenced by the wishes of France, if we
+ could have thought that by exalting the influence of Fournier we
+ were strengthening a friend. But can we do so?
+
+There was, in reality, no foundation for Lord Salisbury's suspicions
+that Gambetta and his allies were seeking to interfere in British
+internal politics. The objectionable articles were written under an
+erroneous impression that France had been outwitted, and that Mr.
+Vivian, in pursuance of secret instructions from his Government, was
+working for the failure of the joint Anglo-French administration in
+Egypt and for the establishment of exclusive British influence. But as
+the attacks in the French press mainly took the form of abusing England
+for not agreeing to energetic proposals made by the French Government,
+it was a legitimate grievance against M. Waddington that he never took
+any steps whatever to contradict this perfectly baseless accusation.
+As for the conduct of French agents who were continually intriguing
+against their English colleagues, it is probable that M. Waddington was
+able to exercise little or no control over them, and it has already
+been mentioned that some of them were in the habit of corresponding
+directly with Gambetta behind the back of their official chief. Lord
+Lyons, who naturally was anxious to make things as easy for the French
+as possible, recommended that the vanity and susceptibility of French
+diplomatists abroad and of the public at home, should be studied as
+much as possible, since there was a universal feeling that France was
+now too strong to play a secondary part anywhere, and that sacrifices
+on our part were preferable to allowing her to throw herself into the
+arms of Russia. Lord Salisbury therefore persevered in the difficult
+task of endeavouring to co-operate cordially with the French Government,
+and M. Waddington applied himself to elaborating the scheme of Dual
+Control which was eventually adopted. Meanwhile it had become apparent
+that, in order to obtain anything like a successful result, the Khedive
+Ismail must be got rid of somehow, a course which was urged not only by
+Gambetta, but by the French Agent at Cairo. Joint efforts were made by
+the French and British Agents to induce him to abdicate in favour of
+Prince Tewfik, which were seconded by the representations of Germany
+and Austria; but these were of no avail, and the Gordian knot was
+not cut until the Sultan suddenly intervened on June 26. On that day
+a telegram arrived from Constantinople, deposing Ismail by Imperial
+Irade, and conferring the Government of Egypt upon his eldest son Prince
+Tewfik, who was at once proclaimed Khedive without any disturbance of
+tranquillity.
+
+The action of the Sultan was not only sudden but unexpected, and Lord
+Salisbury at once took steps to assure the French Government that it was
+not due to the instigation of Her Majesty's Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ June 26, 1879.
+
+ Pray assure M. Waddington that the Turkish move reported
+ to-day does not proceed in any way from our suggestion. We have
+ only urged in the very strongest terms that the Sultan should not
+ interfere with what we were doing in Cairo. But the Sultan seems to
+ have been perfectly resolved to have a finger in the pie; and as he
+ was not allowed to interfere to save the Khedive, he indemnified
+ himself by interfering to upset him.
+
+ I am not specially in love with the Firman of 1873, which
+ I see the Sultan has revoked. But I am afraid it will annoy
+ Waddington, and therefore I am anxious he should be well convinced
+ we had no hand in it.
+
+ Now it is done, the wisest course we can take is to accept it,
+ and devote our energies to procuring any new Firman that may be
+ necessary to the present state of Egyptian finances. I don't think
+ it will be any great evil if their power of raising armaments is
+ limited. But on all this I should like to have Waddington's opinion.
+
+M. Waddington was a sensible man, and therefore there was no difficulty
+in convincing him that England was not responsible for the Sultan's
+action; but French opinion generally was incredulous, and it was
+believed that the deposition of Ismail was the result of the rivalry at
+Constantinople between the French and British Ambassadors. The latter
+was unjustly suspected of a desire to reduce Egypt to the condition
+of a Turkish Pashalic, and it was obvious that the revocation of the
+Firman indicated the intention of the Sultan to reassert his influence
+over Egypt in a manner which French policy had consistently opposed.
+Although, therefore, the Sultan's action had delivered both England
+and France from a highly embarrassing situation, and had been taken
+at a most opportune moment, it was considered advisable, instead of
+expressing gratitude, to criticise adversely the form of the Imperial
+Irade, and to insist upon the issue of another.
+
+What was, however, of really more essential importance than the somewhat
+remote fear of Turkish interference was the question of how the Dual
+Control was to be effectively established.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 7, 1879.
+
+ Our perplexity as to the effect of the Firman has received
+ a rather comical solution. No such Firman exists. An 'Irade' is
+ merely the Sultan's signature; and that was only given to the
+ telegraphic message deposing Ismail. So that the revocation of the
+ Firman of 1873 has not taken place, and the discussion as to the
+ exact meaning of such a revocation seems to be premature. All that
+ we now have to do is to prevent, if we can, any Firman at all being
+ issued to Tewfik, and then every one will be happy.
+
+ Tewfik is resolved to begin the Liquidation at once; and if
+ it be true that interest is rolling up at the rate of L80,000 a
+ month, there is good cause for his desire to hurry it. But the
+ Controllers will hardly be enough. We want to have some hold over
+ the government of Egypt, though we do not want to assume any
+ overt responsibility. The great object seems to me to be to have
+ representatives inside the offices who shall be able to report
+ what the Government are doing to the Agents, and shall be able to
+ give advice to the Government in accordance with the instructions
+ of the Agents. If you have a European Minister, the Agent must
+ be suppressed. I despair of making two talented Englishmen work
+ side by side, without subordinating one to the other; and if we
+ must choose between Agent and Minister as a vehicle of English
+ influence, the former seems to me the easier to work with. He is
+ not quasi-independent, and therefore will obey orders. He occupies
+ a recognized and traditional position and therefore excites no
+ jealousy either among Moslems or other Christian Powers; and he
+ cannot be dismissed; and if his advice is not taken, or applied
+ badly, the country he serves is not in the eyes of the world
+ primarily responsible. The case on the other side is that the
+ European Minister has more power. But has he? What power did Wilson
+ enjoy? The only power Europeans can enjoy at Cairo rests on the
+ fear which their Governments may happen to inspire, and this fear
+ will operate as strongly through an Agent as through a Minister.
+ We do not put European Ministers even into the Governments of
+ dependent Indian Provinces: and there we have, what we cannot have
+ in Egypt for a long time, 'bayonets to sit upon.'
+
+ We have made the mistake in Egypt and elsewhere, of
+ underrating the vitality of the Moslem feeling. I am afraid M.
+ Waddington is doing so with respect to Greece.
+
+Another letter deals further with the question of Control, and contains
+some interesting reflections on moral influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 15, 1879.
+
+ I am very much of the opinion that the Control should take
+ the form of inspection. It is the only form of Control likely to
+ be effective. Actual authority we cannot exercise. We tried to do
+ it through the European Ministers, but when the stress came, the
+ disbanded officers proved to us that two pairs of arms are not much
+ use against two thousand. The only form of Control we have is that
+ which is called moral influence--which in practice is a combination
+ of menace, objurgation, and worry. In this we are still supreme
+ and have many modes of applying it--diplomatic notes, consular
+ interviews, newspapers, blue books. We must devote ourselves to the
+ perfecting of this weapon. And, obviously, the first condition of
+ its use is complete knowledge of what is going in.
+
+ The exchange, therefore, of nominal authority for real
+ inspectionship is a step in the right direction. It is facing
+ facts. We must exert ourselves to open to these inspectors every
+ avenue of information; and we must have a certain number of
+ sub-inspectors paid by Egypt, who shall travel about, collecting
+ information. It is essential, of course, that these last should
+ know the language.
+
+ The division of the jurisdiction of the two inspectors is
+ a serious puzzle. Upper and Lower Egypt certainly will not do,
+ unless we have Lower Egypt. I had thought of a North and South
+ division--the Nile--starting at Damietta. But I know Vivian does
+ not like this; moreover I see difficulties about handing over
+ Alexandria to the French.
+
+ Waddington's proposal for a rotatory jurisdiction sounds odd.
+ What would he think of it as applied to any other department of
+ life--Ambassadors, Bishops, or Ministers? I suppose the frequency
+ of what they call a 'Prefectoral Movement' in France has put it
+ into his head.
+
+ Would it be possible to fuse them into a board, giving them
+ a native colleague to be chosen by themselves, and then decide
+ by majority? I have spoken to Baring[25] about the Commission of
+ Liquidation. I doubt his accepting the Control, though I think he
+ would the Liquidation.
+
+ As to the Firman, we are agreed as to the limitation of
+ armaments. I should be glad to see loans forbidden altogether.
+ To an Oriental ruler they are like firewater to the Red Indians.
+ I should be glad to see a declaration that the Powers would not
+ recognize or encourage the payment of any loan contracted by the
+ Egyptian Government after this date. They are not wanted to meet
+ any present stress; but the fellaheen are already loaded with quite
+ as heavy a weight as they can bear.
+
+The question of appointing the Controllers and deciding what their
+functions were to be, gave rise to more difficulties, caused by the
+obvious desire of many Frenchmen to get the Egyptian finances entirely
+into French hands. Ultimately Major Baring and M. de Blignieres
+were appointed, but their powers were not formally defined until
+November. By the decree of November 15, 1879, it was laid down that
+the Controllers should have full rights of inquiring into all branches
+of the administration; the rank of Ministers and seats in the Cabinet,
+although restricted to making suggestions; the power of appointing and
+dismissing subordinate officials; and it was further enacted that they
+were irremovable without the consent of their respective Governments. By
+this action the British and the French Governments practically assumed
+the responsibility of Government, and for some time to come Egypt ceased
+to give trouble.
+
+In the month of June, 1879, an event had occurred which was of profound
+importance to all political parties in France. The Prince Imperial
+had perished in Zululand, and with him had vanished the hopes of a
+resuscitated Empire. The tragedy of the Prince's death is heightened
+by the fact that it was only owing to an unfortunate misunderstanding
+that he was ever allowed to accompany the expedition. On March 1,
+Lord Salisbury writing to Lord Lyons stated that the departure of the
+Prince Imperial was: _'a mal entendu_ which we are unable to understand
+even here. The Government had very distinctly negatived it, but in
+consequence of some misapprehensions, our orders were not attended to
+by the military men, and he received encouragement which could not
+afterwards be withdrawn. If you think Waddington is at all sore on the
+matter, you are authorized to explain this fully to him. But I rather
+expect to hear from you that no importance is attached by the French
+Government to what has taken place.'
+
+Two days later he again wrote:--
+
+ I am very sorry to hear that so painful an impression was
+ created in Paris. We have never been able to discover exactly
+ how it was done, or why our already clearly expressed objection
+ was disregarded. He was of course at liberty to go, and people
+ who ought to have known better were at liberty to write private
+ letters and go to railway stations. Of course nothing official has
+ been done, but the border line between official and private has
+ been very closely trenched upon. However, all we can do now is to
+ express our sincere regret.
+
+At Lord Lyons's next interview with M. Waddington, the latter asked (not
+in a complaining manner) how the Prince's expedition to Zululand had
+been brought about, and was told in reply that the Prince had settled it
+himself through personal friends and that Her Majesty's Government had
+by no means approved of it. President Grevy alluded to the matter in the
+course of a conversation with the Prince of Wales, who happened to be in
+Paris, and also expressed no disapproval; in fact, he went so far as to
+remark: _qu'il avait tres bien fait_. Thus the principal personages in
+France evidently did not consider the matter of much importance; but,
+on the other hand, the Republican press showed considerable irritation,
+which, under the circumstances, was perhaps not entirely unnatural, as
+it did not seem credible that the Prince could have started without the
+approval of the British Government. When the news of his death arrived,
+it was felt that, for the time being at all events, Bonapartism had been
+practically crushed out of existence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, June 20, 1879.
+
+ In hearing of the sad end of the short life of the Prince
+ Imperial, one's first thought is for the Empress, whose bitter cup
+ of sorrows is now full.
+
+ The immediate political result is the utter disorganization
+ of the Imperial Party. It was far from strong, but still it was
+ the most efficacious element of opposition to the Republicans, and
+ they will now have things still more their own way. The Fleurys,
+ Rouhers, and the old Imperial following can never hope to live to
+ recover from the blow. I suppose Prince Napoleon will hardly put
+ himself forward in the position of a pretender to the Imperial
+ Crown, and he would have no party with him if he did. In the
+ more remote future his eldest son may prove a more formidable
+ candidate than poor Prince Louis could have been. He is said to be
+ a remarkably clever, attractive youth, and a thorough Bonaparte
+ in appearance. No hereditary responsibility for Sedan can be cast
+ upon him; he is undoubtedly of the Bonaparte race, and he has been
+ brought up in France. For the present, however, Prince Louis's
+ melancholy death is a decided accession to Republican strength.
+
+The death of the Prince excited the sympathies of all classes in France
+with the stricken Empress, but when in July, preparations were being
+made for the funeral in England, the bitterness of French party politics
+displayed itself in that hostility which, carried beyond the grave, it
+is the least possible to condone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 10, 1879.
+
+ The susceptibility the French Government is showing about
+ the funeral of the Prince Imperial is neither wise nor dignified.
+ If ever there was an occasion on which political animosities
+ might be left in abeyance, surely this is one. The death of the
+ Prince Imperial has put an end to many hopes and aspirations,
+ and has inclined numerous adherents of the family to acquiesce
+ in the present state of things. It is certainly not politic to
+ require of people in this frame of mind an overt manifestation
+ of heartlessness and ingratitude to the dynasty which has had so
+ mournful an end. The ceremony so manifestly relates to the past
+ and not to the future that there can be no reasonable objection
+ to allowing the old adherents of the family, whether Marshals and
+ Generals, or merely civilians to go over to attend it. I fancy
+ that Grevy himself and the Republicans _de la vieille_ cannot get
+ over, even on such an occasion as this, their old hostility to the
+ Empire.
+
+These almost incredibly vindictive feelings again manifested themselves
+when a proposal was made that a monument to the unfortunate Prince
+should be placed in Westminster Abbey. M. Waddington, who must have
+been heartily ashamed of the part he was forced to play, remonstrated
+privately against the project, and intimated to Lord Lyons that he
+thought of writing to Dean Stanley, whom he happened to know, and of
+urging him not to consent to it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 22, 1879.
+
+ I think, on the whole, I had better not answer your despatch
+ officially about the Prince Imperial's statue; but you can tell
+ Waddington unofficially as much of the following as you may
+ think useful. As soon as I got it, I communicated with the Prime
+ Minister, who sent to the Dean of Westminster. The Dean, when the
+ message reached him, had already forwarded to all the newspapers
+ a letter which you have read in the issues of this morning. On
+ reading it we came to the conclusion that the matter had gone too
+ far to be recalled.
+
+ On historical considerations the Dean proposes to put the
+ monument into Henry the Seventh's chapel, and for that purpose,
+ undoubtedly, the Queen's permission must be obtained. But as
+ regards the Abbey in general he is absolutely supreme. He might
+ put up a statue of Nana Sahib, if he chose. So we must decline to
+ accept any responsibility for his proceedings. As he has publicly
+ made the announcement that it is his intention, if not interfered
+ with, to give the requisite permission, it is clearly impossible
+ for us to 'apply pressure' to induce him to give way. The motive
+ for doing so would have to be confessed and would cause much
+ misapprehension.
+
+ I have expressed a wish to see the inscription before it is
+ put up, and I have no doubt I shall be allowed to do so. I think I
+ can assure M. Waddington that there is not the slightest danger of
+ anything about Napoleon IV. being contained in it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The monument was never erected, the project meeting with much opposition
+in Parliament as calculated to offend the susceptibilities of the French
+Government.
+
+It must be admitted that the circumstances surrounding the death of this
+unfortunate Prince reflect discredit, though in an unequal degree, upon
+both the French and the British Governments. If the French Government
+showed a petty and vindictive spirit totally unworthy of a great and
+powerful nation, the misunderstanding which enabled the Prince to go
+to South Africa; his vague and indefinite status with respect to the
+expeditionary force; the equally vague conditions attaching to his
+relations with Captain Carey, which were partly responsible for his
+death; the unhappy suggestion of the Abbey monument; the helpless
+attitude of the Government in the face of an enterprising ecclesiastic;
+and the subsequent unseemly discussion in the House of Commons, are
+eloquent of slipshod and careless methods which are discreditable to
+British administration and constitute a somewhat humiliating page in the
+national history.
+
+The autumn of 1879 was marked by the conclusion of the Austro-German
+alliance, hailed at the time by Lord Salisbury as 'glad tidings of
+great joy,' and destined profoundly to influence European politics for
+many years to come. In spite of assurances given by Bismarck himself,
+by Andrassy, and by Haymerle, this new grouping of two first-class
+military Powers caused much perturbation at Paris, which was certainly
+not allayed by Lord Salisbury's benediction, and provided convenient
+material for an attack upon the tottering Waddington administration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 14, 1879.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As to French internal politics, the most striking feature is
+ the somewhat vague but almost universal feeling of uneasiness about
+ the future which pervades France. It is impossible not to see that
+ this feeling has increased even during the few weeks that have
+ elapsed since I went away on leave in August. I suppose that the
+ immediate fear is that the Waddington Ministry will be succeeded by
+ one more Radical, and that thus, step by step, the Ultra-Reds will
+ get the Government into their hands.
+
+ When I first saw Waddington on my return, he was in good
+ spirits, thinking that the threatened attacks upon him about
+ the amnesty, the Government, and especially the diplomatic
+ appointments, had blown over. Now, however, he is menaced with
+ an interpellation on the Austro-German understanding. This
+ understanding is, of course, extremely unpalatable to the French,
+ and among them the general belief is that it binds Austria to
+ assist Germany, in case of need, to defend Alsace and Lorraine
+ against France. Waddington has the most positive assurances from
+ Bismarck, Andrassy and Haymerle that there is nothing against
+ France in it, but this is not enough to reassure the cavillers.
+ The intention seems to be to reproach Waddington with this
+ understanding generally, as indicating the failure of his Foreign
+ Policy, and in particular to blame him for having an Ambassador at
+ Vienna who neither prevented, nor found it out, and an Ambassador
+ in London who did not make the French policy on the subject
+ properly understood by the English Government. It seems that
+ it is intended to argue that you would not have spoken of the
+ understanding in the terms you used at Manchester, if you had
+ known the painful impression it had made in France.
+
+ There are two opinions in France on the Foreign Policy to be
+ now adopted. Perhaps the general, unreflecting public are inclined
+ to throw themselves into the arms of Russia. The wise heads (and
+ there is some reason to hope that Gambetta may be among them) look
+ rather to England, and are willing to conciliate her by supporting
+ her views in the East. It may be worth while to take this feeling
+ into account, and perhaps with that view rather to put forward the
+ reinstatement of Khaireddin and Midhat as the objects in view, than
+ exclusively English appointments.
+
+It seems to be a more or less established rule that when an English
+Foreign Secretary makes a speech, Ambassadors should write and expatiate
+upon the admirable effect which has been produced abroad, and Lord
+Lyons's comment upon Lord Salisbury's Manchester speech approaches more
+nearly to criticism than appears elsewhere in his correspondence. The
+charge of ignorance brought against the French Ambassador at Vienna
+was probably quite correct, but the British Embassy at Vienna must
+have been in the same case, for the existence of the Austro-German
+alliance was first discovered by that extremely able public servant,
+the late Sir Joseph Crowe, K.C.M.G.[26] As for the alleged inaction of
+the French Ambassador at London, that official was a retired admiral,
+whom apparently Waddington seldom seems to have consulted, and over
+whose unconscious head business was habitually transacted by the French
+Foreign Office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 21, 1879.
+
+ We are within a week of the opening of the session, but the
+ situation has not become more clear. Gambetta and Waddington have
+ a personal dislike to each other, and no doubt Gambetta would be
+ glad to oust Waddington, and to put in his place some new Minister
+ for Foreign Affairs, such as the Marquis de Noailles, with some
+ creature of his own, such as Spueller as adlatus or Under Secretary
+ of State. But then Gambetta would find it difficult to do this
+ without bringing about such a break up of the Ministry as would
+ raise the question of his own taking office. But if those who ought
+ to know him well judge aright, he does not wish to come into power
+ until he sees his way to doing something very great--in fact to
+ getting back Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+ Gambetta professes to be strongly in favour of the English
+ Alliance, and for that and for other reasons, to make a liberal
+ treaty of commerce with us. I do not, however, imagine that his
+ ideas of a liberal treaty go beyond maintaining, or nearly so, the
+ tariffs as they stand in the existing Anglo-French Treaties.
+
+ I imagine he has thought of going to England himself whenever
+ he has a good opportunity, not with a view to putting himself into
+ the hands of Sir Charles Dilke and taking part in any Ultra-Radical
+ demonstration, but rather with a desire of conciliating the
+ moderate public opinion in England, and showing that he has no
+ desire to promote a Republican Propaganda abroad. He seems to have
+ a decidedly friendly feeling towards the present English Ministry.
+
+ I have heard that the Russian Grand Dukes had been led by
+ General Chanzy to expect a much more warm and cordial reception at
+ Paris than they actually met with, and that consequently they were
+ by no means pleased.
+
+ Waddington seems to be as little prepared to go into the
+ Newfoundland question as he was two months ago. The impression
+ he makes upon me is the same that he made upon you. The Navy
+ Department keep him in awe of them and prevent his acting upon the
+ reasonable views he expressed to you at Berlin.
+
+The various difficulties in all parts of the world which were before
+long to trouble Anglo-French relations for many years, had now
+begun to manifest themselves in such places as Newfoundland, Tahiti,
+Reunion, the Gambia, and elsewhere. All these troublesome questions
+fell under the Marine Department, and their accumulation was productive
+of an irritation which hampered M. Waddington, whose position was
+also weakened by a rabid demand made upon the Ministry for Government
+appointments. In fact it was difficult to see how any French Ministry
+could last, if the American system of a fresh division of the spoils
+was to take place whenever a change occurred. In America the Executive
+is safe for four years, but in France, directly the places had been
+distributed, the disappointed combined to overthrow the unhappy
+Ministers responsible for the distribution.
+
+Meanwhile his most formidable opponent, the ex-Democrat, Gambetta, had
+assumed the _role_ of a grand seigneur, and gave sumptuous Parliamentary
+banquets which were pronounced by the highest gastronomic authorities to
+be exquisite in every respect. He contemplated a visit to London, and it
+is somewhat surprising to learn that the Democrat showed a very obvious
+prepossession in favour of the English Conservative Party.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 12, 1879.
+
+ Gambetta has heard with very great satisfaction that you and
+ Lord Beaconsfield would be very glad of the opportunity of seeing
+ him, which will be afforded if he carries into effect his idea
+ of going to England. He feels that it would be essential that
+ he should not make himself the guest or place himself under the
+ special guidance of any political person on one side or the other.
+ He would probably go to an hotel. As to the time of his visit,
+ he does not seem to have formed any definite plan. It seems to be
+ connected in his mind with the Treaty of Commerce, and he seems
+ inclined to secure himself a good reception by contributing first
+ to making a favourable Treaty of Commerce. I suppose he and his
+ countrymen would consider a Treaty simply renewing the arrangements
+ of 1860 as very favourable to us. He absolutely repudiates all
+ notion of anything like Republican propagandism. He has a strong
+ bias in favour of the Conservatives in England. His sympathies are
+ with an active Foreign Policy, and he has a grudge against the
+ Liberals because they did not come to the assistance of France in
+ the Franco-German war. He seems to follow English home politics
+ very carefully. He wishes England and France to act together in
+ the East, but considers that things have got into a horrid mess at
+ Constantinople, and expresses regret that the French and English
+ Embassies there do not pull more together.
+
+ I think one of his objects in going to England would be to
+ show people in France that he is considered a person of sufficient
+ importance to be admitted into the society of people of rank and
+ station in aristocratic England.
+
+ He has also no doubt the higher object of making France and
+ himself popular in England, so as to avert all risk of England's
+ joining the Austro-German Alliance to the detriment of France.
+
+ The danger would be that he would form too great expectations
+ of obtaining a positive alliance with England, and that if we did
+ not come up to his expectations in this respect, he might in his
+ disappointment, turn to Russia. But from this point of view, the
+ most dangerous thing would be to _froisser_ his susceptibility by
+ showing any coldness beforehand about his visit.
+
+ He undertakes to let us know whenever he comes to any
+ resolution about going to England.
+
+From the above letter it will be seen how much importance was attached
+to Gambetta's views, and how desirable it was considered to secure his
+goodwill; but apparently the visit to London from which so much was
+expected, never took place--perhaps because his English Conservative
+friends were shortly afterwards turned out of office.
+
+The threatened attack upon the Waddington administration took the
+form of a vote of want of confidence which was moved in the month of
+December, but successfully rejected. The Ministerial success, however,
+was of a somewhat fictitious nature, as the Left Groups when united,
+outnumbered the Right, and the Government was, therefore, liable
+to be turned out by a combination. M. Waddington himself professed
+satisfaction, and affirmed with pride that he had been congratulated
+upon his majority by the British Government; while from Berlin, Vienna,
+and even from St. Petersburg, where he was not in favour, assurances had
+been received of the satisfaction felt at the prospect of his continuing
+in office. The result, too, of the vote enabled him to carry out an
+intention he had long had in his mind, of abandoning the Presidency of
+the Council, and of retaining the office of Minister of Foreign Affairs.
+His own wish was to see M. Leon Say Prime Minister, but as that was out
+of the question, he favoured the appointment of M. de Freycinet, who, in
+addition to other qualifications, possessed the confidence of Gambetta,
+and would therefore render it difficult for the latter to attack the
+Government. The proposed transformation of the Ministry, however, was
+found difficult to effect, chiefly owing to the animosity of Gambetta
+against Waddington; the former being credited with the intention of
+upsetting any Ministry in which the latter remained. Gambetta was in
+fact pursuing a systematic dog-in-the-manger policy which was little
+to his credit, for while continually attacking and threatening the
+Government he was unwilling to take office himself, with the Chamber
+then in existence, since he realized that the Ultra-Radicals were trying
+to force him into a position in which he would have either to accept
+responsibility or to abandon the leadership of the Republican Party.
+The object, in short, of Clemenceau and the extreme party was to use
+Gambetta up in order to make room eventually for themselves. Neither
+President Grevy or Freycinet showed any accommodating spirit with
+regard to Waddington's plans, and when Freycinet laid down conditions
+which were unacceptable, the President tried to persuade Waddington to
+remain on as Prime Minister; but Waddington's position had been further
+impaired by imprudent representation on the part of President Grevy
+and others, that he was highly acceptable to Bismarck as a Minister,
+and Waddington admitted openly himself that he was wanting in the
+qualifications of a French Parliamentary leader. Consequently the upshot
+of it all was that he resigned, and Freycinet was allowed to form a new
+administration on his own terms. 'I part with Waddington with great
+regret,' wrote Lord Lyons. 'He had the greatest of all recommendations,
+that you could believe him, and feel sure of him.' These regrets were
+shared by Lord Salisbury. 'I am very sorry for the loss of Waddington.
+It was a luxury to have a French Minister who worked on principles
+intelligible to the English mind.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 30, 1879.
+
+ With the new Ministry I suppose Gambetta's reign is to begin.
+ The Cabinet was almost ostensibly formed by him. He did not, and
+ probably could not, put in any of the chief men of his own party.
+ They are kept, or keep themselves, in reserve to come into power
+ with Gambetta himself. The present Ministers are personally to a
+ certain extent Moderate, and altogether, so far as they are known,
+ mediocre. Freycinet is said to have some inclination to assert
+ independence, but he has not hitherto rebelled against his old
+ master Gambetta.
+
+ The man who appears to have lost most reputation in the affair
+ is President Grevy. He knows well enough that it is Gambetta's
+ intention to supplant him, but he has allowed himself to be
+ circumvented with his eyes open, from lack of resolution and lack
+ of energy, and has apparently let his rival obtain complete control
+ of the Government.
+
+ I do not suppose that we shall see at present any marked
+ change in the Foreign Policy of the French Government. Freycinet
+ knows nothing whatever of Foreign Affairs. Gambetta has strong
+ general notions, but seems more inclined to insist upon disposing
+ of the patronage of the Foreign Office than to go into the details
+ of the business. At home I suppose the first measure will be a
+ wholesale redistribution of places. _Aux situations nouvelles,
+ il faut des hommes nouveaux_, was the principle proclaimed by
+ Clemenceau. Beust[27] turns the phrase round and says: _Aux hommes
+ nouveaux il faut des situations._
+
+ At all events the centre Gauche is dead, and with it the
+ Thiers' policy, which was to preserve as far as possible the
+ institutions, the laws and the administrative system in France,
+ with the simple change of having an elective President, instead
+ of an hereditary sovereign at the head. The policy could not last
+ long unless it was directed by a really able energetic President.
+ France is now about to try real democratic and republican
+ government, and it will be a dangerous experiment in a country like
+ this. It would be a still more dangerous experiment if the old
+ warlike spirit had survived in the people. Happily for peace, they
+ are more intent upon making and enjoying money than upon obtaining
+ military glory, or even upon recovering their lost provinces.
+ Gambetta will try for the recovery of the Provinces if he preserves
+ his energies and fortune seems to give him a chance.
+
+ I have just seen Pothuau[28] who seems very indignant at his
+ place in London having been offered to Waddington, and declares
+ that he has no intention of giving it up.
+
+Lord Lyons was destined to witness many more changes of Government in
+France before his final departure; most of them accurately described by
+the hackneyed phrase: _Plus cela change, plus c'est la meme chose._
+
+A letter from Major Baring written at the close of the year is worth
+quoting as evidence of the improved and hopeful condition of Egypt,
+and also of the harmony prevailing at the time between the English and
+French Controllers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Major Baring to Lord Lyons_.
+
+ Cairo, Dec. 29, 1879.
+
+ You may like to hear what I think of the state of things here,
+ so I venture to write this line.
+
+ There is a very decided improvement. Since I have been
+ connected with Egyptian affairs I never remember matters going so
+ smoothly. I like what I see of the Khedive, and I see a great deal
+ of him, for he frequently presides at the Council, and besides this
+ I often go to see him on business. Riaz's head is rather turned by
+ the decorations he has received, but he is very well disposed and
+ will always follow our advice, if we insist. He is oppressed with
+ the fear that Nubar will return to office; as, without doubt, he
+ will sooner or later; but it is not at all to be desired that he
+ should return just yet. What we want is _time_. If we can get along
+ for six months, or better, a year, without any considerable change
+ I really believe that the financial crisis which has now lasted so
+ long may be brought to a close.
+
+ Cherif and the Turks made overtures to Nubar the other day,
+ but he was wise enough to decline so unnatural a coalition.
+
+ Before long our financial scheme will be ready to launch, and
+ if, as I hope, it is accepted, the Commission of Liquidation will
+ no longer be necessary. This is perhaps the best solution of the
+ matter.
+
+ We shall reduce Unified to 4 per cent, and leave Preference
+ alone.
+
+ Blignieres is behaving most loyally in everything which
+ concerns English interests. The Khedive and his Ministers have, I
+ think, got over the prejudice they entertained against him.
+
+M. de Freycinet took over the Foreign Office as well as the Presidency
+of the Council; as has already been stated, he was quite ignorant of
+all foreign questions, and was also looked upon as less reliable than
+M. Waddington. The first official interview with him, however, produced
+a favourable impression, all the more because he did not let out a
+flood of common-places about devotion to England, and so forth; but the
+important question was to know what line Gambetta was inclined to take
+in Foreign Policy, and Sheffield was deputed to find out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 17, 1880.
+
+ Gambetta has expressed confidentially to Sheffield to-day his
+ views as to the Foreign Policy of France; with the intention of
+ course that they should be communicated to me only in the strictest
+ privacy.
+
+ He considered that the Austro-German Alliance had been made
+ against France; that it entered into Prince Bismarck's calculations
+ that it might throw France into the arms of Russia, but that His
+ Highness thought that there would be more than a compensation for
+ this if in consequence of it England were completely detached from
+ France. Gambetta declared that France had not fallen into this trap
+ and would not fall into it--that she would never make an alliance
+ with Russia, but that if Russia were attacked by Germany, France
+ would have to take care of her own safety. He had information which
+ convinced him that there was no foundation for the assertions that
+ Russian troops were being massed on the frontier of Germany, and
+ he believed that these rumours were spread from Berlin to afford a
+ pretext for an attack on Russia, to be made so suddenly as to be
+ successful at once and to enable Germany to turn towards France
+ without any fear of Russia in her rear.
+
+ In order to disconcert this plan Gambetta thought it highly
+ important that a good understanding should be established between
+ England and Russia both with regard to Turkey and to India. He
+ held that it was the interest of France to urge in every way the
+ Russian Government to come to such an understanding with England.
+ He looked upon the state of things at Constantinople as very
+ bad, and attributed it to the disagreements between the French
+ and English Ambassadors; while in order to promote the accord
+ which he wished to see between England and Russia he desired that
+ the best feeling should exist between the French and English
+ Representatives at Constantinople. It was evident, however, from
+ what he said that any complaint against Fournier by England would
+ be met by counter-complaints on the part of France against Layard.
+ If Fournier resigned, Tissot the French Minister at Athens would be
+ Gambetta's candidate for the Embassy in Turkey.
+
+ Gambetta denied most positively that there was any truth
+ whatever in the rumours that he had been in communication with
+ Bismarck about the restoration of Lorraine to France or anything
+ of the kind. As to the insinuation that it was proposed that
+ while Lorraine should be restored, France should receive a slice
+ of Belgium in compensation for Alsace, Gambetta said that it
+ was plain that this could only have been put about to produce
+ ill-will between England and France. After the Benedetti affair, no
+ Frenchman in his senses would enter into secret arrangements with
+ Bismarck about Belgium, and the French Republic had certainly no
+ desire under any circumstances to despoil its neighbours.
+
+ Gambetta expressed a desire that a liberal Treaty of Commerce
+ should be made with England and he was eloquent on the importance
+ of a close and cordial union between the two countries.
+
+ Gambetta impressed upon Sheffield that he was speaking to him
+ simply as a friend, and quite privately. I think it is interesting
+ and important to know what sentiments he expresses in this way:
+ but, of course, if he was quoted, or if what he said was allowed to
+ transpire, he would feel bitterly towards us and at once put an end
+ to all communications of the kind. His tone appears to have been
+ quite that of a man who felt that he would have the power to carry
+ into effect the policy he recommended in this country.
+
+ Freycinet has just been to see me, but I did not find him
+ equally communicative on the general Foreign Policy of France.
+
+As Freycinet was occupied at that moment, _more Gallico_, in clearing
+the old officials out of the Foreign Office, and as he admittedly
+possessed little knowledge himself, his reticence under the
+circumstances was not surprising; but, so far as could be gathered, it
+was the intention of the new Ministry to follow the prudent course of
+their predecessors, a profession of faith evidently intended especially
+for Berlin. As regards the so-called Eastern Question, interest had
+temporarily shifted from Egypt to Greece, and the various Powers were
+endeavouring without much success to negotiate the cession of Turkish
+territory to that country. The usual spring war scare had taken a
+different shape, and, without any foundation whatever, Bismarck was
+credited with the extraordinary intention of suddenly falling upon
+Russia, while a coolness had sprung up between the French and Russian
+Governments owing to the refusal of the former to surrender the Nihilist
+Hartmann, who was implicated in an attempt to wreck a train in which the
+Russian Emperor was travelling.
+
+This refusal annoyed the Emperor so much that he withdrew his
+Ambassador, Prince Orloff, from Paris, the French consoling themselves
+with the thought that if they lost the favour of the Russian Emperor
+they would, on the other hand, ingratiate themselves with Bismarck.
+
+Upon the Greek Frontier question, which in consequence of an English
+proposal had been referred to an International Commission, there was,
+for some unknown reason, a disposition to blame the British Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Sir H. Layard._
+
+ Paris, March 19, 1880.
+
+ The withdrawal of Orloff, on account of the refusal of the
+ French Government to give up Hartmann, is of course the topic of
+ the day here. The form adopted is that which was used when normal
+ relations between Russia and the Pope were suspended some years
+ ago. The Emperor Alexander is, I understand, very angry; but I do
+ not know how long this _mouvement d'humeur_ will hold out against
+ the obvious political interest which both Russia and France have in
+ not being on bad terms with each other. There was a strong feeling
+ on the Left of the Chamber against giving Hartmann up, and as to
+ foreign relations, I suppose the French set pleasing Bismarck
+ against displeasing the European Alexander.
+
+ Freycinet is decidedly against the admission of Turkey to the
+ Greek Frontier Commission. It might have been politic to admit her,
+ though I don't see how she could have been asked to engage to be
+ bound by the votes of the majority.
+
+ I think things in the East are indeed looking serious. How
+ Turkey is to be kept going, in spite of herself, much longer,
+ passes my comprehension. I should be sorry to make a fourth in an
+ alliance between France, Russia and Turkey. If France and Russia
+ did unite for any serious purpose, I should think the last thing
+ they would wish would be to tie such a clog as Turkey to their
+ wheels. If there is any truth in the proverb, _Quem deus vult
+ perdere si_, etc., I am afraid that there can be very little doubt
+ that the ruin of Abdul Hamid is in the hands of Allah.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 21: French Secretary of Embassy at London.]
+
+[Footnote 22: French Ambassador at Constantinople.]
+
+[Footnote 23: Sir Charles Rivers Wilson, G.C.M.G.]
+
+[Footnote 24: H.B.M. Agent and Consul General at Cairo.]
+
+[Footnote 25: Now Earl of Cromer.]
+
+[Footnote 26: At that period British Consul-General at Duesseldorf.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Austrian Ambassador at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 28: French Ambassador at London.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE REVIVAL OF FRANCE
+
+(1880-1881)
+
+
+The General Election in England which took place in March, 1880,
+resulted not only in the rout of the Conservative Party, but in the
+reversal of the Foreign Policy of Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury,
+and necessitated the withdrawal of Sir Henry Layard from Constantinople,
+while Lord Lytton, whose Afghan policy had been furiously denounced by
+the Liberal Party, sent in his resignation. It is worthy of note that
+Lord Lyons, whom no one could accuse of Jingo tendencies, and whose
+opinion was certainly a very much better one than that of most of Lord
+Lytton's critics, was emphatically in favour of the latter's Afghan
+policy. Writing to Lady Lytton on January 8, 1879, he had expressed
+himself as follows:--
+
+ I have never had the least misgiving about Lytton's policy
+ with regard to Afghanistan, and I was always sure it would be
+ wisely carried into execution. I am only too thankful that we
+ have a spirited Viceroy. You can hardly form an idea of the
+ advantage our reputation has derived, all over Europe, from the
+ Afghan campaign, and you have seen enough of diplomacy to know how
+ much success in all questions of Foreign Policy depends upon the
+ prestige of the country one represents.
+
+Sir Henry Layard had incurred even greater execration than Lord Lytton
+in the eyes of the Liberal Party, because he was considered to have
+been deeply committed to what was described as the Pro-Turkish policy
+of the Conservative Government, although his inexpiable offence
+seems to have consisted chiefly in strenuous and unavailing efforts
+to induce the Turks to put their house in order. During his stay at
+Constantinople he had been greatly hampered by the consistent opposition
+of his French colleague, M. Fournier, whose great object it appeared
+to be to thwart English action whenever opportunity occurred. The
+French Government, which professed great anxiety to act in harmony with
+England, upon ascertaining that Sir Henry Layard was to be replaced by
+Mr. Goschen,[29] withdrew Fournier and appointed M. Tissot in his place.
+
+A change in the French Embassy in London was also imminent, and the
+circumstances attending the appointment of a new Ambassador were not
+devoid of humour.
+
+Admiral Pothuau, the Ambassador under the Waddington regime, had been
+forced to retire, probably much against his inclination, and it was
+considered that M. Leon Say would make an excellent representative, more
+especially as he passed as that _rara avis_, a French Free Trader; but
+M. Say shortly after accepting the appointment was elected President
+of the Senate, and therefore forced to resign. To find a satisfactory
+successor was apparently not so simple a matter as might have been
+assumed. Nothing could have been more correct than M. de Freycinet's
+ideal of a French Ambassador in London: 'a man possessing the full
+confidence and sharing the sentiments of his Government; not so much of
+a politician as to be thinking more of establishing his own political
+position at home than of following his instructions: a man who would
+stay long at the post, and desire to stay there; who would form personal
+friendships with English Statesmen, and improve good relations and
+soften asperities by personal influence. A man calculated to take a part
+in a society like that of London, and who would not be out of place at a
+Court--a man who would have a wife with the same qualities--finally, a
+man not unaccustomed to diplomatic business and diligent and accurate in
+transacting it.' When, however, the question passed from the abstract to
+the concrete, M. de Freycinet's ideas ceased to flow so freely, and he
+seemed utterly at a loss to find the ideal being which his imagination
+had sketched, although he mentioned M. Challemel Lacour--as a man who
+would not do. In spite, however, of M. Challemel Lacour being in M.
+de Freycinet's opinion a man 'who would not do,' it was evident that
+he had a powerful backing, for an emissary from the French Foreign
+Office shortly made his appearance at the Embassy and intimated in
+so many words that the appointment of M. Challemel Lacour would be
+agreeable to Gambetta. That no doubt was a considerable advantage, but
+M. Challemel Lacour by no means corresponded to M. de Freycinet's ideal
+representative, being a man of unconciliatory character and particularly
+notorious on account of a speech which he had once made, in which,
+alluding to political opponents, he had used the words _Fusillez moi ces
+gens la!_ an expression which was continually being quoted against him.
+In the meanwhile, however, M. de Freycinet had had an inspiration, and
+sent for Lord Lyons to tell him that he had discovered just the right
+man for the place. Unfortunately, this personage was married to a lady
+whose antecedents were not considered to be satisfactory, and it became
+necessary to intimate that under the circumstances the appointment would
+not be favourably received in England.
+
+ 'Freycinet was dreadfully put out,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'when he
+ found that the appointment was impossible. He complained chiefly
+ of Leon Say for having brought him into the difficulty, by first
+ accepting the London Embassy and then standing for the Presidency
+ of the Senate.
+
+ 'Leon Say's picture of the lady is about as much like what she
+ was when I last saw her a few years ago, as Challemel Lacour is
+ like Freycinet's ideal of a French Ambassador in London.'
+
+The appointment of M. Challemel Lacour was persisted in, and gave rise
+to some very disagreeable discussions in the House of Commons. Doubtless
+much of the abuse of M. Challemel Lacour was undeserved, but whatever
+his political capacity, he was not remarkable for urbanity.
+
+On the occasion of a big official dinner at the Paris Embassy, when
+requested to take in the absolutely unexceptionable and agreeable wife
+of one of his principal ministerial colleagues, he replied with an
+emphatic '_Jamais!_' which precluded any further discussion.
+
+The question of diplomatic appointments recalls the fact that it was
+about this time that my connection with Lord Lyons first began, through
+becoming a member of his staff, and that it may be appropriate to say
+something about his habits and personal characteristics.
+
+Lord Lyons, who was then more than sixty years of age, was a big,
+heavily built man, whose appearance in no respect suggested the
+diplomatist of fiction, and who rather resembled the conventional
+British squire as depicted by Leech; and the chief characteristic of his
+somewhat homely features was a small piercing eye which nothing seemed
+to escape, from the most unimportant clerical error to a minute detail
+in a lady's dress. As compared with the ordinary English diplomatist,
+his knowledge of foreign languages, without being exceptional, was
+thoroughly adequate. He, of course, spoke French with perfect facility,
+and it is probable that he wrote it with greater correctness than many
+Frenchmen, having a complete mastery both of the grammar and of all
+the complicated expressions which are made use of in correspondence.
+He was also equally at home in Italian; had a knowledge of German,
+and was well acquainted with modern Greek. In addition, he was a fair
+classical scholar, and a peculiarly retentive memory enabled him,
+unlike most people, to remember much of what he had read. His manner,
+at first sight, seemed somewhat alarming, and he was altogether a
+person with whom no one would have felt disposed to take a liberty,
+but the alarming impression, which was solely due to shyness, wore off
+with closer acquaintance as the natural kindliness of his disposition
+revealed itself, and one of the excellent traits in his character was,
+that he never formed a favourable or unfavourable opinion of any one
+in a hurry, but invariably waited for the test of time. The result
+was, in almost every case, that the more he saw of people the more
+he liked them and the more reluctant he became to part with men who
+had been associated with him for any length of time. The position
+which he occupied in British diplomacy during the twenty years which
+he spent at Paris may, without exaggeration be described as unique.
+No other man stood on quite the same footing, though it would be idle
+to deny that there were some who were perhaps more brilliant. But the
+implicit confidence which successive Foreign Secretaries placed in Lord
+Lyons's judgment was based upon the knowledge that his opinions were
+sound, unprejudiced, disinterested, and only formed after the most
+conscientious investigations. 'I never volunteer advice,' he used to
+remark, and it was perhaps for that very reason that his opinion was
+so frequently sought by the Foreign Office. In fact so much importance
+was attached to his views that he was occasionally asked to give his
+opinion upon subjects of which he had no knowledge whatever, ranging
+from the defence of Canada to the minimum dress allowance required
+by the wife of a British Ambassador at Paris. As he had no intention
+of seeking a consort himself, and as he had no intention, either, of
+resigning his post, the latter inquiry (which was made in 1870) appears
+somewhat superfluous; but, it may be worth noting, that as the result of
+conscientious researches, he reported that L1000 a year was considered
+to be necessary.
+
+As to his merits as a chief, every one who had ever been associated
+with him was of the same opinion, and it was generally held at the
+Foreign Office that service under him at the Paris Embassy was a
+liberal education in itself. It may be doubted, however, whether his
+capacity and love of work were not to some extent a disadvantage to
+his subordinates, since his industry was so great that it left them
+comparatively little responsible work to do. At the Paris Embassy the
+ordinary routine work is probably greater than at any other Embassy
+with the exception of Constantinople, but there was scarcely anything,
+however trivial, which he did not attend to himself. It is believed
+in some quarters that an Ambassador leads a dignified, luxurious and
+comparatively unoccupied life, but that was emphatically not the case
+with Lord Lyons. He rose early and began the day by carefully studying
+the more serious French newspapers; the whole of the time up to luncheon
+was spent in writing or reading despatches, or attending to the various
+small questions which were continually occurring. In the afternoon he
+worked again until about 3 or 4 p.m., and then usually went to see
+the French Foreign Minister or paid official calls in connection with
+current business. Upon his return he worked again until dinner unless
+interrupted by visitors, who were often of a tedious and uninteresting
+type, and it not infrequently happened that telegrams would arrive at a
+comparatively late hour of the night which it was necessary to deal with
+immediately. All correspondence which arrived at the Embassy, no matter
+from how insignificant a source, was attended to by him personally,
+and elaborate directions given with regard to the replies, which were
+invariably sent with the least possible delay. His industry was only
+equalled by an almost preternatural caution, which showed itself in
+a variety of ways. The reluctance to give advice has already been
+noticed, but his excessive caution showed itself not only in writing,
+but in conversation, and even amongst intimates he rarely expressed
+opinions on men or things which it would have been unsafe to quote in
+public, although his conversation was marked by much dry and original
+humour of that elusive character which cannot be described on paper. It
+was practically impossible to catch him napping. 'The Juarez (Mexican
+Revolutionary) Minister having left his card upon me without any
+official designation, I have returned a card also without an official
+designation,' he wrote from Washington in 1859. His reticence during the
+prolonged _Trent_ crisis has already been commented upon. 'I received
+by the last mail,' he wrote to Sir Henry Elliot in 1867, 'a letter from
+Hussein Khan, containing nothing but complimentary expressions. Not
+wishing to be outdone in civility, I have written a reply in the same
+strain. It has, however, occurred to me as just possible that Hussein
+Khan may desire to appear to be in correspondence with me for some
+particular object, and that there may be something which has occurred
+since I saw him, which might render it advisable that he should not be
+in correspondence with me. Accordingly I send my letter herewith open
+to you. If you see any reason, however slight, for not forwarding it,
+please destroy it, and take an opportunity of telling Hussein Khan that
+I asked you to thank him for his letter to me.' It will be remembered
+that even Queen Victoria was unable to draw him successfully on the
+subject of the Treaty of Berlin. Similar instances might be quoted
+indefinitely, and as an illustration of his caution in private life it
+may be mentioned that he never stirred a yard outside the house without
+a passport. A man of this temperament was not likely to make mistakes,
+and it is a remarkable fact that throughout a correspondence extending
+over something like forty years, there is not to be found a single
+expression in any official communication addressed to him which could by
+any stretch of the imagination be described as a censure or even as a
+criticism of his proceedings.
+
+As for the pleasures of the world, they hardly seemed to exist for him,
+but the ordinary human weaknesses, which were chiefly non-existent in
+his case, he regarded with an indulgent and even benevolent eye. He
+used to repeat with much glee that the chief entry upon his _dossier_
+at the Paris Prefecture de Police consisted of the words: _On ne lui
+connait pas de vice_, and this concise statement may be said to have
+been literally true. He had never been in debt, never gambled, never
+quarrelled, never, as far as was known, ever been in love, although it
+was a mistake to suppose that the opposite sex possessed no attractions
+for him. Nor did he possess the resources available to the ordinary man,
+for he cared nothing for sport, had probably never played a game in his
+life, and detested exercise and outdoor life. The surprising thing was
+that he contrived to keep his health, as although a total abstainer,
+he was a large eater, and never took the slightest exercise. In fact,
+during the last five or six years of his life he probably never walked
+further than the English Church in the Rue d'Aguesseau, which was within
+a hundred yards of the Embassy. 'Abstinence and exercise,' he used to
+say, 'were the only two things that disagreed with him.'
+
+The natural shyness of his disposition prevented him from deriving much
+real enjoyment from what is generally described as society, but all the
+social duties of an Ambassador were discharged in a manner which evoked
+universal approval. The entertainments at the Embassy consisted chiefly
+of dinners, which were remarkable for their excellence, and invitations
+to which were highly prized by all sections of French society. Nothing,
+in fact, could exceed the dignity or the faultless taste of the Embassy
+arrangements, and not only were Lord Lyons's entertainments renowned,
+but his horses and carriages were, even in Paris, noticeably amongst
+the very best, it being one of his strongest convictions that the
+British representative should always make an imposing appearance. But
+his hospitality was no matter of mere show; every night the unmarried
+secretaries were asked to dine with him unless otherwise engaged; and it
+was upon these occasions that he used to appear at his best; obviously
+finding more pleasure in their society than in that of any one else with
+the exception of his own relatives. Affection, indeed, for his relatives
+was one of his most marked characteristics, and it is highly probable
+that his devotion to his sister, the Duchess of Norfolk, and to her sons
+and daughters, was one of the causes of his not marrying; anyhow there
+was no further question of marrying after the failure of the determined
+attempt made upon him by an exalted personage, which has already been
+mentioned.
+
+His temper was singularly equable, and during his long stay in Paris
+it was said that upon two occasions only was he known to have broken
+out; once, when at a review at Longchamps, the Diplomatic Corps were
+allotted an inferior position, and once upon an occasion when his
+coachman appeared wearing trousers instead of top boots and breeches.
+These ebullitions were due to the fact that he attached enormous
+importance to all the outward signs of official representation, and
+strongly resented anything which bore in any degree the nature of a
+slight. In his capacity as a private individual he was the most modest
+and unostentatious of men, and it is recorded, as an instance of his
+shyness, that he once passed a week at Woburn without ever leaving the
+precincts of the garden, because he was so much embarrassed by the
+salutations of an adjacent lodge keeper.
+
+It might have been supposed that a man of this unimaginative and
+eminently judicial character would have failed to secure the regard
+of his subordinates, however highly he might be esteemed by Cabinets
+and Foreign Secretaries. As a matter of fact, probably no chief ever
+enjoyed greater popularity, which was due to a variety of causes. He
+was essentially a kind-hearted man, his correspondence abounds with
+instances of help given to persons who had been in his employment in
+any capacity, however humble; of opportune assistance rendered to
+other persons who had been unlucky in their public careers, and of
+recommendations of men whose services appeared to deserve recognition.
+And in spite of his apparently detached nature, he took the warmest
+interest in all those who were connected with him officially, and
+invariably showed the utmost consideration, not only for their feelings,
+but for their personal convenience. Thus, unlike some distinguished
+diplomatists, one of his great objects was to save his staff unnecessary
+work; he never put obstacles in the way of persons desiring leave, and
+every afternoon at the earliest possible moment, in order to release
+the Chancery, he used to send across the welcome written message: 'I
+have nothing more for to-day,' although that by no means signified that
+his own labours were concluded. Hardworking himself, he expected his
+secretaries and attaches to do their share, and it was only when they
+conspicuously failed, that he showed any sign of severity. During his
+long career it fell to his lot to administer many reprimands, but these
+were invariably so just and unavoidable, that the culprits seldom,
+if ever, felt any sense of resentment, and he always made a point of
+obliterating as soon as possible, any disagreeable incident of this
+nature. The consequence was that he had no enemies, and no one who was
+ever associated with him, has, so far as is known, ever had anything
+but good to say of him. Another excellent feature in his character was
+that he always made the best of his subordinates instead of searching
+for their weak points; however unpromising the material, he generally
+succeeded in effecting a marked improvement, and whenever any one who
+had been with him left for another post, he never failed to draw special
+attention to such good qualities as he appeared to possess with the view
+of assisting him in his future career. Perhaps I may be pardoned for
+interposing a personal testimonial, upon the occasion of a temporary
+transfer to Berne, which may serve as an example amongst many others.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, May 15, 1883.
+
+ MY DEAR ADAMS,[30]
+
+ I have settled that Legh is to be at Berne on the 28th, and I
+ hope you will like him. He is clever and well informed, though some
+ people think he does not look it.
+
+It need scarcely be added that many of the communications of this
+nature are of a more elaborate character, and refer to persons who now
+occupy distinguished positions in the British Diplomatic Service. As
+Lord Lyons grew older he became more and more reluctant to part with men
+whom he knew well, and it was pathetic to witness the obvious sorrow
+which he felt at their departure.
+
+Paris has always been the most coveted post on the Continent, and in
+addition to the social attractions of the place, the Embassy enjoyed
+the reputation of carrying on its business in an efficient manner
+chiefly owing to the qualities of the Ambassador. The reputation was
+well deserved, and I can only recall one serious _lache_, not devoid,
+however, of humour, as to which I was unjustly alleged to be the
+culprit. At a moment when critical negotiations respecting intervention
+in Egypt were proceeding with the French Government, a member of the
+Embassy had an extremely confidential conversation with an important
+French Cabinet Minister, in the course of which the Minister criticized
+in very uncomplimentary terms his Ministerial colleagues, and the
+conversation was immediately embodied in a confidential despatch to
+the British Foreign Office. The following morning a much agitated
+Chef de Cabinet appeared at the Chancery, bearing the despatch, and
+announced that he 'thought that some mistake had occurred, as the
+despatch had been received by the French Minister for Foreign Affairs.'
+To the general consternation, it now became evident that the despatch,
+instead of being placed in the Foreign Office bag, had found its way
+into a lithographed envelope addressed to the _Ministre des Affaires
+Etrangeres_, and the whole horrid mystery was laid bare. The question
+arose whether Lord Lyons should be told or not; the arguments of fear
+prevailed; the French Minister behaved in an honourable manner and kept
+silence, and Lord Lyons, fortunately for all concerned, never heard
+of an incident which he would have looked upon as little short of a
+calamity.
+
+The only possible criticism that could be brought against Lord Lyons
+as an Ambassador would be that he led too narrow a life, and moved in
+too restricted a circle. Day after day and week after week he led the
+same existence; even his holidays were laid out on the same mechanical
+principle; every year he left his post, much about the same date, took
+the waters at some spa, and then proceeded on a round of visits in
+England, chiefly at the country houses of the governing families, such
+as Knowsley, Chatsworth, Woburn, and Hatfield, but always including
+a prolonged stay with his relatives at Arundel. He was essentially a
+diplomatist of the old type, consorting entirely in Paris with the
+official classes, the Faubourg, and the Haute Finance; keeping the
+press at arm's length, avoiding everything which did not come within
+the scope of his duties, and confining himself strictly to his own
+business. The modern developments of diplomacy; the use of the press,
+the hasty missions of amateur diplomatists, the gushing speeches which
+are apparently now considered to be obligatory upon the professional
+diplomatist--all this would have been hateful and perhaps impossible to
+a man who could boast that he had spent five years in America without
+making a speech or taking a drink. But in an impartial survey of the
+twenty-eight years which Lord Lyons spent at Washington, Constantinople,
+and Paris, it would be rash to assert that any other man would, under
+similar circumstances, have retained to an equal extent the confidence
+of successive British Governments and the esteem and friendship of
+the long series of Foreign Ministers with whom he was called upon to
+negotiate questions often of the most vital importance.[31]
+
+The main interest in foreign politics in the summer of 1880 lay in
+the Balkan Peninsula. Mr. Goschen had been sent out to Constantinople
+in the place of Sir Henry Layard, and Her Majesty's Government were
+endeavouring energetically to force the Porte to carry out the
+provisions of the Treaty of Berlin with regard to the rectification of
+the Montenegrin and Greek frontiers. The Greek Frontier Question made
+little way, and the Gladstone Government in their diplomatic campaign on
+behalf of the Greeks met with little encouragement or support from the
+other Powers, not even excepting France, who had always been the leading
+advocate of Greek claims. When M. de Freycinet was asked what he was
+prepared to do if the Turks resolved to defy the Conference which was
+then sitting, nothing more satisfactory could be got out of him than:
+_nous marcherons avec vous_, or _nous ne marcherons pas sans vous_, and
+to the question whether he would go far if necessary, he only made the
+cryptic reply, _peut-etre bien_. The British Government were hankering
+after a naval demonstration, and it was disheartening to work with so
+pusillanimous a comrade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 21, 1880.
+
+ In answer to your private and personal letter of the day
+ before yesterday, I may say that I am not much afraid of the
+ French not being willing to go as far as we are willing to go in
+ coercing the Turks, if they set Europe at defiance about the Greek
+ Frontier. Freycinet seems to shrink from the idea that actual
+ coercion may be required, but his only distinct limit to the action
+ of France is that she will not do more than England.
+
+ I myself very much doubt whether the Turks will yield anything
+ to naval or other demonstrations, unless they are quite sure that
+ these demonstrations are the prelude to the actual use of force,
+ and it will not be easy to get them to believe this, unless we are
+ ourselves quite sure that that is what we mean.
+
+ Supposing we pushed demonstrations to the point of forcing
+ the Dardanelles, and sending the allied fleets to Constantinople,
+ we might produce a revolution, without obtaining the cession of
+ the territory to Greece. If the populations are in parts really
+ unwilling, the central government may be truly unable to compel
+ them to give in.
+
+ Supposing the Greek troops (_par impossible_) be defeated
+ either by the Turkish troops or by recalcitrant Albanians, the
+ ships of the Powers might not be able to do much to get them out of
+ the scrape.
+
+ I am very far from meaning to say, in answer to your question
+ as to the mildest and safest form of coercion, that it would
+ consist in moving troops to occupy the territory. To do so would
+ be neither mild nor safe, nor easy to arrange. But I am afraid
+ we shall find that in the end the treatment must be topical, and
+ that if the Greeks cannot take possession for themselves, we shall
+ hardly be able to obtain it for them by pressure exercised at
+ Constantinople only.
+
+ A rendezvous of the fleets at Corfu might have a good effect
+ on the Albanians, and perhaps increase the chance of the Greeks not
+ being seriously resisted.
+
+ I see Goschen suggests that the decision of the Conference
+ should be announced to the Porte by an identic note. I think a
+ collective note would have more effect and be more appropriate.
+
+The Turks, however dense they may be in other respects, are usually
+intelligent enough to perceive whether the Powers are in earnest or not,
+and as no Government except the British felt much enthusiasm for either
+the Greek or the Montenegrin cause, they showed no signs of giving way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 2, 1880.
+
+ I am afraid it does not look as if the Turks were going to
+ yield to the moral force of United Europe. Leon Say and Montebello
+ seem to hold even less resolute language to you than Freycinet
+ does to me. Did the King of Greece understand Gambetta to say
+ that France, with or without the co-operation of other Powers,
+ would support Greece with troops? Freycinet will no doubt do
+ whatever Gambetta tells him, but one of the inconveniences of the
+ power behind the Government greater than the Government, is that
+ Gambetta does not talk as cautiously as he would if he felt direct
+ responsibility. No power except Russia seems to be willing to bell
+ the cat. France seems to be the only one that has in abundance the
+ three elements--men, ships, and money. Freycinet always says he
+ will do anything with us, but nothing alone, and does not seem much
+ more willing than Austria to look the chance of having to use force
+ in the face.
+
+ I do not see much prospect of an immediate diplomatic lull,
+ and I very much want one because it is of importance to my health
+ (at least the doctors say so) to get away, but I conclude that I
+ ought not to shrink from going through the national Festival of the
+ 14th July, and that I should do what is to be done at least as well
+ as any of my colleagues.
+
+Reviews, it may be said, were functions which he abhorred beyond all
+others.
+
+The King of Greece was in Paris at the time, vainly trying to stir up
+Gambetta to come to his assistance, although Gambetta in conversation
+with Sheffield expressed strong opinions as to the desirability
+of France and England acting energetically in concert, and even
+professed himself in favour of their making a joint demonstration
+at Constantinople, and landing troops there if necessary. Upon the
+same occasion he betrayed his gross ignorance of English politics by
+lamenting that Lord Beaconsfield had not postponed the dissolution until
+the autumn, 'when he would have been certain of success.'
+
+Freycinet, however, remained deaf to Lord Granville's appeals, even when
+the latter reproached him with the humiliating position in which France
+would be placed by abandoning a question which she had made her own, and
+when the British Government proposed a naval demonstration in favour of
+the Prince of Montenegro, made all sorts of excuses for evading it if
+possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 13, 1880.
+
+ I was more displeased than disappointed by the refusal of
+ the French to join in the naval demonstration in favour of the
+ Prince of Montenegro. They always try to act with Germany and
+ have a horror of sending away a ship or a man unless Germany does
+ the same: such is their confidence in the friendship they profess
+ to believe in, that they want always to be ready at the shortest
+ notice to attack their friend or to defend themselves from him.
+ They are also, no doubt, jealous of any separate help to Montenegro
+ which does not explicitly pledge the Powers to action in the Greek
+ Question also.
+
+ I quite agree with you that separate threats from the
+ French to the Porte about Greece (however incorrect their acting
+ separately may be) are more likely to do good than harm. One Power
+ in earnest would frighten the Porte more than the six, if the
+ Porte were convinced that the five others would not restrain the
+ energetic one.
+
+During the next three months the Sultan, single handed, conducted a
+campaign against the six Great Powers, which, as will be seen, nearly
+ended in success; and it must, in fairness, be admitted that there was
+a good deal to be said from the Turkish point of view. The Powers were
+engaged in endeavouring to force the Porte to comply with conditions
+directly or indirectly resulting from the provisions of the Treaty of
+Berlin. But no steps whatever were taken, or ever have been taken, to
+force other States to comply with stipulations which appeared to be
+disagreeable to them. The right of the Sultan, which had been secured to
+him under the Treaty, to occupy Eastern Roumelia, remained in reality
+an empty phrase: the Bulgarian fortresses which were to have been
+demolished, remained untouched, the tribute due from Bulgaria remained
+unpaid, and there was no indication of an intention to reinstate the
+unfortunate Mussulmans who, as the result of the war, had been driven
+away from their homes, and had been despoiled of their property by
+their new Christian masters. Neither could it be justly maintained
+that, in agreeing to a rectification of the Greek frontier at Berlin,
+the Turks had recognized the right of the Greeks to annex a territory
+equal in extent to half of the Greek Kingdom. Added to this, were the
+difficulty and the humiliation involved in surrendering against their
+will, a large number of Mussulman subjects. The difficulty had in fact
+proved insurmountable in the case of Montenegro, and the Albanians
+who were in the first instance allotted to Montenegro offered so
+successful a resistance that the original plan was abandoned, and after
+much negotiation, the Porte accepted 'in principle' the cession of the
+Dulcigno district as an alternative. But the concession of anything 'in
+principle' by the Turks, usually means something quite different from
+the usual interpretation of that expression, and the Sultan succeeded
+in organizing a highly successful so-called Albanian League, and ably
+supported by a resourceful local Pasha, contrived by various expedients
+to delay the surrender of Dulcigno for so long that it began to look
+as if it would never take place at all. Finally, the resources of
+diplomacy becoming exhausted, a policy of coercion was decided upon, and
+an international fleet assembled off the coast of Albania in the month
+of September, under the command of Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour.[32]
+Each power signed a declaration of disinterestedness and a pledge not to
+acquire territory, but the hollow nature of this imposing manifestation
+was betrayed by a provision that no troops were to be landed, and the
+Sultan, who probably had some inkling of the situation, still refused
+to give way. A bombardment of Dulcigno would presumably have left him
+philosophically indifferent.
+
+As the Dulcigno demonstration did not appear likely to produce any
+satisfactory result, the British Government decided upon the hazardous
+step of proposing the seizure of Smyrna, that being considered the most
+efficacious means of coercing the Turks and of preventing the concert of
+the Great Powers from becoming the laughing stock of Europe. This step
+was evidently taken chiefly at the instigation of Mr. Gladstone, and the
+letters of Lord Granville bear witness to the extreme anxiety which
+he felt as to the result. No encouragement whatever was received from
+France; the timorous Freycinet having in the meanwhile been succeeded at
+the Foreign Office by the equally timorous Barthelemy St. Hilaire, an
+aged survival of the Louis Philippe period.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 4, 1880.
+
+ Barthelemy St. Hilaire's answer about the Greek Frontier does
+ not look as if we should receive any energetic help from France
+ towards obtaining the settlement of that or any other question
+ in the East. The answer was all ready cut and dried, and the
+ declaration as to France sticking to the Concert, but not taking
+ any initiative, had been made before to my colleagues. A more
+ experienced diplomatist would have acknowledged more elaborately
+ your courtesy in offering to communicate first with France, before
+ addressing the other cabinets on the Greek Frontier affair.
+
+ The fact is that the present Cabinet is still more frightened
+ than the last by the disapproval which has been manifested by
+ all parties in France of even the little that has already been
+ done. With regard to this, M. St. Hilaire made a remark to me
+ yesterday which seems to be true enough. France, he said, has quite
+ recovered her financial strength, and in great measure her military
+ strength, but the _moral_ of the people is not yet _releve_.
+ They are horribly afraid of another war and consequently utterly
+ averse from anything like a risky or energetic policy. Another
+ popular sentiment, which is extremely inconvenient just now, is the
+ feeling that France made the Crimean War _pour les beaux yeux de
+ l'Angleterre_ and had better not repeat the experiment. Altogether
+ I am afraid France will be a trouble, not a help to us, and I am a
+ good deal put out about it.
+
+ Barthelemy St. Hilaire talked to me a long time about
+ Gambetta, with whom he described himself as very intimate. He
+ described Gambetta as having a naturally generous nature, as being
+ somewhat impulsive and incautious, but at the same time somewhat
+ 'Genoese.' He said that if I took opportunities of associating with
+ him, I should find his character an interesting study. The study
+ will not be a new one to me, and I am not sure that too apparent an
+ intimacy between me and Gambetta would be viewed without jealousy.
+
+M. Jules Ferry, the new Prime Minister, was no more amenable than his
+colleague.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 8, 1880.
+
+ As to the French agreeing to the Smyrna proposal, I cannot
+ prognosticate favourably. I had a long conversation yesterday
+ with Jules Ferry, the Prime Minister. I seemed to make some
+ impression by urging that to break up the European Concert now
+ would be to keep the questions open, with all their inconveniences
+ and all their dangers, for an indefinite time. He also admitted
+ the many advantages of the Smyrna plan, and was quite unable to
+ suggest any other course of action so likely to bring the Sultan
+ to reason without inconvenient consequences. But he perpetually
+ reverted to the argument that it would be going too near war to be
+ admissible under the French Constitution, and that the Chambers
+ on that account would call the Ministers severely to task. The
+ argument from the Constitution seems to me almost absurd, but it
+ is constantly used already in the press, and will no doubt be used
+ hereafter in the Chambers. The fact is that Jules Ferry and his
+ colleagues are horribly afraid of the effect which they believe any
+ action on their part would produce on public opinion and on the
+ Chamber.
+
+ I have seen B. St. Hilaire this afternoon. I went over with
+ him the same ground I had gone over with Jules Ferry yesterday, but
+ with much the same result. He told me that the question had been
+ discussed in the Cabinet this morning and was to be discussed in
+ another Cabinet to-morrow. Perhaps they would not like to stay out
+ in the cold if Germany and Austria came in, but I am afraid they
+ will certainly not say 'yes,' though they may say 'no' before those
+ Powers have given their answer. They seem to argue from the delay
+ of the German Government, that Bismarck is against the proposal.
+ Orloff, my Russian colleague, tells me that he is strongly urging
+ the French to agree. Beust and Radowitz (the German) talk as if
+ they themselves thought well of the Smyrna plan, but say they have
+ heard nothing from their Governments.
+
+ I spoke to B. St. Hilaire about your reasons for communicating
+ first with him about the Greek Question, and he sent with effusion
+ the message of thanks which he ought to have sent at first.
+
+ Choiseul is applying with vigour the _epuration_ system to
+ the Foreign Office and the Diplomatic Service. He seems to have
+ dismissed some very good men in both. Des Michels is one of his
+ victims, and to-day he has decapitated the head of the Commercial
+ Department.
+
+ I think it better not to communicate at present the draft
+ instructions to the Admiral. They would, I think, be seized upon as
+ arguments that the occupation of Smyrna would be an act of war.
+
+Her Majesty's Government were in effect in a very bad mess. The Smyrna
+proposal had received no real support from any Power. Bismarck had
+announced that the so-called Eastern Question was not worth the bones
+of a Pomeranian Grenadier, and nothing was to be expected from him.
+The same thing applied to Austria; neither Italy nor Russia were to be
+relied upon, and France was unwilling and unenterprising. No wonder
+that Lord Granville felt singularly uncomfortable: the Concert of
+Europe, as he expressed it, had 'gone to the devil,' no one was going to
+help him, and unless within a few days the Turks yielded, the British
+Government would be confronted with the alternatives of seizing Smyrna
+single handed or of confessing defeat and abandoning the contest. Lord
+Granville himself was in favour of the latter course, as being logical,
+and the natural consequence of the action of the other Powers, who would
+neither agree to the English proposals nor propose anything themselves.
+Mr. Gladstone, on the other hand, was apparently all for going on and
+acting as the mandatory of Europe, and as he usually got his way, it
+is possible that this dangerous course might have been adopted; but in
+the very nick of time, just at the moment when the situation looked
+to be at its worst, the Sultan suddenly gave way and announced that
+Dulcigno should be handed over to the Montenegrins. What brought about
+this sudden decision has always remained more or less of a mystery, but
+there is no proof that the proposed seizure of Smyrna (which would have
+probably inconvenienced European interests quite as much as the Sultan)
+was the deciding factor. According to the late Lord Goschen, who was in
+as good a position to know the real facts as any one else, the sudden
+surrender of the Sultan was caused by a Havas Agency telegram from
+Paris; but the contents of this communication have never been divulged,
+and Lord Goschen himself never ascertained what they were. The surrender
+of Dulcigno, which took place in November, terminated the crisis and
+enabled the Gladstone Government to claim a striking if lucky success
+for their own particular sample of spirited Foreign Policy.
+
+In the year 1880 the relations between the Liberal Government and
+the Irish Nationalists were the reverse of cordial, and a good many
+inquiries used to come from the Foreign Office respecting alleged Irish
+plots and conspiracies at Paris with requests that the French police
+authorities should be asked to give their assistance. These requests
+Lord Lyons was in the habit of discouraging as much as possible,
+partly from an ingrained dislike to being involved in any secret and
+equivocal transactions, and partly because he knew that if the French
+police gave their assistance in tracking down Irish conspirators, they
+would certainly expect reciprocity in regard to Bonapartists and other
+opponents of the existing system of Government at that time residing
+in England. For these reasons he always urged that the English police
+authorities should communicate direct with the French police authorities
+without using the Embassy as an intermediary. But the efforts of the
+Gladstone Government were not confined to endeavouring to check Irish
+plot by means of the police, and an attempt was made to restrain the
+turbulent bishops and priests engaged in the Home Rule agitation by
+applying pressure upon them from Rome. The credit of this expedient
+seems to have been chiefly due to the active and enterprising cleric,
+Monsignor Czacki, who was acting as Nuncio at Paris, and who appears
+to have conceived the idea that if the Pope could be persuaded to
+intervene on the side of the British Government, it might be possible
+to re-establish regular diplomatic relations between England and the
+Papacy. As far back as December, 1879, Monsignor Czacki had made certain
+overtures, but they met with no attention from Lord Salisbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 18, 1880.
+
+ Last October a very quiet, not to say dull, old Italian
+ prelate was succeeded here as Papal Nuncio by a very active,
+ talkative and agreeable Pole, Monsignor Czacki.
+
+ At the beginning of December Monsignor Czacki came to me and
+ told me that he had received a letter from Ireland accompanied by,
+ or referring to, letters from very important people, among which
+ was, he said, one from you. He had in consequence written to the
+ Pope, and the Pope had written to the Irish Bishops to exhort them
+ to do all in their power to restrain their flocks from taking
+ part in violent or seditious proceedings. Monsignor Czacki asked
+ me whether the state of affairs in Ireland was at the moment so
+ serious as to render it advisable that the Pope should repeat these
+ exhortations to the Irish Bishops. I made a somewhat banal answer
+ to the effect that though there were no grounds for feeling alarm
+ as to the ultimate issue of what was going on, there was good
+ reason that those who possessed influence there should use it for
+ the prevention of crime and outrage, and also of turbulence and
+ disorder.
+
+ I reported what has passed in a private letter to Lord
+ Salisbury, but I received no answer from him, and I heard no more
+ of the matter till yesterday.
+
+ Yesterday, however, Monsignor Czacki came to see me and
+ showed me a letter he had received a few days before from Lord
+ Emly. The letter said that previous intervention had produced the
+ best results, that several Bishops had denounced the agitation in
+ the strongest terms, but that unfortunately the Socialists were
+ publicly supported by various Bishops. It mentioned that the Roman
+ Catholic Bishop of Meath, and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of
+ Cashel had manifested their sympathy with Mr. Parnell, and that the
+ Roman Catholic Bishop of Kilmore had himself recommended Mr. Biggar
+ to the electors as a candidate. The letter begged Monsignor Czacki
+ to intervene again, but it made the request only from Lord Emly
+ himself, without any allusion to you or to any other person, as
+ being cognizant of it.
+
+ Monsignor Czacki said that he entirely sympathized with the
+ views of the writer and intended to send the letter to Rome; and he
+ proceeded to ask me whether I would authorize him to say that he
+ had shown it to me and that he sent it with my approval.
+
+ It seemed to me that this would be bringing the thing much too
+ near Her Majesty's Government for it to be right for me to assent
+ to it without knowing your wishes.
+
+ I confess this mode of communicating with the Vatican does
+ not commend itself to my judgment, and that it seems to me that it
+ might lead to awkwardness and interfere with better means you have
+ of communicating with the Pope, if you wish to communicate with
+ His Holiness at all. At the same time I was not absolutely sure
+ that you might not think there might be some convenience in having
+ this channel open. I did not therefore rebuff Monsignor Czacki, but
+ without giving any hint that I should refer to you, said simply
+ that I would think about what he had said.
+
+ He is very fond of enlarging academically upon the advantages
+ England would derive from entering into regular diplomatic
+ relations with the Holy See, or if that were impossible, from
+ re-establishing an unofficial agent at Rome.
+
+ You will gather from all this that Monsignor Czacki is not
+ altogether disinclined to be busy.
+
+The energetic Nuncio returned to the subject at the close of the year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Dec. 31, 1880.
+
+ You may remember that in June last I gave you in a private
+ letter a long account of a conversation which Monsignor Czacki, the
+ Papal Nuncio here, had volunteered to have with me on Irish affairs.
+
+ Monsignor Czacki came to see me three days ago, and enlarged
+ on the great advantage to the cause of order and tranquillity in
+ Ireland it would be for the Pope to pronounce an authoritative
+ condemnation of the wicked acts perpetrated in that country. He
+ hinted that the Pope had been misled by some of the Irish Bishops
+ who had recently been at Rome, and he dwelt on the inconvenience
+ which arose from the British Government's having no channel of its
+ own through which to communicate direct with His Holiness.
+
+ On the last occasion Monsignor Czacki offered to be himself
+ a channel of communication. He did not repeat this offer, but
+ his object in what he had said appeared to be to lead up again
+ to the question of the establishment of regular diplomatic
+ relations between England and the Vatican, or if that could not be
+ immediately, then to the return to Rome of an unofficial agent, in
+ the same position that was occupied by Odo Russell, and before him,
+ by me. He told me he spoke entirely of his own accord, but that he
+ was sure that Pope Leo XIII. would most willingly receive even an
+ unofficial agent.
+
+ Monsignor Czacki is a very great talker, which makes it easy
+ to say very little in answer to him, and I took full advantage of
+ the facility for being conveniently silent which this afforded me.
+
+ The impression he left upon me was that for some reason or
+ other the authorities at the Vatican decidedly wish to have some
+ sort of agent there, from whom they could receive information
+ respecting the views of the British Government upon the accuracy of
+ which they could fully rely.
+
+ I don't think that if it had depended on me I should have
+ discontinued the unofficial agent, awkward as the position had been
+ made by the presence of the Italian Government and of a regular
+ British Embassy. But to establish one now would be a question of
+ far greater difficulty than to have kept one going.
+
+Whether influenced by Monsignor Czacki or not, Her Majesty's Government
+sent Mr. Errington, a Liberal Member of Parliament, to Rome in an
+ambiguous capacity which was loudly denounced in the House of Commons
+both by Home Rulers and by fervent Protestants, and in the course
+of one of the discussions on the subject, Mr. Gladstone informed an
+astonished audience that there was all the difference in the world
+between an Agent and an 'Agente.'
+
+The French Municipal Elections which took place in January, 1881,
+produced a reassuring impression throughout the country, as both the
+extreme parties were decisively defeated, and the effect was largely
+to increase the power and influence of Gambetta, who was now in the
+enviable position of being able to make or unmake Ministries, and who
+at the opening of the Chambers made a kind of 'speech from the throne'
+which considerably perturbed the uninspiring President Grevy.
+
+Everything that Gambetta now said was of importance, and his views on
+the European situation were ascertained in the usual manner through
+Sheffield.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Feb. 8, 1881.
+
+ Gambetta asked Sheffield to breakfast on Saturday, and as
+ usual talked freely to him.
+
+ He appeared to think that the three Emperors had come to
+ an understanding with each other, and that whatever might be
+ their plans, it was certain that they would not be beneficial
+ to French interests. According to him, it was with the Emperors
+ not a question of the position of their Empires, but of their
+ own individual positions. They were opposed to liberal views and
+ liberal institutions. They were intent upon doing whatever would be
+ most hurtful to the prestige and success of the Republic in France.
+ They were, in fact, reconstituting the Holy Alliance.
+
+ At this moment France was unfortunately powerless. Until the
+ General Election had taken place, her destinies must be at the
+ mercy of any old women who were employed as stopgaps in ephemeral
+ ministries. Since Barthelemy St. Hilaire had been in office he had
+ only seen him once. He knew nothing or next to nothing of what went
+ on at the Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, and what little he did
+ know, he disapproved. 'Que voulez vous,' he said: 'nobody will do
+ anything to commit himself in any way, pending the uncertainty of
+ the elections.'
+
+ He seemed well informed about Egyptian affairs. He praised
+ Malet and said de Ring was entirely in the wrong in his quarrel
+ with de Blignieres, which was very injurious to the calm direction
+ of Egyptian affairs. He expressed an intention to urge the
+ immediate recall of de Ring.
+
+ I mark this letter private because we should get into a great
+ scrape and close a very convenient channel of communication if
+ Gambetta found that he was quoted or that his sayings transpired in
+ any way.
+
+The interest of the year 1881 lies in the fact that it makes a fresh
+departure in French foreign policy and the abandonment of the retiring
+and timorous attitude which had prevailed ever since the war with
+Germany. The first State to experience the inconvenience of this new
+development was Tunis, and early in the year it became evident that
+a very acute Tunis question was imminent. The trouble began over a
+large property known as the Enfida Estate. This property was sold to
+an important French financial association, but upon the sale becoming
+known, a certain Mr. Levy, a Maltese British subject, put in a claim of
+pre-emption under Tunisian Law, and it was believed by the French that
+he had been instigated by the Italians, and was merely utilized by them
+as a convenient means of obstructing French enterprise. The dispute over
+the Enfida Estate rose to such proportions that a French ironclad, the
+_Friedland_, was sent to Tunis in February, and the British Government,
+who were bound to make a show of defending the interests of Mr. Levy,
+in spite of his dubious position, followed suit with H.M.S. _Thunderer_.
+Both vessels were soon withdrawn, but before long it was generally
+believed that a French invasion of the country was contemplated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 25, 1881.
+
+ The French public are getting very cross about Tunis.
+ Reasonable people see that we cannot allow our own subject to be
+ bullied, but the French in general do not distinguish between
+ the Enfida case and the Tunisian questions regarding predominant
+ influence, Italy, and so forth. Drummond Wolff's question last
+ night was very mischievous. It was his own party which gave the
+ assurances at Berlin which have made Tunis so very delicate a
+ matter between the French and us, and which dispose the French to
+ allege that the present Government is less friendly to them about
+ that country than the late. Anyhow, Tunis is the point on which
+ above all others the French are susceptible and irritable; and
+ the Italians, and, however unconsciously, our own Consul too, I
+ am afraid, are always stirring up awkward questions on the spot.
+ I should be heartily glad to be rid of the Enfida question in any
+ creditable manner. I so strongly suspect that Levy is simply put
+ forward by the Tunisians for their own gain, and supported by the
+ local enemies of goodwill between France and England, in order
+ to make mischief, that I only wish we could wash our hands of
+ the whole affair. There seems to me to be no evidence that he is
+ a _bona fide_ purchaser on his own account. Tunis is the really
+ ticklish point in our relations with France.
+
+The Enfida Estate case was not only unsatisfactory on account of Mr.
+Levy not being a very desirable _protege_, but because it enabled
+the French to manufacture a grievance against the Bey, and gave the
+Italians an opportunity to encourage that unfortunate potentate in the
+belief that he would receive foreign support in the event of French
+aggression.
+
+The intentions of the French Government were disclosed before long.
+Shortly after the wretched Bey had protested against a memorial
+containing a long list of alleged French grievances against the
+Government of Tunis, M. Jules Ferry, on the ever convenient plea of the
+necessity of chastising hostile frontier tribes, asked for votes of
+credit for both the army and the navy, which were unanimously agreed to.
+Before the expedition actually started, the French agent at Tunis, M.
+Roustan, visited the Bey and informed him that the French preparations
+were intended to protect him against the Sultan of Turkey, who desired
+to convert Tunis into a Turkish Pashalic, and that, under these
+circumstances, it was very desirable that Tunis should be placed under
+a French Protectorate. It was quite in vain that the unhappy Bey urged
+that he had no reason to suspect the Sultan of any such intention and
+that he had not the slightest desire for a French Protectorate; he was
+informed that he was not the best judge of his own interest, and that
+French troops would shortly enter his country to chastise the Kroumirs,
+a race of whom nobody had yet heard, but who apparently constituted a
+serious menace to the French Republic.
+
+The obvious design of the French drew from Lord Granville an opinion
+that they could not be allowed to seize upon Tunis without the consent
+of Turkey, and the permission of other Powers; but to this opinion not
+much attention seems to have been paid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 5, 1881.
+
+ I have thought it necessary to instruct you to inquire into
+ the state of affairs at Tunis. You are not likely to do so in an
+ unnecessarily offensive manner.
+
+ I am told that the French are determined to establish their
+ Protectorate. This will be very awkward at the moment.
+
+ Pray look as mysterious as you can, as to what might be our
+ attitude.
+
+ We do not wish to follow the example of the foolish opposition
+ made to Algiers, but the French cannot be allowed to seize Tunis
+ without the consent of Turkey and communication with the rest of
+ Europe.
+
+ The Italians wish us to move vigorously in the matter; the
+ Italian Government seems alarmed at the excitement of their chamber.
+
+It was all very well to say that the 'French cannot be allowed to seize
+Tunis,' but when a big European Power decides to pounce upon a weak and
+decaying Oriental State, it is not of the slightest use to employ such
+language if merely moral suasion is contemplated. The recent action
+of the Italian Government with regard to Tripoli[33] was the exact
+repetition of French action with regard to Tunis, and remonstrances were
+of no more avail in one case than in the other. The Bey sent piteous
+protests and appeals for justice to all the Great Powers, but as Italy,
+the only Power which really objected, was not prepared to fight, his
+lamentations fell upon deaf ears. Meanwhile, in an attempt to justify
+their bare-faced aggression, the French Government apparently handed to
+M. Blowitz, the _Times_ correspondent at Paris, a despatch from Lord
+Salisbury written in 1878, which it had been agreed should be treated as
+confidential, and it was intimated in the press that further private
+and confidential communications would appear in a forthcoming Yellow
+Book. This produced a very justifiable remonstrance from Lord Salisbury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Hatfield, April 24, 1881.
+
+ I am not sure that I am not irregular in addressing to you any
+ communication on public affairs. But I think I have been told that
+ a certain license is accorded to disembodied Foreign Secretaries,
+ of haunting the scenes of their former misdeeds.
+
+ My cause of writing is this. My eye caught a statement in one
+ or two English papers that St. Hilaire intended to print in the
+ forthcoming Yellow Book, Waddington's first despatch to d'Harcourt
+ on coming back from Berlin. I had a dim recollection that it was
+ undiplomatically phrased and had been withdrawn: but I could
+ remember no more.
+
+ Is it not rather a strong measure for a Government to withdraw
+ a despatch to which objection is taken at the time, when it might
+ be answered, and then to publish it three years later, when the
+ materials for answering it no longer exist? However, perhaps I am
+ wrong in assuming that the newspaper report is correct.
+
+Lord Salisbury was quite correct in his recollection, and the intention
+of publishing the despatch referred to was not carried out, but various
+attempts were made to fix upon him the responsibility for French action
+in Tunis.
+
+Lord Granville, although he confessed to disliking the process, had to
+content himself with ineffectual barking.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ April 22, 1881.
+
+ You will not like a despatch I send you, and I am rather sorry
+ to send it. But I do not see how we are to give France _carte
+ blanche_.
+
+ I dislike barking without biting, but if the result of not
+ barking (in contradistinction to all that was done under Louis
+ Philippe and Napoleon, when English remonstrances certainly stopped
+ the French) is the annexation of Tunis, or the creation of the
+ great port of Bizerta impregnable by naval force and neutralizing
+ Malta, we should look rather foolish.
+
+ Notwithstanding the present Chauvinism about Tunis, it would
+ not be a sweetmeat for the French to have England, Italy and the
+ Arabs inside and outside Algeria against her.
+
+ It is as well that she should not imagine that this is
+ perfectly impossible.
+
+ But, of course, I wish to ruffle her as little as possible,
+ and nobody will wrap up the warning of our doctrine as to the
+ Ottoman Empire better than you will.
+
+Undeterred by Lord Granville's just remonstrances and equally undeterred
+by the Sultan's assertion of his suzerainty claims, the French entered
+Tunis and occupied the capital on May 11, after little more than a
+mere promenade. On the following day the Treaty of the Bardo, which
+practically established a French Protectorate over the country, was
+extorted from the Bey, and declarations by the French Government made it
+clear that no intervention, direct or indirect, would be tolerated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 13, 1881.
+
+ Barthelemy St. Hilaire certainly foreshadowed the Tunisian
+ Treaty accurately when he said that it would very much resemble a
+ Protectorate. It is so like one that it would be difficult to point
+ out a difference. The guaranteeing the execution of the Treaties of
+ the European Powers is sufficiently impertinent. As in all these
+ French expeditions, there is a vast amount of dirty pecuniary
+ stockjobbing interests at the bottom, which have been the real
+ motive power.
+
+ The whole affair is of very bad augury. It will inspire the
+ French Public with a love of resorting to high-handed proceedings
+ which can be indulged in without any real risk. Gambetta said to
+ Dilke that his Cherbourg speech was the first glass of wine given
+ to the Convalescent France, good for her but somewhat startling to
+ her system. This Tunis expedition is the second. The patient has
+ swallowed it so complacently that she may soon wish for another,
+ and perhaps a stronger stimulant. They got Bismarck's leave for
+ this, and it will perhaps be a long time before they do anything
+ of the kind without his leave. But then he will be sure to push
+ them on to any undertakings which will occupy their minds and their
+ forces, and tend to put them on bad terms with other Powers. And
+ this is disquieting, for there are not wanting all over the globe
+ places and questions in which the French might make themselves very
+ inconvenient and disagreeable to us, and might, if encouraged by
+ Bismarck, come at last to a downright quarrel with us.
+
+ Add to this the state of feeling in the English manufacturing
+ districts which is likely to be produced by the Commercial
+ proceedings of the French, and their virulent Protectionism, and
+ the prospect looks gloomy enough.
+
+The actual proceedings of the French in Tunis were in reality of less
+importance as regards England than the spirit which they betrayed, for
+their reception by the French public indicated a state of feeling which
+might have dangerous consequences. The preparations for the expedition
+were not considered by impartial critics as particularly creditable
+to the skill or efficiency of the French military administration, and
+there had been nothing like serious fighting in the short campaign. The
+question had simply been one of bullying a defenceless ruler, and of
+carrying on a high-handed policy in the face of Europe. Nevertheless
+the whole affair was hailed with almost unanimous delight by the French
+people. Nor, apparently, was this delight diminished by the reflection
+that the expedition had not been undertaken without the approval and
+encouragement of the German Government, and that the favour had been
+acknowledged with almost humiliating gratitude.
+
+Gambetta had represented that his object was to emancipate France
+from the humiliation of having to consult Bismarck confidentially
+beforehand upon every step she took, but this humiliating precaution was
+certainly not neglected in the case of Tunis, and if there had been the
+slightest suspicion that the expedition would have involved France in
+any difficulty with Germany, public opinion would at once have declared
+against it. From the German point of view this was satisfactory enough,
+but scarcely reassuring as far as other Powers were concerned.
+
+The French had shown that they rejoiced in any high-handed proceedings
+which did not bring them into collision with Germany, and whilst it was
+not improbable that their rulers would seek popularity by gratifying
+this feeling, it seemed not unlikely that the policy pursued by
+Germany with regard to the Tunis expedition would be persevered in. To
+disseminate the forces of France and to divert the minds of the French
+from Alsace and Lorraine by encouraging them to undertake distant
+enterprises for the gratification of their vanity, was an obvious means
+of increasing the safety of Germany, and the more such enterprises
+tended to alienate from France the sympathies of other Powers, the more
+they would contribute to the security of Germany. Unfortunately there
+were scattered over the globe, numerous islands and other territories,
+the annexation of which by France might be prejudicial to English
+material interests or objectionable to English feeling; and there were,
+moreover, various countries in which the undue extension of French
+influence might be dangerous to England, and where France, if tempted
+or encouraged to resort to arbitrary proceedings, might, without
+deliberately intending it, become involved in a downright quarrel with
+England. These considerations made it desirable that especial caution
+should be exercised in the case of Egypt. The effect of the Tunis
+expedition upon Egypt had been twofold. On the one hand, it increased
+Egyptian suspicions of the insincerity and rapacity of European Powers;
+on the other hand, it increased the reputation of France in Egypt at the
+expense of the other Powers and of England in particular, and diminished
+any confidence in being effectively protected from French encroachments.
+The lesson of the Tunis expedition was obvious; it would clearly be
+folly, either by withholding the tribute or by any other step to weaken
+the connexion of Egypt with the Porte, for the French Government had
+taken elaborate pains to show that in dealing with Tunis it was dealing
+with an independent Power. This contention had naturally been resisted
+by the Porte, and there was little difficulty in proving that suzerainty
+had been effectually established by a Firman of 1871. But the Sultan of
+Turkey, who in the past had enjoyed the possession of more suzerainties
+than any other potentate, had seldom derived anything but embarrassment
+from this particular attribute, and in the case of Tunis it proved
+to be singularly inconvenient. Encountering no opposition from other
+Powers, the French flouted the claims of Abdul Hamid, and in order to
+signify their new position, announced that the French representative
+would thenceforth take charge of all foreign questions. In spite,
+however, of the flexibility of the European conscience with regard to
+the general principle of the Sultan's suzerainty, it was recognized
+that under certain circumstances that principle must be conscientiously
+upheld; and it was, therefore, intimated, more or less directly to the
+French Government, that although the Sultan's suzerainty in Tunis was a
+negligible quantity, the situation in Tripoli was quite different, and
+so, in a far greater degree, was that of Egypt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 17, 1881.
+
+ It is most true that the danger of bad relations between us
+ and the French arises from their proceedings not ours, and that
+ this makes the great difficulty in meeting it.
+
+ The change of their position with regard to Bismarck is
+ another great difficulty. A little while ago dread of Germany
+ made them unwilling to send a regiment or a ship to a distance
+ from France, but since the Tunis affair, they have gone into the
+ trap he has set for them with their eyes open. They feel sure of
+ his support and encouragement in any distant enterprises, and the
+ surer of it in proportion to the hostility which such enterprises
+ may provoke in England and Italy. They thus find a cheap way of
+ gratifying their vanity, and of advancing some of their apparent
+ interests. This coquetting with Bismarck does, moreover, divert
+ their thoughts from Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+ I don't think it would be prudent to make any special advances
+ to Gambetta at this moment. We might not please him and we should
+ very probably offend Grevy and Barthelemy St. Hilaire, and so
+ interfere with the practical treatment of present questions, such
+ as the Commercial Treaty, the West Coast of Africa, Newfoundland,
+ etc.
+
+ The anomalous position of the French in Tunis, and the
+ proceedings of Roustan[34] there, will keep up irritation in
+ England and Italy--and I suppose the French, annuente Bismarck,
+ will cut the Gordian knot, sooner or later, by annexing it. They
+ ought in consequence to acquiesce in some improvement of the
+ position of England in Egypt, but this is dangerous ground.
+
+The overbearing attitude of the French officials in Tunis caused
+considerable irritation in England, and something akin to exasperation
+in Italy. The Italians, had they felt strong enough to do so, would have
+resisted the French pretensions by force, but being without an ally at
+the time, had to content themselves with violent ebullitions in the
+press. The ill-feeling between the two countries was marked by serious
+riots at Marseilles and other towns in the South of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 24, 1881.
+
+ I did my best to impress upon B. St. Hilaire yesterday that
+ there was real bitterness of feeling among the public in England,
+ and that if the French Government and its agents persisted in a
+ series of irritating measures, the consequences might be very
+ inconvenient. The French had got all they could want, I said, and
+ I could not help wondering that it did not strike them that their
+ policy should now be to let the new system settle down quietly,
+ to avoid occasions of controversy about it, and in short, to let
+ Tunis be as little heard of as possible at present. It was an ill
+ return, I observed, for the great patience and friendliness shown
+ by our Government, to be perpetually springing upon them surprises
+ unpalatable to English public opinion. He professed to _abonder
+ dans mon sens_. I entreated him to keep his subordinates in order.
+
+ The French seem to have an unpleasant business in Western
+ Algeria, and there is beginning to be an outcry against the
+ military and civil management of the troubles there.
+
+ Good feeling between French and Italians will not be promoted
+ by late events at Marseilles. The feelings of the French towards
+ the Italians there are like those of the American workman towards
+ the Chinese at San Francisco, or of the Irish towards the negroes
+ at New York. There are said to be more than 50,000 Italians at
+ Marseilles, and they are apt to use their knives.
+
+ There are symptoms of a growing antagonism between Jules Ferry
+ and Gambetta, signs of the feeling between the Elysee and the
+ Palais Bourbon.
+
+After all, the Tunis expedition turned out to be a rather more
+troublesome affair than had appeared probable at first. At the end of
+June insurrections broke out at Sfax and other places, necessitating the
+recall of French troops who had been sent back to France; bombardments,
+and other severe measures of repression. The insurrection spread into
+Algiers on the western side, and on the eastern side the disturbances
+created the possibility of a violation of the frontier of Tripoli by the
+French troops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 5, 1881.
+
+ Retribution has come quickly upon the French for their
+ hypocritical seizure of Tunis. The Arabs seem to be upon them
+ in all directions. Although this serves them right, it is, I
+ think, much to be regretted for political reasons, independently
+ of the suffering it causes to un-offending Europeans of various
+ nationalities in Africa.
+
+ If the French have to send a large force to Tunis, they will
+ very probably, formally as well as virtually, annex the Regency.
+ Tripoli will then stand exactly in the same relation to them
+ that Tunis did before the assumption of the Protectorate. After
+ Tripoli would come Egypt; but happily there is, I believe, a very
+ impracticable desert tract between them.
+
+ How great must be the complacency of those who desire to
+ occupy French troops in distant countries, and to involve France in
+ difficulties with other Powers.
+
+If the action of the French in seizing Tunis was hypocritical, the
+contention that the case of Tripoli stood on an entirely different
+footing was equally unconvincing. The real truth, of course, was that,
+with the exception of the Italians, no one really objected to the French
+going to Tunis. They went there, under distinctly false professions,
+announcing that the expedition was intended solely to punish refractory
+tribes, and that the occupation was merely temporary. The disclosure
+of their real objects naturally caused irritation in England as well
+as in Italy, but all hostile criticism was met by the assertion of the
+Liberal Government that Lord Salisbury had himself invited the French
+to take Tunis at the time of the Berlin Congress. The French themselves
+were careful to represent that they had only followed Lord Salisbury's
+advice, and Lord Granville, in defence of his own policy, always
+maintained that the phrase attributed to Lord Salisbury, _Carthage ne
+doit pas rester aux barbares_, had cut the ground from beneath his
+feet, and rendered remonstrance useless. But to make Lord Salisbury
+responsible for this act of flagrant immorality seems, in the face of
+such evidence as is available, unjustifiable. All that he had done was
+to intimate that he had heard that the French were extremely anxious
+to go to Tunis; that if they did so, British interests would not be
+endangered, and that he should consequently look on with indifference.
+When M. Waddington, in 1878, construed this opinion as an invitation to
+France to appropriate Tunis, Lord Salisbury felt bound to remonstrate,
+and he wrote to Lord Lyons, as has been already shown. 'He (Waddington)
+makes me talk of Tunis and Carthage as if they had been my own personal
+property, and I was making him a liberal wedding present.' The real
+instigator of the Tunis expedition was not Lord Salisbury, but Bismarck.
+The latter, who was omnipotent in Europe at the time, could have stopped
+French action at any moment he pleased, but instead of doing so, he
+naturally encouraged an enterprise which was certain to lead eventually
+to difficulties between France, Italy, and England.
+
+While, however, it was convenient to overlook any French illegality
+with reference to Tunis and to its connection with the Turkish Empire,
+it would have been, as has already been shown, manifestly imprudent
+to allow Tripoli, which stood in a precisely similar position, to be
+menaced with a similar fate: besides which, Italy had already marked
+Tripoli down as her own prey. Accordingly the French Government were
+informed that 'in view of the unquestioned incorporation of Tripoli in
+the Turkish Empire, as well as its proximity to Egypt, Her Majesty's
+Government could not regard interference of whatever description on
+the part of the French Government in that province in the same manner
+as they viewed the recent occurrences at Tunis. That Her Majesty's
+Government should take this view of the question of Tripoli cannot, they
+feel assured, be a source of surprise to that of France, since they
+have, on all occasions when the question of the extension of French
+influence in the direction of Egypt has been under discussion, been
+perfectly frank in their explanations with the French Government on the
+subject.' In his reply to this communication, M. B. St. Hilaire (who
+had previously announced that to annex Tunis would be a great mistake),
+effusively stated that the French Government looked upon Tripoli as
+an integral part of the Ottoman Empire, over which it did not pretend
+to exercise a predominant or exclusive influence, and gave a formal
+denial to all rumours which attributed to France any designs upon that
+country. The British Government professed itself quite satisfied with
+these assurances, and the Porte, for once in a way, showed sufficient
+intelligence to make its suzerainty quite clear, by despatching troops
+to garrison the country, and by other precautionary measures. In
+consequence of these steps Tripoli remained immune from attack for
+another thirty-two years, and when, in 1912, the Italians, following
+the French example of 1881, fell suddenly upon it without any serious
+attempt at justification, they did not allege that they were attacking a
+semi or wholly-independent State, but declared war upon Turkey itself,
+and incidentally brought about the destruction of Turkish power in
+Europe. The future of Tripoli under Italian rule is still obscure, while
+the numerous prophecies of failure which attended the seizure of Tunis
+by the French have not been fulfilled, but in either case it would be
+difficult to justify the morality of the enterprise or to defend the
+policy of these two Great Christian Powers.
+
+The year 1881 witnessed the renewal of negotiations for a new Commercial
+Treaty between France and England, and in consequence of opinions
+expressed by M. Tirard, the French Minister of Commerce, it was
+determined to take the negotiations out of the hands of diplomatists.
+M. Tirard had declared that he believed that an understanding could be
+effected if the question could be freed from diplomatic dilatoriness,
+and that if he were brought face to face with a 'competent and
+well-disposed man,' the whole matter would be settled within a week
+by making a few mutual concessions. To meet these views, the late Sir
+Charles Dilke, M.P., was appointed principal British Commissioner with
+the late Sir Joseph Crowe, Sir Alfred Bateman, and other distinguished
+experts as his colleagues or assistants, but M. Tirard's prognostication
+turned out to be entirely incorrect. In spite of the great ability
+and indefatigable industry of Sir Charles Dilke and the other British
+Commissioners, the negotiations made a very unsatisfactory start,
+were constantly broken off, and were not even concluded by the end
+of the year, so that it must have been impressed upon M. Tirard that
+dilatoriness was not necessarily due to diplomacy. From the first, the
+negotiations were unpromising, for Free Trade had continually receded in
+France since the Empire, and the necessity of cultivating good political
+relations with England was evidently less in 1881 than it had been upon
+the last occasion.
+
+The representatives of the two nations met in London in June, and an
+inauspicious beginning was made by the French Commissioners repudiating
+the bases signed in 1880 by Lord Granville and M. Leon Say. By the
+middle of the month the breaking off of the negotiations was already
+being considered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Sir C. Dilke, M.P._
+
+ Paris, June 14, 1881.
+
+ I received last evening your letter of the day before, asking
+ me whether I had anything to say on the policy of breaking off the
+ commercial negotiations when you get to work.
+
+ I don't think we should lose sight of the fact that there will
+ in all probability be a thorough change of Government in France in
+ the autumn. We might _perhaps_ get a decent treaty from the new
+ Government if they found the negotiations in progress. It might
+ not be so easy to get negotiations reopened if they had once been
+ broken off, and the French had become accustomed to the idea of
+ having the general tariff applied to British goods.
+
+ Politically, it would, I think, be a great pity to begin
+ ill with the new Government, and I don't think we could possibly
+ begin well, in the state of feeling which would be produced in
+ this country, and still more I suppose in England, by a commercial
+ rupture.
+
+ The majority of the French would be very glad that the general
+ tariff, or still higher duties, should be enforced against English
+ goods, but they would none the less be irritated by our breaking
+ with them.
+
+ I confess, too, that I am alarmed, perhaps without sufficient
+ reason, at the effect which may be produced both at home and abroad
+ by the cry in England for retaliation.
+
+ My own plan would be, for the present, to pursue the
+ negotiation as seriously and as steadily as is compatible with
+ not committing ourselves to any decidedly objectionable duties so
+ definitely as to be hampered in subsequent negotiations if we find
+ the new Government more fairly disposed towards us.
+
+ If there was ever any possibility of concluding a Treaty in
+ time for it to be passed by the Chambers this Session, there is
+ certainly none now. Gambetta wanted to get the question out of the
+ way before the elections; but even if the Treaty were signed, I
+ don't think the Chambers could be induced to consider it under
+ present circumstances. Nor would they, I should think, pass a bill
+ to prolong the existing Treaties.
+
+ To my mind, our most prudent course would be to let the new
+ Chambers find the negotiations going on when they meet in the
+ autumn. I don't of course mean that you should go on sitting every
+ week from this time to the autumn: it would suffice that there
+ should not be any adjournment _sine die_, and that we should not
+ give any ground for an assertion that we are not really willing to
+ conclude even a moderately fair treaty.
+
+Lord Lyons, as has already been stated, was, like almost every British
+official of the time, a firm and almost bigoted Free Trader; and it
+is possible that his alarm at the prospect of retaliation was caused
+by the appearance of the Fair Trade League; that harbinger of Tariff
+Reform to which somewhat inadequate justice has been rendered by its
+imitators. But it is surprising to learn of these qualms, when he is
+found predicting that the smaller countries who were willing and able to
+retaliate on French goods, would obtain better terms than England. The
+very different spirit in which the smaller States approached commercial
+questions with France is shown in the following instructive account of
+the views of the Swiss Minister at Paris, M. Kern.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Sir C. Dilke._
+
+ Paris, June 25, 1881.
+
+ Last evening, after my letter to you of yesterday had gone, I
+ met Kern, who told me that in the course of the day he had had an
+ interview with M. Tirard, and also one with M. Gambetta. He had,
+ he said, declared most distinctly to both, first, that Switzerland
+ would not sign a Treaty placing her in a less advantageous
+ commercial position than that now existing; and secondly, that
+ if the general tariff were applied to Swiss goods, French goods
+ would be forthwith subjected to duties of precisely the same amount
+ in Switzerland. He had, he said, somewhat surprised M. Tirard by
+ informing him that the Swiss Government had power to impose such
+ duties at once, without waiting for legislative sanction.
+
+ The impression left upon Kern's mind by the two interviews
+ was, that as hard a bargain as possible would be driven by France,
+ but that in the end they would rather make moderate treaties than
+ no treaties at all, if they saw that this was the only alternative.
+
+ He is going to Berne to confer with his Government, and he
+ says that he is sure they will approve and confirm his language to
+ Tirard and Gambetta.
+
+ After these interviews, Kern was very positive that the French
+ Government were making a great fight to justify themselves to the
+ Chambers, but that if the Powers, and particularly England, were
+ firm, the French would yield rather than incur the political and
+ other inconveniences of not making any treaty at all.
+
+ I am not so sure as he seemed to be of this, but I think that
+ the French are alive to the political inconveniences of breaking
+ with England altogether; and it might therefore be worthy of your
+ consideration, whether, when you go back to the Articles you
+ reserved in the Tariff, you should not make a last effort to see
+ whether the French cannot be brought to consent to a Treaty which
+ would be better commercially than no Tariff Treaty at all. It might
+ interfere with whatever chance of success such an effort might
+ have, for the French to feel beforehand that they could get out of
+ the political difficulty by signing a simple Most Favoured Nation
+ Treaty.
+
+ Nevertheless I am not shaken in my opinion that it would be
+ advisable for you to sign a Most Favoured Nation Treaty, if better
+ may not be, before you break up the Commission, or adjourn it for
+ any long time.
+
+ Commercially we had better make sure at once of sharing the
+ concessions which may be made to other Powers under threats of
+ retaliation.
+
+ Politically we should, I think, find it most disadvantageous
+ to have even the appearance of being on bad terms with France.
+
+The British Government apparently still entertained the illusion
+that there were real French Free Traders. M. Challemel Lacour was
+the chief French Commissioner and Lord Granville welcomed him as a
+brother Free Trader. His brother Free Trader said it was true that he
+was _Libre-Echangiste_, but he was _Libre-Echangiste Francais_, and
+recognized the necessity of paying due consideration to the interests of
+native industries. To this chilling response, Lord Granville was forced
+to retort that he must venture to doubt whether a _Libre-Echangiste
+Francais_, in His Excellency's acceptation of the term, was not what
+in England was called a Protectionist. M. Waddington had once stated
+that he was a Free Trader 'bar cotton,' and whenever the French Radical
+Parliamentary candidates, who were then perambulating the country in
+view of an approaching general election, were asked whether they were
+Free Traders or not, they replied in the affirmative, but qualified by
+a reserve in favour of French industries which would be ruined by Free
+Trade. As a matter of fact, the spirit of Protection was becoming more
+and more ingrained in the French people, and the best chance of getting
+a reasonable Commercial Treaty lay in the hope that an election would
+bring Gambetta into power.
+
+The London negotiations which had been temporarily suspended were
+resumed at Paris in the autumn, and continued during the remainder of
+the year; but interest was diverted from commercial matters to the
+events which were occurring in Egypt and their probable effect upon
+Anglo-French relations.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 29: Subsequently Viscount Goschen.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Sir Francis Adams, Minister at Berne.]
+
+[Footnote 31: See Appendix by Mrs. Wilfrid Ward, "Lord Lyons in Private
+Life."]
+
+[Footnote 32: Afterwards Lord Alcester.]
+
+[Footnote 33: 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 34: French Consul-General at Tunis.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ARABI'S REBELLION
+
+(1881-1882)
+
+
+In September, 1881, the long-drawn-out Egyptian crisis culminated in the
+military _coup d'etat_ of Arabi and the colonels, which resulted in the
+dismissal of the Ministry and the practical establishment in Egypt of a
+military dictatorship. From that moment European intervention, in some
+form, became inevitable, and it was the object of the British Government
+to continue to adhere honestly and consistently to the policy of working
+in conjunction with France, and to avoid carefully as long as possible
+any action which might necessitate the employment of force.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Sept. 30, 1881.
+
+ The article in the _Times_ has produced an anti-English
+ explosion on the subject of Egypt, and was certainly well
+ calculated to do so.
+
+ For my part, I think the best thing to be done is to take an
+ opportunity of distinctly manifesting at Cairo the continuance of
+ the Anglo-French understanding.
+
+ If we let either the Egyptians or Foreign Powers suppose they
+ can upset that, we shall not be able to maintain the English and
+ French Controllers, and if they disappear, the financial prosperity
+ will disappear with them, and we shall have the bondholders,
+ French and English, on our backs again.
+
+ If we let in other Foreign Powers, and at the same time try
+ to establish English predominance, we shall have those Powers
+ coalescing with France against us.
+
+ A split with us would very probably lead to France throwing
+ herself into the arms of Bismarck, and he would encourage all
+ her ambitious aims out of Europe, and, in particular, those
+ the prosecution of which would widen the breach between her
+ and England: or, in other words, be especially annoying and
+ inconvenient to us.
+
+ I hope things are so far calming down in Egypt, that we may
+ not be called upon to take any special measures this time; and
+ the best hope of avoiding them in future seems to be in making it
+ understood that England and France united will resist attempts to
+ overthrow the existing system.
+
+ I am all against letting the Turks thrust the smallest finger
+ into the pie. At this moment the French would never consent, and
+ would consider our bringing in the Turks a specially unfriendly
+ act, with a view to their Tunisian affairs. The less they merit any
+ consideration from us, the more sore they will be at not receiving
+ it. Besides which, where the Turkish hoof has trod, no grass grows,
+ and woe to the finances of any country with which the Turk can
+ meddle.
+
+ Of course, in what I have said about Egypt I have confined
+ myself to the present and the immediate future.
+
+The chances of being able to avoid active intervention were in reality
+non-existent; for temporizing measures taken in conjunction with France
+could not put off for ever the day when, moral pressure having been
+found insufficient, armed force would necessarily have to be employed.
+When that day arrived, the probability was that France would want to
+send troops in conjunction with ours, and our consent to that course
+might involve us in war with France in a very short time. If we had the
+courage to tell the French that our interests were paramount in Egypt,
+and that therefore all other European Powers must be kept out, then we
+must be prepared to back our words with force, and everything therefore
+pointed to the naval superiority of England in the Mediterranean as
+being our paramount necessity. With real naval superiority in the
+Mediterranean we were practically able to make the French do our
+bidding, if we chose. We had the power to shut up their navy in French
+ports, to stop their communications with Africa, to render powerless
+two millions of French soldiers, and to demolish Bismarck's schemes
+of elbowing us out of the Mediterranean. Such was the happy position
+which we enjoyed in 1881, and it was a great contrast to that which
+we occupy at the present day; but it did not tend towards promoting
+goodwill between the two nations, and Lord Lyons constantly urged
+that some joint understanding should be arrived at, in the event of
+another military outbreak in Egypt. The situation had been complicated
+by the despatch of a Turkish mission, and the general impression in
+France was that Arabi and the colonels would shortly be engaged in a
+conspiracy to dethrone the Khedive and to restore something like the old
+_regime_ in the country. A positive declaration from the English and
+French Governments that they would not tolerate the overthrow of the
+Khedive and the established system might have effected much if it was
+felt that the two Governments would interfere by force, if necessary,
+rather than permit it; but this would not be felt or believed unless
+the two Governments had really come to an understanding and had agreed
+upon details; and when it came to discussing details the question
+at once presented difficulties. These difficulties were not lessened
+by a French Ministerial crisis in the autumn, as a crisis usually
+produced a fit of petty Chauvinism, such an encouragement to Consuls
+in the East to _porter haut le drapeau de la France_, the bullying of
+local authorities, and a demand for the extortion of monopolies and
+concessions for French speculators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 4, 1881.
+
+ The Treaty of Commerce and Egypt will probably be the two
+ first questions we shall have to discuss with the new Government.
+
+ The Commercial negotiations seem to me to have been brought
+ exactly to the right point. Having obtained the three months
+ prolongation, we have resumed the negotiation on the day fixed, and
+ have continued it _bona fide_; and it now stands over in a manner
+ which will enable us to see in due time whether or no we can make a
+ treaty with the new Government.
+
+ As regards Egypt, the opinion gains ground here that at the
+ bottom of the agitation there is (or soon will be) a plot to
+ dethrone Tewfik and put Halim in his place as a 'National': _i.e._
+ anti-European, anti-French, and anti-English Control, Khedive. I
+ understand that de Blignieres represented strongly to Gambetta that
+ the only way to produce quiet in Egypt and counteract intrigues
+ in favour of Halim at Yildiz Kiosk is for England and France to
+ declare positively at Cairo and Constantinople that they will not
+ stand it, but will resolutely support Tewfik and the existing state
+ of things. I do not know how far Gambetta assented to this, but I
+ am told he did not dissent from it.
+
+The result of much political manoeuvring was that in November, 1881,
+Gambetta was forced to take office and to exchange the irresponsible
+power which he had hitherto wielded in the background for Ministerial
+responsibility. As frequently occurs in similar cases, when the great
+mystery man was dragged out into the light of open day, his appearance
+was somewhat disappointing. His Administration, with one exception
+only, was composed entirely of men belonging to his own immediate
+following, and contained no one of any weight beside himself. Gambetta
+took the Foreign Office as well as the Presidency of the Council, and
+on the principle that _il vaut toujours mieux avoir affaire a Dieu qu'a
+ses anges_, this was an advantage, although it was believed that he
+entertained so great an admiration for Bismarck, that, following the
+latter's example, he would probably hand over the foreign diplomatist to
+an under secretary. The first impressions produced by the new Ministry
+were not favourable.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 18, 1881.
+
+ I don't think the present Ministry is so far at all a success.
+ Among other inconveniences arising from the appointment of men of
+ so little personal importance is that there is no one in Gambetta's
+ party who does not think that he ought to have been a Minister;
+ or, in other words, who acquiesces in the superiority of any of
+ those chosen. The fact that Leon Say and Freycinet were offered
+ portfolios, but would not accept them on Gambetta's terms, tells
+ against the selection ultimately made. Gambetta's personal genius
+ must make up for all deficiencies. He appears to have a talent
+ in particular for parliamentary tactics, especially for making
+ the right move on the spur of the moment. I doubt his having
+ deep-matured plans. So far as I can see, he lives _au jour le jour_
+ like ordinary men.
+
+ I had a long visit yesterday from Spueller, but we did not get
+ much beyond generalities. Gambetta and I have exchanged visits, but
+ have not met.
+
+ I do not hazard conjectures on commercial matters, as Dilke
+ will ascertain to-morrow exactly how the land lies. ... As a
+ diplomatist, I cannot but feel that there is convenience in being a
+ bachelor just now.
+
+The last sentence does not refer to the fact that he had just been
+created a Viscount, but to the somewhat peculiar domestic circumstances
+attaching to certain members of the new Government.
+
+It had been assumed that Gambetta's accession to office would be
+marked by a more vigorous foreign policy, especially in the direction
+of acquiring fresh territories in distant regions; but this was not
+justified by his own language or bearing, and at his first interview
+with the Ambassador he abstained from pompous common-places about
+preferring England to all the rest of the world, and desiring peace at
+any price, which was looked upon as a good sign. At the same time, there
+was, in his speeches about Tunis and the Mediterranean, a slight flavour
+of Chauvinism which would not have excited remark before 1870, but which
+would not have appeared in 1880, and would certainly not have been
+applauded in 1881, unless it had become generally known that Bismarck
+had sanctioned and encouraged French enterprises away from the continent
+of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 6, 1881.
+
+ Gambetta gave the Diplomatic Body an excellent dinner last
+ Saturday, and played his part as host very successfully.
+
+ What may be at the bottom of his heart, nothing has yet shown.
+
+ The change which has come over the relations between France
+ and Germany opens to him the door for a comparatively safe yet
+ ambitious Foreign Policy. Will he resist the temptation?
+
+ During the years which immediately followed the war, the
+ feeling of France towards Germany was composed of furious hatred
+ and of mortal dread. The line taken, consciously or unconsciously,
+ by Germany tended to add bitterness to this feeling. She interfered
+ dictatorially with France even in internal matters. Her object
+ seemed to be not only to impede the restoration of French strength
+ and wealth, but to prevent the French recovering even prestige
+ anywhere. She was, or affected to be, convinced that a war of
+ revenge on the part of France was imminent. She was believed by
+ the French to be angry at their showing so much vitality and to be
+ preparing to give them the _coup de grace_.
+
+ At this moment, however, neither France nor Germany appears
+ to apprehend an attack or to be prepared to make one. Each appears
+ to consider the other too strong to be attacked with impunity.
+ Certainly Gambetta would not find the nation in heart to follow him
+ in defying Germany. If therefore his policy or his passions incline
+ him to do something striking to flatter the national vanity, how
+ is he to find the means? The Tunis affair has given Bismarck an
+ opportunity of showing him. It has enabled the Chancellor to
+ convince the French that they will have the countenance of Germany
+ in any enterprise in which they may engage out of Europe.
+
+ How far this may be part of a great plan of Bismarck's
+ to secure German supremacy in Europe by pushing Austria into
+ the Levant, Russia into Asia, and France into Africa and the
+ Mediterranean, and by shutting up England in her own islands, we
+ need not inquire. In any case it must suit Prince Bismarck to see
+ France making acquisitions of territory or influence, which weaken
+ her military force in Europe, throw burthens on her finances, and
+ make ill blood between her and other Powers.
+
+ Unhappily if Gambetta is so short-sighted as to give in to
+ temptation of this kind, difficult questions are, more than with
+ any other Power, likely to arise with England, who is in contact
+ with France all over the world and especially in the Mediterranean.
+
+ I hope better things, and I am not at all willing to despair
+ of a thorough good understanding between France and England which
+ would avert danger from both, and enable both to do good to all the
+ world. Still one cannot but be anxious at this moment. Egypt may be
+ the ticklish point.
+
+The Parliamentary skill of Gambetta was seen to advantage during the
+short winter session, and compared favourably with the want of tact and
+vigour which had been displayed by his predecessors. He even obtained a
+success in the Senate, where he had not expected to find any sympathy
+at all, and some of the more sensible Conservatives became disposed to
+support him, more from fear of what might result if he fell than from
+personal attachment. Some of his appointments, however, aroused alarm,
+and he perturbed Lord Lyons by bestowing upon a journalist a most
+important post in the Foreign Office.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 30, 1881.
+
+ I will not despair, but I am feeling very great anxiety
+ about the Commercial Treaty. I am afraid that on this side of the
+ Channel, much more than in England, the failure of the negotiations
+ would have a most undesirable political effect. In France and on
+ the Continent generally, it would be taken as a sure indication of
+ a coolness between the two Governments. Gambetta would be taunted
+ by the Opposition with having alienated England (Italy having been
+ alienated before). Gambetta's supporters in the press and elsewhere
+ would try to throw the blame upon England, the English press would
+ retort upon France, and a very unpleasant state of feeling would be
+ the result.
+
+ Gambetta has astounded people by appointing a flashy newspaper
+ writer, of no particular principles, to the post of Political
+ Director in the Foreign Office. The Political Director is almost
+ the most important person in the office, as he drafts all the
+ political despatches and notes. I hope the communications to the
+ foreign ambassadors are not to be in the style of 'smart' newspaper
+ articles. I confess that when I saw the appointment in the _Journal
+ Officiel_, it did not occur to me that the man could be the same
+ Weiss who had been writing in the _Figaro_.
+
+The friendly disposition of Gambetta towards England has already been
+noted, and beyond a certain tendency in his speeches towards Chauvinism,
+there was nothing in his conduct calculated to arouse alarm, but
+nevertheless a critical moment in Anglo-French relations appeared to
+be approaching at the beginning of 1882. The Government of France had
+passed into the hands of a Minister far more influential, more able,
+and more ambitious than any man who had taken part in public affairs
+since the retirement of Thiers, and the time was at hand when that
+Minister must decide on the line of policy to be followed with regard
+to Foreign Powers. The character and temperament of Gambetta naturally
+disposed him to endeavour to make his Foreign Policy more vigorous,
+more successful and more striking than that of his predecessors, and
+with that object he would probably take one of two courses. Either
+he would aim at emancipating France from her existing confidential
+servility towards Germany; or, despairing of that, he would continue the
+existing relations with Bismarck, and thus ensure the latter's willing
+acquiescence in aggressive proceedings on the part of France beyond the
+limits of Europe.
+
+In order to shake off the German yoke, Gambetta evidently considered
+it essential that he should be able to place himself on distinctly
+friendly and intimate terms with England, and if he failed in this, the
+probability was that he would be obliged to revert to the patronage
+which was felt to be so irksome. But the change which had come over
+the relations between France and Germany opened the door to a foreign
+policy which was comparatively safe and easy, and yet did not present
+the disadvantage of being unambitious. The period which immediately
+followed the war of 1870, was, as has already been pointed out, marked
+by a feeling in France towards Germany of fierce hatred combined with
+extreme fear, and German policy, whether consciously or unconsciously,
+tended to embitter this feeling. Germany interfered dictatorially and
+ostentatiously even in French internal affairs, and the object seemed
+to be not only to crush the reviving strength of France, but to prevent
+her recovering anywhere, or in any matter, the smallest portion of her
+lost _prestige_. The German Government professed to believe that a war
+of revenge was meditated, and was credited with the intention of finally
+destroying France before the latter should be sufficiently recuperated
+to resume the struggle.
+
+But with the lapse of time, a change of policy, and, to a certain
+extent, a change of feeling had taken place on both sides. Neither
+country was in any immediate apprehension of an attack from the other. A
+somewhat ostentatious interchange of courtesy had been substituted for
+their former reserve, and Bismarck had seized the opportunity of the
+invasion of Tunis to let the French understand that they would have the
+countenance of Germany in enterprises undertaken by them out of Europe.
+Apart from all far-reaching schemes for securing German supremacy in
+Europe, it was obviously in the interests of Germany that France should
+engage in enterprises and make acquisitions which dispersed her armies,
+disorganized her finances and created ill feeling with other Powers.
+
+Gambetta was much too intelligent a man not to see through this policy,
+but the temptation to direct the energies of France into the Colonial,
+rather than the continental direction, might prove too strong for him
+if he despaired of gaining credit for his Government in another way.
+Unhappily, in such a case, with no Power were difficulties so likely to
+arise as with England, which was more or less in contact with France in
+all parts of the world, and especially in the Mediterranean. Nor could
+it be forgotten that in the speeches lately delivered on the subject of
+Tunis, Gambetta had made strong appeals to national pride with regard to
+French possessions and interests beyond the seas.
+
+Still there was no reason to suppose that the so-called Colonial Policy
+was Gambetta's first choice. He was known to chafe under the practical
+subservience of France to Germany, and to feel deeply humiliated by it.
+At the bottom of his heart he cherished an ardent desire to recover
+the lost provinces, but he knew that neither the military strength of
+France nor the spirit of the people would warrant his attempting this
+within any assignable period. He did, however, aim at freeing the French
+Government from the sort of occult control which Germany had recently
+exercised over it, and at improving the position of France as a Great
+Power. He desired to present the Government over which he presided
+to France and to Europe as taking a dignified and important part in
+international questions, and feeling that these objects could best be
+attained by a real and visible friendship with England, he was evidently
+disposed to treat pending questions with a view to maintaining and
+manifesting a cordial understanding.
+
+The two most important questions of the moment were, of course, Egypt
+and the Commercial Treaty.
+
+As regards Egypt, there was so far complete unity between the two
+Governments--the strain having not yet arrived--but the conclusion of
+a Commercial Treaty appeared to be a more arduous affair. Gambetta
+was apparently ready to go as far towards making an acceptable Treaty
+as was possible without risking a defeat in the Chambers. But if the
+negotiations were to fail, he would probably despair of keeping up good
+feeling towards England in France. He would conceive that the failure
+would discredit him in the eyes of France and of Europe; that it would
+convey to foreign Governments an impression, which he could not remove,
+of there being a coolness between France and England, and that it would
+oblige him to seek for his Foreign Policy some other basis than union
+with England.
+
+Perhaps the fear that unsuccessful commercial negotiations would convert
+Gambetta into a foe was partly due to a communication from Sir Charles
+Dilke announcing that a commercial ultimatum was about to be hurled at
+the French Government. This communication is extremely instructive from
+the English Parliamentary point of view, for it recommended that in
+despatches the word 'bargain' should be carefully avoided, 'as it would
+strengthen the reciprocity argument.' In other words, although wine
+duties were to be utilized for the purpose of bargaining, the fact was
+not to be disclosed lest it might be construed as a departure from the
+sacred principles of Free Trade.
+
+Attention was, however, quickly diverted from the Commercial Treaty
+to Egypt. On January 8, the British and French Governments presented
+the so-called Dual Note, in which they declared their intention of
+'warding off by their united efforts all causes of external or internal
+complications, which might menace the _regime_ established in Egypt.'
+The Dual Note was by no means as successful as had been hoped, and it is
+clear that Gambetta was in favour of more decided and independent action
+than the British Cabinet. Within a few days Lord Granville was already
+writing to Lord Lyons and asking him whether it would not be advisable
+for England and France to ask permission from the Powers to appear as
+mandatories of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Jan. 17, 1882.
+
+ The news from Egypt is certainly not reassuring, and the
+ _mauvais quart d'heure_ may arrive at any moment.
+
+ M. Gambetta would probably desire joint intervention; the
+ objections to this are immense: I need not recapitulate them all to
+ you.
+
+ Single occupation, by England or by France, still more so.
+
+ I am not quite sure that Turkish occupation under proper
+ conditions and control by France and England, although a great
+ evil, would not be less bad than the three alternatives I have
+ mentioned. But it is not only bad in itself, but it would be
+ strongly opposed by the French, although it would be supported
+ by the German Powers. In these circumstances, an observation of
+ Malet's struck me as having some force. Talking of the intentions
+ of some of the other Powers to have their part in the question, he
+ said it would not be so objectionable, if they consented to allow
+ the English and French to be the mandatories.
+
+ The idea seemed to me to be worth considering, and I spoke to
+ Tenterden and Rivers Wilson (but to no one else) and requested them
+ to draw up a memorandum as to how this could be carried out. I send
+ you an extract, and I should like to have your opinion on it before
+ I submit it even to Gladstone as a possibility.
+
+ Gambetta of course would not like it. But his difficulty is as
+ great as ours if he were to understand that we will not agree to
+ joint occupation. There would be nothing humiliating to France if
+ the proposal was freely consented to by both countries and jointly
+ offered to Egypt.
+
+ For us it would only be acting on the Concert of Europe
+ principle, about which we have been making such a fuss.
+
+This somewhat half-hearted proposal met with no approval from Lord
+Lyons, who expressed his objections in more decisive terms than were
+usual with him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 19, 1882.
+
+ In your letter of the day before yesterday you ask me for
+ my opinion on a suggestion as to admitting other Powers to take
+ part in the Egyptian Question, on the supposition that France and
+ England should be their mandatories.
+
+ This would, _ipso facto_, be the abandonment of the
+ exceptional position which England and France have taken up in
+ Egypt. Whether this position can be, or ought to be, maintained for
+ a long time, is a question which I will not stop to examine.
+
+ That a proposal to abandon it, at this moment, would have a
+ very bad effect on our relations with France, does not, I think,
+ admit of a doubt. It would be taken as an abandonment of our
+ intention to give up, in the face of Europe, all special intimacy
+ with the French Government. It would give rise to suspicions
+ that we were trying to use the other Powers for the purpose of
+ ousting France from Egypt. The union of England and France on the
+ Egyptian Question is the principal symbol of there being a good
+ understanding between them, and to this symbol the French attach no
+ little importance.
+
+ I don't know that the designation of mandatories of Europe
+ would mend the matter. The other Powers would not commission
+ England and France to decide by themselves what measures should
+ be recommended for Egypt. They might depute England and France
+ to enforce the decisions of Europe, but this would only bring us
+ back to the joint intervention of the two Powers in a particularly
+ awkward and unmanageable form.
+
+ Practically, it would, I think, be found much more difficult
+ for us to keep well with France, if the other Powers were also to
+ have a voice in details. Hitherto England and France have managed
+ to come to an agreement with each other on the questions that have
+ arisen. It might be made more difficult for them invariably to side
+ with each other against other Powers. Political considerations as
+ to affairs distinct from Egypt might come into play. Setting aside
+ a natural and not improper jealousy on the part of each, lest its
+ associate should obtain separate and undue influence, the interests
+ of England and France in Egypt are very much the same. The main
+ interest of some Governments, and in particular that of the Porte,
+ might be antagonistic to cordiality between the two Western Powers.
+
+ A Commission appointed now to deal with questions relating to
+ the government and administration of Egypt would be a different
+ matter from the Commissions of 1878 and 1880.
+
+ In the first place, it seems probable that the Sultan would
+ protest strongly against it, and that he would do so whether or
+ no there were Turkish members of it appointed by him. His Majesty
+ might possibly acquiesce under strong pressure from all the Powers,
+ but would all the Powers put such pressure on him? In all matters
+ bearing upon the relations between the Porte and Egypt, it must, I
+ am afraid, be taken into consideration that neither France singly,
+ nor England singly, nor the two acting together, are likely at the
+ present time to exercise predominant influence at Constantinople;
+ and that, on the other hand, the Power which does exercise
+ predominant influence there shows no disposition to jeopardize that
+ influence by giving unpalatable advice, and is not supposed to have
+ any desire to promote cordiality between England and France.
+
+ Moreover, we have to consider not only the Sultan and the
+ Khedive, but the mutinous officers and the so-called National Party
+ in Egypt. From a telegram which Gambetta showed me yesterday,
+ it would appear that Arabi had expressed some idea of appealing
+ against England and France to the Great Powers collectively. But
+ would he and his party, whose watchword seems to be 'Egypt for
+ the Egyptians,' submit passively to the installation of a Foreign
+ Commission to settle all the important national questions? Would
+ they acquiesce in the subsequent enforcement of the decision of the
+ Commission?
+
+ The Commission might certainly sit at Alexandria, and it
+ might perhaps have the support afforded by the presence of an
+ Anglo-French squadron, or an International squadron. In either
+ case, would the squadron be provided with men to be landed in
+ case of need, and would the Commission be authorized to call for
+ the assistance and protection of a force to be put on shore? If
+ this were so, it might be merely a small beginning which might
+ ultimately render intervention in arms on a larger scale inevitable.
+
+ On the other hand, if the presence of the squadron were to
+ be merely a naval demonstration, would the fact of its being more
+ or less representative of all the Great Powers give it much more
+ weight than if it were made on behalf of England and France alone?
+ Would it, in either case, be safe to trust to the moral effect
+ of its being sufficient, and to its not rendering further action
+ imperative?
+
+ Gambetta seems to hope that firm and decided language, used
+ collectively now by France and England, may ward off a crisis.
+ If there be any chance of warding off a necessity for action, it
+ no doubt lies in this; but I suppose that with Gambetta the wish
+ is father to the thought. On the one hand, in face of the present
+ unpopularity of the Tunis expedition, it would be very awkward for
+ him to have to send another French force to Africa at the present
+ moment. But, on the other hand, he could not confront the mass of
+ enraged bondholders if he abandoned their interests; and public
+ opinion here, which is very sensitive about Egypt, would not
+ tolerate his letting France be openly set at naught in that country.
+
+ It is needless to add that the French Government would
+ bitterly resent it, if any hint were given to a third Power,
+ without their having been previously consulted, if there is any
+ idea on our part of withdrawing from our separate understanding
+ with them, and merging Egypt in the general Eastern Question. If
+ they were ever brought to consent to calling in the other Powers,
+ they would not readily forgive having their hands forced in the
+ matter.
+
+ For my own part, I would certainly, as regards Egypt, rather
+ have to deal with France only than with four or five more Powers.
+
+There can be no shadow of doubt that Lord Lyons's view was the correct
+one, but Lord Granville and Mr. Gladstone (no other member of the
+Cabinet is mentioned) seem to have hankered after the Concert of Europe,
+probably in consequence of the stroke of luck at Dulcigno.
+
+ 'Your very powerful letter,' Lord Granville wrote on January
+ 21, 'is gone to Gladstone. It is not easy to find an answer to all
+ your arguments. The question is whether there are not stronger
+ arguments against any other course. I think it is likely that I
+ shall write to you to ask you to speak to Gambetta.
+
+ 'On the imminence of the crisis: the importance of perfect
+ union between England and France: our strong objection to intervene
+ alone--giving as reasons:--opposition of Egyptians; of Turkey;
+ jealousy of Europe; responsibility of governing a country of
+ Orientals without adequate means and under adverse circumstances;
+ presumption that France would object as much to our sole occupation
+ as we should object to theirs.
+
+ 'Have carefully considered joint occupation; some of the
+ objections to sole occupation lessened, but others most seriously
+ aggravated.
+
+ 'Deprecate Turkish intervention, but think it a lesser evil
+ than the two to which I have alluded, giving some reasons.
+
+ 'Then propose the European element, as sketched out in my
+ private letter.
+
+ 'Any concessions to Europe after any demonstrations on the
+ part of the German powers and Italy would place us in a false
+ position; but if made spontaneously and jointly by France and
+ England, would not have that inconvenience.
+
+ 'Please reflect upon the way such arguments might best be put,
+ but let me have all your opinions upon it.
+
+ 'Such able letters as your last are very valuable.'
+
+Another letter written on the same day asks for advice as to what should
+be done 'if the crisis arrives, as is probable, in a week.' It was very
+evident that the Cabinet had no definite plan of their own, and were
+only too glad of the opportunity of consulting some one whose opinion
+was worth having.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, January 22, 1882.
+
+ I have received this morning your two letters of yesterday
+ about Egypt; and I have reconsidered the letters from me of the
+ 19th to which they are answers.
+
+ There exists at this moment one new difficulty, the
+ uncertainty whether Gambetta will still be in office this day week.
+
+ I do not, however, find in this circumstance any reason to
+ modify the views expressed in my long letter.
+
+ Whoever may be in office here at the time, if we proposed to
+ call in the other Powers, we should be held (to use Commercial
+ Treaty slang) to have 'denounced' our good understanding with
+ France. We should be reproached with deserting our comrade at the
+ critical moment, and I am seriously afraid that for a long time
+ the feeling in France towards England would be bitter, and the
+ relations of the French Government towards the English Government
+ more than cold.
+
+ In my communication to the French Government respecting Egypt,
+ there are some topics in particular which would require delicate
+ handling.
+
+ First of these, I should mention Turkish intervention. This
+ has been a subject of difference between France and England for
+ half a century, and the French have a traditional feeling on
+ the subject at all times. But at this moment they (rightly or
+ wrongly) think it a matter of vital importance to them with regard
+ to Algeria and Tunis, and they would go very great lengths to
+ resist the introduction of the Turkish Troops into Egypt, or the
+ increase of Turkish influence there. They always suspect us of
+ hankering after Turkish support against them, not reflecting that
+ our influence at Constantinople is not so predominant as when they
+ supported Mehemet Ali against the Porte and England.
+
+ Another topic on which the French might be sensitive would be
+ the question of governing a country of Orientals. This is a matter
+ on which I feel strongly myself, but it would need to be dealt with
+ very cautiously, or the French would see in it a sneer against
+ their own shortcomings in Tunis and even in Algeria.
+
+ The objections to joint dual occupation are strong, but almost
+ any statement of them would apply with equal force, or more, to
+ joint sextuple occupation, or to the occupation by two Powers as
+ mandatories of the rest.
+
+ Malet, I see, telegraphs that the Chamber would, he thinks,
+ listen to the united Great Powers, but would not listen to England
+ and France alone.
+
+ Admitting that Malet is right (and he generally is right),
+ there always remains the difficulty as to putting this cumbersome
+ six-wheeled waggon into motion in any reasonable time.
+
+ And this brings me to the question in your second letter, what
+ course should I recommend, if the crisis, as is probable, arises in
+ a week.
+
+ It seems to me that in that case either things must be let
+ 'slide,' or England and France must take some step together,
+ without waiting for the other Powers.
+
+All the anxious speculations which had taken place with regard to
+Gambetta's future foreign policy turned out to be quite unnecessary, for
+on January 27, after little more than two months of office, he resigned,
+having been defeated, like any ordinary political mediocrity, on a
+question of domestic interest. His place was taken by M. de Freycinet,
+who succeeded in forming a respectable Ministry, but whose policy with
+regard to Egypt was as vague and undecided as that of the British
+Government, and whose views with regard to a Commercial Treaty were
+supposed to be identical with those of his predecessor.
+
+Advantage was taken of the change by Lord Granville to again urge the
+substitution of the Concert of Europe for purely Anglo-French control in
+Egypt, and Freycinet showed himself much more amenable than Gambetta.
+As far as can be gathered, the attitude of both Governments was the
+reverse of heroic; the British Government was anxious to hand over its
+responsibility to other parties, and the French Government was not
+disposed to take any initiative at all. The French were, in fact,
+waiting for England to make a suggestion, and while perhaps ready to act
+in conjunction, wished that the responsibility of whatever proceedings
+were adopted in common, should rest primarily, if not exclusively, upon
+England. The Tunis enterprise had proved to be so much more troublesome
+and expensive than had been expected, that the Government shrank from
+becoming involved in anything of the same nature in Egypt. But the
+condition of affairs in Egypt was such that even the timid Freycinet
+Government might find its hand forced. An insult to a French functionary
+might produce an outbreak of Chauvinism which would force the Government
+to send a force to avenge it, and Gambetta would certainly have had a
+force ready for a contingency of this kind.
+
+Nubar Pasha was in Paris at the time, and his views on the Egyptian
+situation were not without interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 7, 1882.
+
+ I do not find the least diminution of the French opposition to
+ Turkish intervention in Egypt, even if it were only moral.
+
+ Nubar has been here for some months, and often comes to see
+ me. His first object in life seems to be to get Blignieres out
+ of Egypt, and his second to get Tewfik deposed. I conclude that
+ he thinks that both are obstacles to his own return to power.
+ His language is, that the dictation of the English and French
+ Controllers in Egypt was more than any country could bear; that the
+ present state of things is much better; office and power being in
+ the same hands; that Arabi Bey and his compeers will do very well
+ if they are properly managed, and that two quiet, conciliatory
+ (perhaps we should read imbecile) Controllers would keep everything
+ straight. I think he inclines to the moral intervention of the
+ Sultan. He seems to be intriguing with Germany. He had an interview
+ with Freycinet, to whom, according to his own account, he held the
+ language I have described above. He talks more ably than any one
+ else about Egypt, but always with a view to his own interests.
+
+Any one who ever conversed with the late Nubar Pasha could not fail to
+be impressed with his ability, but like many other able Orientals, he
+was a consummate intriguer, and probably the predominant feeling in his
+mind was a desire to be reinstated in power. It should be explained
+that, at this time, Arabi was already practically at the head of the
+Government, although only occupying the post of Minister of War, and
+that M. de Blignieres was still French Controller. M. de Blignieres,
+however, resigned his post on March 12, and an open letter[35] from him
+to M. Clemenceau threw a lurid light on the tortuous and inexplicable
+course of French policy in Egypt.
+
+ 'Lorsqu'il (Cherif Pasha) a du quitter le pouvoir; lorsque j'ai
+ compris que les chefs du parti militaire, qui l'avaient renverse,
+ pouvaient compter sur la bienveillance de notre gouvernement,
+ ce jour-la, ne me faisant aucune illusion sur les consequences
+ necessaires de cette politique nouvelle, j'ai resigne mes
+ fonctions.'
+
+If, therefore, M. de Blignieres was correct, the French were playing
+a double game; ostensibly acting in concert with England against the
+Nationalist agitation in Egypt, while secretly encouraging Arabi and his
+friends to persevere in their efforts. In one respect, however, they
+were consistent, namely in their opposition to Turkish intervention, and
+the traditional French opposition to Turkish influence in Egypt was
+accentuated in consequence of the recent events in Tunis and Algeria.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, April 4, 1882.
+
+ You will have seen by the despatches I sent you by post
+ yesterday that Freycinet has at last put the dots on his i's, and
+ distinctly proposed that Tewfik shall be deposed and Halim put
+ in his place. I cannot say I take to the idea. As you said to
+ Tissot, there might be some good in it if Halim had great moral and
+ intellectual qualities. But I don't see that we have any reason
+ to suppose he has such qualities. Nor indeed, if he had, do I see
+ how his mere appointment would at once set things straight in
+ Egypt. The removal of Ismail was a great blow to the prestige of
+ the Khediviate, and it would require a genius to re-establish its
+ authority, if another deposition takes place in so short a time.
+ I do not understand how Freycinet reconciles his present idea
+ with his objection to Turkish interference. If the Khedive is in
+ daily fear of being deposed by the Sultan, there will be abject
+ submission to Yildiz Kiosk and a constant flow of backsheesh to the
+ Porte.
+
+ Halim no doubt promises the French that he will be their man,
+ and if he becomes so, they may go great lengths to support him; but
+ how will this suit us? And how long will it be before it leads to
+ something very like armed intervention of the French in support of
+ him?
+
+ Then it seems to me that to depose Tewfik would be something
+ very like treachery, after the dual declaration made to him in
+ January.
+
+ It seems to me that the things to aim at should be: to keep
+ Tewfik; to give him some strength against military dictation, and
+ to preserve the Anglo-French Control, which means a reasonable
+ financial administration, and gives us at any rate some means of
+ knowing what the Egyptians (perhaps I ought to add) what the French
+ are about.
+
+The immoral proposal to depose Tewfik met with no encouragement from
+Her Majesty's Government, as was only to be expected, and the only
+conclusion to be drawn from the equivocal language of M. de Freycinet
+was that he felt armed intervention to be inevitable, but wanted the
+proposal to come from England. He tried to persuade Lord Lyons to
+propose a plan of his own which should be put forward privately, but
+this met with no approval at all. '"Private and between ourselves
+conversations," between Ambassadors and Foreign Ministers generally
+cause mischief.'
+
+As the situation in Egypt continued to get worse, the British Government
+was forced to take some action, and accordingly suggested that three
+generals, French, English, and Turkish, should be sent to Egypt 'to
+restore discipline to the Egyptian army.' As it was not proposed that
+these generals should employ anything but moral force, it is difficult
+to see how they could have succeeded, but Lord Granville appears to have
+considered that it would obviate armed interference, and the French
+Government having no plan of their own were presumably ready to accept
+almost anything, but caused considerable embarrassment by asking for a
+pledge that Turkish intervention by force of arms, in any circumstances,
+would not be tolerated. What Freycinet wanted, in fact, was to be able
+to declare to the Chamber that England and France were agreed not to
+allow armed Ottoman intervention.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 5, 1882.
+
+ Freycinet asked me just now to let him speak to me 'privately
+ and academically' about intervention in Egypt. He said his great
+ objection to Turkish intervention was that as matters now stand,
+ it would take place for a vague and indefinite object: that thus
+ it would be impossible to fix the exact time at which that object
+ would be accomplished, and that thus the Turks would have pretexts
+ for prolonging it indefinitely, for mixing themselves up in the
+ administration, for laying their hands on the Treasury, and what
+ not.
+
+ If the intervention was simply for installing a new Khedive,
+ his objections would be less. This would be a single definite
+ sovereign act of the Sultan. It might be accomplished in a week or
+ ten days, and the Ottoman troops would have no pretext for staying,
+ or for interfering in the administration. He should not object to a
+ Turkish, French, and English fleet going to Egypt to support some
+ single definite act of this kind, nor even, speaking solely for
+ himself personally, to Turkish troops being landed.
+
+ After some questioning from me, he said that, for a single
+ definite object, he personally might even prefer a Turkish
+ intervention, but that for any such vague purpose as supporting
+ Tewfik and restoring order, he thought Turkish intervention
+ absolutely inadmissible. If anything of that kind was to be
+ attempted, Anglo-French seemed to him the least open to objection.
+ Italian seemed to him to be worse than Turkish.
+
+ His idea was that we should set on foot some Government that
+ could stand by itself. Under Tewfik no such Government would in his
+ opinion be ever possible. He had no predilection for any particular
+ individual as Khedive: all he wanted was to have some reasonably
+ efficient man at the head of the Government.
+
+ He begged me to consider all this as strictly confidential,
+ personal, private, and academic; and he said that except in a
+ conversation of this character, he could not even have mentioned
+ the possibility of France consenting under any conceivable
+ circumstances to Turkish intervention; for he was by no means sure
+ that it would ever be agreed to by his colleagues or borne by
+ public opinion.
+
+The 'confidential, personal, private, and academic' character of M. de
+Freycinet's conversation was, of course, merely intended to conceal
+his own vacillation and fear of having to communicate to the Chambers
+any announcement that he had sanctioned Turkish intervention in any
+shape whatever. A little later, however, he nerved himself to make a
+proposal that there should be a joint Anglo-French Naval Demonstration
+off Alexandria. An allied squadron consequently proceeded to that
+port, and its appearance produced a temporary panic in the ranks of
+the Nationalists; the latter, however, speedily recovered when it was
+realized that there were no troops on board, and that the Sultan, far
+from approving of the demonstration, had protested against it. The
+ultimatum of the allies was practically rejected, and Arabi, who had
+been compelled to resign, was reinstated in office nominally as Minister
+of War, in reality as dictator. To make Freycinet's position still
+worse, he got into difficulties in the Chamber.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 26, 1882.
+
+ The explosion has come, and if the irritation that prevails
+ in Paris to-day continues, Freycinet will be out of office, or
+ will, _per fas et nefas_, back out of his proposal that Turkish
+ intervention may be resorted to in Egypt. His Chauvin speech in the
+ Chamber about French preponderance, and what not, is now of course
+ turned against him.
+
+ There is an impression here that in order to keep Gambetta out
+ of office, Bismarck may help Freycinet to eat his words.
+
+ I am afraid that now, whether Freycinet stays in or goes out,
+ it will be next to impossible to have any comfortable understanding
+ with France about intervention in Egypt.
+
+ Even supposing all the other Powers cordially united with
+ us, to repeat the experiment of 1840 would be dangerous, and would
+ produce a scarcely ever to be remedied coldness (to call it by a
+ mild name) between us and France.
+
+ Then I share all Dufferin's misgivings as to the possibility
+ of either controlling the Turks if they set foot in Egypt, or of
+ ever getting them out. I have also a very strong fear of my own as
+ to the mischief they would do to the country. Even if they went
+ with the acquiescence of France, I think we should be constantly in
+ hot water with the French as long as they stayed.
+
+ If Gambetta comes in he will no doubt again propose joint
+ Anglo-French intervention. Unless the Porte is backed up very
+ strongly indeed, he will very likely make its intervention in Egypt
+ something like a _casus belli_ with Turkey--or in fact do as the
+ French did with regard to Tunis--declare that he will oppose by
+ force the despatch of Turkish troops to Egypt.
+
+The Anglo-French Naval Demonstration had been intended as a compromise
+between the two Governments over the question of Turkish intervention,
+but when it was seen to be useless, it was agreed that the Sultan should
+be asked to send a Special Commission to Cairo, and communications were
+made to the other Powers with a view to convoking a European Conference
+on Egypt; M. de Freycinet, who had for three months opposed the English
+proposal for Turkish intervention, suddenly discovering that there was
+no danger about it, if requested jointly by England and France. The
+Turkish Commission which proceeded to Egypt was not more successful in
+restoring order than the Anglo-French Naval Demonstration. It consisted
+of three persons; one of whom, Dervish Pasha, was instructed to support
+the Khedive and to threaten the Nationalist leaders; the second
+Commissioner was instructed to support Arabi and his associates; and
+the duty of the third Commissioner was to spy upon his two colleagues.
+In order to make everything quite safe, the latter was accompanied by a
+fourth official, whose duty it was to spy upon him, and it was perhaps
+owing to these over-elaborated precautions that the mission proved to be
+a complete failure.
+
+On June 11, the massacre at Alexandria took place, and armed
+intervention became more and more inevitable, but some Governments still
+entertained the hope that diplomacy might yet be successful, and the
+Conference assembled at Constantinople towards the end of the month.
+The chief advantage of the Conference was that it disclosed the views
+of the various Great Powers, and the conditions which were to govern
+the despatch of Turkish troops to Egypt were of so engrossing a nature
+that they were still being discussed when the battle of Tel-el-Kebir
+was fought two months subsequently, and the victorious British troops
+entered Cairo.
+
+The vacillations and dilatoriness of M. de Freycinet irritated even the
+easy-going Lord Granville, who complained of having twice been put in
+a hole by him, and was justifiably anxious as to how he could defend
+his Egyptian policy successfully in Parliament if the French Government
+could not be relied upon for any consistent line of action. But while
+admitting that nearly everything had gone wrong up till now, and that
+the failure of the Sultan's Special Mission made the outlook still more
+gloomy, he consoled himself with the reflection (which was shortly
+afterwards shown in one respect to be quite erroneous) that, 'we have
+avoided a rupture with France, a rupture with Europe, and a possible
+war.' Within a few weeks, the error of this last assumption was to be
+conclusively established.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 20, 1882.
+
+ I do not hope much from the Conference: certainly I have very
+ little expectation of its forwarding the strong measures which the
+ Alexandria massacres seem to me to call for imperatively.
+
+ I think Germany will be very little inclined to urge the
+ despatch of Turkish troops. Bismarck's great object appears to be
+ to keep Freycinet in, and he fears, not without some reason, that
+ when the first Turkish soldier sets his foot in Egypt, Freycinet
+ will fall at Paris.
+
+ The Freycinet Ministry would probably be succeeded by a
+ Cabinet in which Gambetta would not actually have a seat, but
+ over which he would exercise very great influence. Bismarck very
+ probably exaggerates the strength of that influence and looks for
+ more direct hostility to Germany than it would really provoke. But
+ he is perhaps right in thinking that, under Gambetta's influence,
+ France would coquet with the Anti-German party in Russia, and would
+ lose no opportunity of fostering enmity to Germany whenever she
+ could find an opening for doing so. At all events, it would be
+ impossible for Germany to feel as much at her ease as she does now,
+ if Gambetta were the virtual director of French policy.
+
+ Freycinet's strength lies partly in the disinclination of the
+ nation for anything like what it calls adventures, but mainly in
+ the dread which the present Chamber has of Gambetta, the Scrutin de
+ Liste and a dissolution.
+
+ Meanwhile general dissatisfaction with the whole state of
+ things, and despondency do not diminish. People who looked to
+ Gambetta as the man to set things straight are directing their eyes
+ to other quarters, and there is even a sort of revival of Orleanism.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A few hours after this letter reaches you, you will in
+ all probability receive from me by telegraph the French answer to
+ the proposal to them to concert measures with us for the protection
+ of the Suez Canal. I don't think Freycinet likes the idea of
+ anything which may tend towards sending French troops to Egypt.
+ He seems to me to want to lean on the Conference in the hope that
+ by so doing, he may be able to stand quite still. Strange to say,
+ the Chamber and the public seem to be in the same mood. They like
+ to think that it is more upon England than upon them that the
+ discredit of putting up with the Alexandria massacre and the recent
+ patch up in Egypt would fall. Their present pusillanimity seems so
+ unnatural that I cannot think it will last. Gambetta will rouse
+ them from it, if he has the chance.
+
+They are full of suspicions of designs on our part to seize the Suez
+Canal with or without the assistance or connivance of Turkey. You will
+see by a telegram I have just sent, that Freycinet has asked me a
+question about this. I imagine the French would object very much less to
+our acting entirely alone than to our acting in any way with the Porte.
+
+The Sultan seems to tell de Noailles all kinds of stories against
+England and Dufferin. It is not, however, from Freycinet that I hear
+this.
+
+In Lord Lyons's opinion, the French, at this stage, were quite prepared
+for England acting alone in Egypt, but he considered that it was most
+important to be very frank with them, to afford them every opportunity
+of joining us, but to do it in such a way that other Powers should not
+be given too much time in which to raise objections.
+
+It was not apparently until June 27, 1882, that the British Government
+seriously considered the probability of having to employ 'material
+force' in Egypt, whether alone or in concert with other Powers; but
+in consequence of the danger of the situation and of the necessity of
+acting quickly, they then applied to the War Office for information as
+to what forces were available for an expedition. In view of our alleged
+military capacity at the present time, it is of interest to learn what
+the War Office was prepared to do thirty-one years ago. The military
+authorities stated that they were prepared to embark within twenty-four
+hours, 3500 infantry, and 500 garrison artillerymen, with a small siege
+train, from Malta and Gibraltar, with necessary camp equipage and
+reserves of food and ammunition. These troops could be conveyed in the
+ships of the Channel Squadron now in the Mediterranean. A force of about
+12,000 fighting men, complete in infantry, cavalry, and field artillery,
+with forty-eight field guns, was also available, to embark from England.
+The first 5000 of the infantry could sail within a week, and the whole
+force could leave England in a fortnight from the date of the order,
+with complete supplies for an army in the field. The force from England
+would be made up partially by the First Class Army Reserve, and a
+Brigade was also available to be sent from Bombay to Suez. Such was the
+purport of a most confidential communication to Lord Granville from the
+War Office, dated June 27, 1882.
+
+On July 11, the bombardment of Alexandria by the British fleet took
+place; the departure of the French ships marking, in an unmistakeable
+form, the refusal of the French Government to incur further
+responsibility, and foreshadowing the permanent renunciation of the old
+French position in Egypt.
+
+The news of the Alexandria bombardment, which, owing to the absence
+of troops for landing, could hardly be described as a very effective
+operation, was received without much excitement in Paris, and Freycinet
+stated that the Chamber would certainly not have sanctioned the
+co-operation of the French fleet. The main point on which sensitiveness
+was shown was the Suez Canal. The French seemed disposed to resent any
+landing of English troops alone at Port Said, and to insist, if not
+on joining with us, on sending a 'lateral' expedition of their own.
+It was important, therefore, that they should be given a _bona fide_
+invitation to join in anything we might determine to do, and the French
+were accordingly invited by Lord Granville to concert measures at once
+for the protection of the canal; questions of detail being left to
+the Conference at Constantinople. Upon the whole the bombardment of
+Alexandria had tended to improve rather than to impair Anglo-French
+relations, and the chief danger seemed to lie in the projected Turkish
+intervention, which would alienate public opinion and provoke strong
+opposition from Gambetta and his followers. Extraordinary French Naval
+Credits were voted and Lord Granville appears to have thought that joint
+action was secured after all, at least as far as the Canal was concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 19, 1882.
+
+ I wish you and ourselves joy of the renewed _entente
+ cordiale_. It will not be popular in many quarters here, but it is
+ an immense national advantage, and ought to relieve us from many
+ dangers.
+
+ I am not in the least jealous of the dual action in the Canal,
+ though I should prefer its being triangular. But I own I dread it,
+ if we are obliged, as is probable, to intervene in Egypt itself.
+
+ I hope they do not think we are pressing them too fast. I
+ believe the Cabinet will settle to send 15,000 men to Malta. If so,
+ I will let you know.
+
+ Remember I am always grateful for suggestions and criticisms.
+ I hear Bismarck is really ill and cannot sleep at night. The
+ preparation of his own financial measures does not act as an
+ anodyne.
+
+ I am told that the debate in the Commons last night did us
+ good and not harm. I suppose we shall have a more formidable one in
+ the Lords.
+
+ It is rumoured that the Peers will pass the Second Reading of
+ the Arrears Bill, and mutilate it in Committee.
+
+The voting of the extraordinary French Naval Credits, which had caused
+it to be supposed that the French Government intended to take some
+decided action, was soon shown to mean nothing at all. Freycinet, whose
+position had been much shaken, was in the uncomfortable situation of
+being blamed by the Chamber for doing too much and denounced in the
+Senate for not doing enough. On July 19, an important debate took place
+in the Chamber, during which Gambetta, with his accustomed eloquence,
+adjured the Government to adhere to the English alliance at all costs,
+and urged that to quarrel with England would be the most fatal of
+mistakes. The Credits asked for were agreed to, and the Government
+obtained a large majority; but when Freycinet appeared in support of his
+modest proposals before the Senate, he was obliged to admit that the
+Conference at Constantinople had refused to entrust France and England
+with a Mandate, and that in consequence of this refusal the French
+Government would leave England to act alone, and would confine their own
+action to the protection of the Suez Canal. A fresh credit amounting to
+about L350,000 was asked for with this object, but met with formidable
+opposition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 26, 1882.
+
+ When I saw Freycinet this afternoon he seemed in absolute
+ despair. There are two modes of escape which are supposed to be
+ still open.
+
+ Though the majority of the Chamber are strongly opposed to
+ military intervention in Egypt, they may still hesitate to turn
+ Freycinet out, lest by showing it to be impossible to make their
+ own existence compatible with anything like a stable Government in
+ France, they may bring about a dissolution.
+
+ It is said that they are casting about for some means of
+ refusing the Credit and yet not turning out Freycinet; and the
+ second device, which might enable Freycinet to stay in, is the
+ singularly undignified one of his playing into their hand, by
+ declaring that he does not make the Credit a Cabinet question, and
+ that if it be refused, he will bow to the will of the Chamber and
+ withdraw from the protection of the Canal.
+
+ So long as it is undeniable that we have _bona fide_ invited
+ and pressed France to take part in all our operations in Egypt, I
+ shall not break my heart if she chooses to decline to do so.
+
+ I believe that Freycinet would have been in a better plight
+ if he had taken a decided course either way; if he had distinctly
+ refused all intervention, or if he had boldly joined England in all
+ her operations.
+
+On July 29, the question of voting the fresh Credit was brought forward
+in the Chamber and made one of confidence in the Ministry. Every one
+by this time was much alarmed at the prospect of France being dragged
+into some vague and desperate adventure; the Credit was refused by an
+overwhelming majority; Freycinet resigned office, and France definitely
+retired from the scene of action.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, July 30, 1882.
+
+ Among the innumerable Ministerial crises which I have seen
+ here, I do not recollect one in which there has been so much
+ uncertainty as to who would be the new Prime Minister.
+
+ Grevy, in conformity with his own views, and with those of
+ the great majority of the Chamber and indeed of the country, is
+ trying to form an absolutely non-intervention Cabinet. But such a
+ Cabinet might have difficulties with the Senate. Leon Say and Jules
+ Ferry, the most able members of the late Ministry, were for full
+ intervention and the English Alliance.
+
+ Freycinet very unwisely began with a perfectly idle dispute
+ with Gambetta as to whether the English Government would, or would
+ not, have consented to armed intervention with France only, if
+ Gambetta had remained in power. Gambetta did not speak yesterday,
+ but he and his followers voted against Freycinet.
+
+ Hohenlohe seemed, I hear, dreadfully put out by the result of
+ the division yesterday. It was Bismarck's communication which gave
+ Freycinet the _coup de grace_. Hohenlohe had evidently hoped that
+ it would save him, by giving him an excuse for withdrawing the Bill.
+
+ I was very much disappointed to hear from Freycinet that
+ Russia had gone back to the Conference. I hoped her retirement
+ would have given us a good opportunity of freeing ourselves from
+ that cumbrous clog.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Aug. 1, 1882.
+
+ All is still uncertain as to who the new French Ministers
+ will be. Grevy is doing his best to keep Freycinet, and Hohenlohe
+ is working in the same direction, which is not wise. Hitherto
+ Freycinet has positively declined, but he is a man who sometimes
+ changes his mind. He will be in an extraordinarily false position
+ if he does come back. Grevy may, perhaps, manage to appoint a
+ warming-pan sort of Ministry, just to keep the offices warm during
+ the recess and to make room for something more serious in October.
+
+ The French are in very good disposition towards us at this
+ moment. The way to keep them so will be to endeavour to make their
+ present position comfortable to them, without being humiliating,
+ and, above all, not to crow over them, as part of our press seems
+ too much inclined to do. Their fleet, next to our own, is the most
+ important factor in the Mediterranean question. We can do as well
+ or better, without any aid from France or other countries, but we
+ ought to have the field to ourselves.
+
+ I wish we were well rid of that dangerous Conference. I had
+ a sort of hope that just now it might have a sort of use, as a
+ means of letting the other Powers talk while we were acting. But in
+ fact, as worked by Bismarck and by the Turks under his direction,
+ it seems merely to supply the machinery for formally placing us in
+ opposition to the so-called European Concert, and for embarrassing
+ France. I think the French would be glad to be delivered from it.
+
+ Public opinion in France is at this moment friendly to us, but
+ it is in a very susceptible state.
+
+A new Ministry was in course of time formed under M. Duclerc, one of
+the many uninteresting mediocrities who have governed France during the
+last forty years, and a sort of formula was agreed upon that there was
+no 'solution of continuity in the Entente,' which was not intended to
+commit the French to anything in particular.
+
+A vast amount has been written respecting the events in Egypt in 1882;
+much of it by persons who occupied responsible and important positions
+at the time; but the reasons for the inaction and eventual retirement
+of the French have never been clearly explained. Probably the French
+themselves would be unable to give a satisfactory explanation, and
+would attribute their inglorious attitude to the Freycinet Government,
+which did not know its own mind. But it may be assumed that a variety
+of reasons were responsible for the French refusal of co-operation with
+England. Had the invitation been received some months earlier, it would
+probably have been accepted with enthusiasm; but the Tunis expedition,
+which had opened with so much success and enthusiasm, had proved a much
+more troublesome and unsatisfactory business than had been anticipated,
+and had created a decided disinclination for further enterprises in
+North Africa. In the second place, the difficulties of an Egyptian
+campaign were greatly over-estimated; the French calculation was that
+no less than 60,000 men would be necessary, and the ordinary French
+Minister would not venture to allow so many men to leave the country.
+Lastly, the French were quite unable, rightly or wrongly, to get it out
+of their minds that they were being deliberately led into a trap by
+Bismarck, and this by itself was sufficient to daunt a Government of the
+Freycinet type.
+
+France having now definitely declined, the British invitation was
+transferred to Italy.
+
+ 'We have asked the Italians to join us,' Lord Granville wrote
+ on July 27, 'but we have not pressed them. They also will try to
+ _se faire prier_, and will be too late. I told Menabrea I could not
+ delay operations.
+
+ 'I hope they will decline, but I myself was not very hot for
+ even the offer. But the balance of argument seemed to be in favour
+ of it, and you did not raise any objection to it.
+
+ 'Please explain that the _Times_ is entirely off the track as
+ to our wish for a protectorate.'
+
+The refusal of the Italians was welcome and not unexpected, and as
+no other Power was in the least inclined to co-operate, the British
+Government was able to set about the task of smashing Arabi with a clear
+conscience, in its own way, and unhampered by allies; for the Turks, who
+had agreed to send troops, protracted the negotiations with regard to
+their employment to such an extent, that the campaign was finished long
+before an agreement was arrived at.
+
+Lord Cromer in his well-known work 'Modern Egypt,' has exposed with
+much skill and lucidity the futile nature of many of the proposals
+put forward by the British and French Governments during the period
+that they were acting together. But the really remarkable fact is,
+that each Government succeeded in bringing about the result which it
+least desired. The policy of the British Government was governed by a
+sincere, if mistaken, determination not to be dragged into assuming
+sole responsibility for Egypt, and in particular to avoid the necessity
+of military occupation. The efforts of the French Government were
+chiefly directed towards the prevention of Turkey or any other Power
+establishing its predominant influence in Egypt, and that French policy
+should have unconsciously and involuntarily thrust England into this
+unsought and unwelcome position is one of the real ironies of recent
+history.
+
+Perhaps the most fortunate event for England during the crisis which
+preceded the Egyptian expedition was the fall of Gambetta early in the
+year. Had that statesman remained in office he would certainly have
+never consented to remain a supine and indifferent spectator; he would
+undoubtedly have insisted on France taking an active part: a joint
+expedition would have taken place, and the sequel might have followed
+the Schleswig-Holstein precedent.
+
+It was hardly to be expected that the skill and rapidity with which the
+campaign against Arabi was conducted would evoke much enthusiasm in
+France, nor could the French reasonably expect that upon the restoration
+of peace and order the old state of things would be renewed. Before the
+end of October Lord Granville informed the French Ambassador in London
+that the Control would not be restored; and when the French Government
+objected, on the ground that such an alteration must be submitted to the
+Powers, it was pointed out the matter was one for the Khedive to decide
+himself. In order to soothe wounded French feelings various compromises
+in the shape of posts in the Egyptian administration were offered in
+vain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 3, 1882.
+
+ I thought it simpler and better to let Duclerc have a copy of
+ your despatch, as you had no objection to my doing so. He has not
+ yet given any sign of life since he received it.
+
+ The argument that the Financial Adviser will have only a small
+ position in Egypt, or at all events a less important position than
+ the Controllers, cuts both ways here. Duclerc's line is to say that
+ we are making a distinction without any real difference: that in
+ practice the adviser will have all and more than all the powers of
+ the Controllers; and that thus virtually France is to be deprived
+ of her share in the Control without receiving, even nominally, any
+ compensation.
+
+ A complaint of a very different kind is made by the 'Haute
+ Finance.' They say that the only real compensation which could be
+ given to France, if she is to be ousted from the Control, would
+ be the establishment, under the auspices and responsibility of
+ England, of such a strong practical supervision of the Egyptian
+ Administration as would make the regular payment of the Debt
+ and the maintenance of the commercial and other interests of
+ foreigners secure. They pretend that the proposed establishment
+ of the Financial Adviser is in form injurious to the dignity of
+ France, while in substance it does not sufficiently provide for the
+ control by any one of the Egyptian Government. These seem to be the
+ opinions of a very influential body here. It is quite consistent
+ with them that Dufferin's mission should be looked on with favour
+ by those who hold them.
+
+ Clemenceau's views seem to be confined to himself.
+
+ The thing most favourable to our coming to an understanding
+ with France, is the very general belief among Frenchmen that
+ Bismarck is egging indirectly both England and France on to a
+ quarrel.
+
+ In the meantime the alarm caused by the anarchists is enough
+ to keep the minds of the great majority of the French fixed
+ on their own internal affairs. People are sending away their
+ securities and other valuables to foreign countries. I suppose an
+ absolute outbreak in force enough to resist the Government, if the
+ Government be resolute, is not to be expected. But there may be
+ explosions of dynamite here and there, and the employment of the
+ other new-fangled means of creating panic which the French seem to
+ be inclined to adopt from the Russians.
+
+ The competition of America and other causes are producing
+ a curious change in the French peasantry, and a change not
+ favourable to peace and order. The tenacity with which the very
+ small proprietors have hitherto clung to their land is visibly
+ diminishing. They now offer their land for sale to an extent
+ hitherto quite unprecedented. They say that they can get better
+ interest by putting the price of the land into the funds or other
+ speculations, and can thus lead a pleasant life, instead of
+ slaving from morning to night to get a bare subsistence out of
+ their fields. The tendency of all this is to reduce the numbers
+ of the hitherto ultra-Conservative laborious class, and to fill
+ the towns more and more with idle and very often disappointed and
+ discontented speculators, who form a material ready to the hand of
+ anarchists.
+
+The letters from Lord Granville show that although the British
+Government had embarked most unwillingly upon the Egyptian enterprise,
+and viewed additional responsibility with so much horror that some
+members of the Cabinet were even opposed to the office of Financial
+Adviser to the Egyptian Government being given to an Englishman, yet
+that the Cabinet was at all events unanimously against the maintenance
+of the Control, and of the old dual arrangements. The French Government,
+with an entire absence of logic and common sense, was quite indisposed
+to recognize the complete change in the situation which had taken place,
+and continued to claim that England and France should remain on an
+equality as regarded themselves, and in a superior position as far as
+the other Powers were concerned. The difficulty lay in discovering some
+means of satisfying French vanity without yielding on the essential
+point of equality, and efforts to ascertain what would be considered
+satisfactory did not meet with much success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 14, 1882.
+
+ I tried to make Duclerc see yesterday that the practical way
+ towards obtaining some satisfaction for French _amour-propre_ was
+ to enter upon the discussion of details as to the Boards in Egypt.
+ I went as far as I could without running the risk of provoking
+ lofty language, which might have been an obstacle to moderate
+ arrangements hereafter.
+
+ However, at the moment Duclerc did not go back from his old
+ grounds. He does not insist upon a literal re-establishment of
+ the Control, but he does claim a virtual return to the _status quo
+ ante_, and he interprets that status as equality between England
+ and France and superiority of the two jointly over other Powers.
+
+ The single Financial Councillor pleases no one here. As
+ he must of course be an Englishman, the sticklers for French
+ _gloriole_ declare that whether his functions be great or small,
+ he will simply be a symbol of English supremacy and French
+ decadency. To the _haute_ and _petite finance_, the mode of his
+ appointment and the smallness of his powers seem an additional
+ cause of complaint, as not giving sufficient security for a proper
+ administration of the finances of Egypt. I shall be very anxious to
+ hear how it all strikes Dufferin.
+
+ In fact, at the present moment, the French are too uneasy
+ about their internal affairs to pay much attention to Egypt. But
+ they may fire up if any special event comes to irritate them. It
+ is more, however, future lasting ill will than violence at the
+ moment which I apprehend. If we leave them bitterly discontented
+ with arrangements in Egypt, I hardly see when we shall be able to
+ withdraw our troops and still maintain the influence which is a
+ necessity to us.
+
+The idea that the British occupation of Egypt was anything more than
+a temporary expedient does not seem to have been considered a serious
+possibility by any English Minister so far. Partly by luck, partly
+by the skill of Sir Garnet Wolseley and Lord Dufferin, we had found
+ourselves in possession of Egypt, unhampered by association with any
+European Power or with the Turks; but for a time it looked as if the
+brilliant results achieved were to be thrown away because the British
+Government had no clear idea what its policy was to be. Fortunately for
+all concerned, the step was taken of sending Lord Dufferin on a special
+mission to Cairo, and unlike most special missions of more recent date,
+the experiment proved a complete success, and quickly destroyed the
+mischievous delusion entertained by a section of English politicians
+that an evacuation of Egypt was possible at any early date. This
+delusion had never been shared by the French, who naturally judged the
+action of others in the light in which they themselves would have acted
+under similar circumstances, and who made little effort to conceal their
+annoyance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 1, 1882.
+
+ I don't succeed in making Duclerc _coulant_ about Egypt. He
+ rather implied that it was not from Tissot that he had heard that
+ you were going to send him a favourable communication, and that you
+ were thinking of sending an expert to discuss details. He did not,
+ however, say who it was that told him. Perhaps d'Aunay may have had
+ something to do with it. Duclerc went on to hint at there being two
+ currents in the English Cabinet, one more favourable to the French
+ than the other, but I declined to listen to this. He talked as if
+ he had some special source of information as to your intentions and
+ sentiments. He seemed to take to the idea of a discussion between
+ experts.
+
+ He was amiable about Madagascar, but we shall see what
+ his written answer will be. He represented himself as having
+ overwhelmed the Ambassadors with kindness, and then as having
+ broken off the negotiation on the point of the leases being for 99
+ years.
+
+ In the meantime prospects at home do not brighten. Railroads
+ and other public works have been begun, with very little system, in
+ all kinds of places to please Deputies and their constituents. The
+ Government dare not stop them for fear of what the workmen would do
+ if large numbers of them found themselves out of work. To go on,
+ is ruinous to the finances. There must be a limit to the floating
+ debt. The Government are again negotiating with the railway
+ companies. People are beginning to talk of Saviours of Society.
+ The names most mentioned are those of General Chanzy and the Duc
+ d'Aumale. Gambetta would have been everybody's man, if he had never
+ been Minister. However, I don't think that we are very near any
+ violent change.
+
+ Grevy is certainly not brisk, but he may grow old without
+ things coming to an early catastrophe.
+
+ There is a not unaccredited rumour that it was in wresting
+ the revolver from a female hand that Gambetta got wounded. The
+ bulletins at the office of the _Republique Francaise_ are that he
+ is going on as well as possible.
+
+The last paragraph refers to the wounding of Gambetta by a pistol shot.
+The accident (which terminated fatally) occurred at his villa outside
+Paris, and was surrounded by a mystery which has never been dispelled,
+but it may be assumed that a lady really was involved.
+
+The allusion to Madagascar relates to the mission despatched by the
+Queen of the Hovas to Europe in the autumn in the vain hope of coming to
+some agreement with the French Government, which had raised questions
+ominously resembling those which had, in the previous year, formed
+the prelude to the Tunis expedition. The Hovas, like the Kroumirs,
+constituted 'a serious danger' to the French Republic, and demands were
+put forward which involved general French rights over the whole of
+Madagascar, and a protectorate over the northwest coast. The unhappy
+Hova envoys proceeded from Paris to London, but met with little
+encouragement there, and before long a semi-official announcement
+was made in which the stereotyped statement, with which small and
+defenceless states are so painfully familiar, appeared: 'The Cabinet is
+resolved to enforce the respect of the rights and interests of France
+in Madagascar, and orders in conformity with the situation have,
+therefore, been sent to the Commander of the French naval station.'
+Signs of the same ominous activity were also beginning to manifest
+themselves in Tonquin; and the only compensating factor was that
+Madagascar and Tonquin served to distract a certain amount of French
+attention from Egypt, although the tone of the press, and especially of
+the _Republique Francaise_, the organ of Gambetta, became increasingly
+hostile to England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 19, 1882.
+
+ There are reports afloat that Gambetta's cure is not going
+ on as steadily as it ought. At all events there is no change for
+ the better in the tone of the _Republique Francaise_ respecting
+ England in Egypt. I don't like the idea of having the French there
+ in bitter opposition to all we do. It may make it very difficult
+ for us with safety to ourselves to give any large measure of
+ independence to the Egyptian Government. At all events, the less we
+ are able to sacrifice to satisfy French _amour-propre_, the more we
+ must do to give security to legitimate French material interests by
+ providing for a really good honest financial administration. If the
+ French take the protection of their material interests exclusively
+ into their own hands, they may go very great lengths indeed to
+ protect them, if they are seriously threatened; and, besides, the
+ pretext that the credit, property or persons of Frenchmen are
+ threatened, will always be at hand to sanction interference.
+
+ At present it looks as if the Duclerc Government would be
+ glad to back out of its expeditions to Tonquin, etc., etc. The
+ proceedings of the Hova Ambassadors and their supporters in England
+ may make it difficult for the French Government to be as reasonable
+ as it might otherwise wish to be about Madagascar.
+
+ The prevalent feeling of depression and uneasiness about
+ the general condition of France does not seem to diminish. There
+ seems to be a profound distrust of the abilities, if not of the
+ intentions, of the men who so rapidly succeed one another in
+ office, and no one seems to know where to turn for something better.
+
+It was somewhat unfortunate that French aggression in Tonquin and
+Madagascar was unconsciously stimulated by the English press. 'The
+English press is driving the French public wild on the subject of
+Tonquin, Madagascar, and other beyond sea questions, which the
+Government would probably have been glad enough to back out of if they
+had been let alone.'[36]
+
+Until the end of the year private negotiations continued between Lord
+Granville and the French Government with reference to the abolition of
+the Control with completely unsuccessful results.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 26, 1882.
+
+ I hear, not from himself, that Duclerc's present intention
+ is to make a very strong protest if we abolish Control without
+ coming to a previous understanding with France; and that our making
+ our own Control, or that of Europe in general, over the Egyptian
+ finances weak, would not mollify him. On the contrary, he would try
+ to make a point of what he would call our abandonment of French
+ material interests--and deduce from it an argument that France is
+ bound to protect them herself. While we are absolutely at two with
+ France, we shall find it very difficult to relax our material hold
+ on Egypt. Egypt for the Egyptians is only too likely to become
+ Egypt for the French.
+
+ Gambetta's illness seems to have rather strengthened his
+ position. The anxiety of his opponents in the press to make out
+ that he is worse than is really the case and the disgusting
+ statements they have in consequence put forward, have served to
+ impress on friends and foes his importance. According to the best
+ information I have been able to get, he is not at this moment
+ seriously ill, though his recovery is too slow to be satisfactory.
+
+ Confidence and tranquillity do not appear to revive in France,
+ and the disappearance of Gambetta would increase uneasiness. People
+ do not exactly know what they are afraid of, but there is a general
+ vague uneasiness. Perhaps the most definite cause of fears or hopes
+ is the intrigue in which certain officers of the army are said to
+ be engaged with a view of putting the Duc d'Aumale at the head of
+ the state.
+
+The childish frame of mind in which the French Government of the day
+considered the question of the Control may be judged from the fact that
+Duclerc in private conversation had admitted in the autumn that, if
+for form's sake, the _status quo ante_ could be restored for only five
+minutes, he would agree subsequently to its immediate abolition. In
+December, however, he was in a more intractable mood, and, at the end
+of the year, Lord Granville found it necessary to break off all private
+negotiations on the subject, observing that it was very painful and
+disadvantageous to be on bad terms with the French, but that it was, at
+the least, equally disadvantageous to them.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 35: 'Egypt and the Egyptian Question,' Sir D. Mackenzie
+Wallace.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Lyons to Granville.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+ANGLOPHOBIA
+
+(1883-1885)
+
+
+The first day of 1883 was signalized by the announcement of the death of
+Gambetta, and those who were present at the Elysee on the occasion of
+President Grevy's New Year's Day reception will remember the singularly
+embarrassed demeanour of that uninteresting personage; an embarrassment
+which might have been accounted for on various grounds. Gambetta's
+death was followed in a day or two by that of General Chanzy, an event
+which caused consternation amongst the Monarchical and Conservative
+parties, as he was looked upon as the only man capable of stopping the
+too rapid progress of the Republican car. It was doubtless with the
+view of anticipating other pretenders, that Prince Napoleon seized the
+opportunity to issue a Proclamation denouncing the Republic, which
+resulted in his immediate incarceration in the Conciergerie.
+
+For some months there had existed in France a feeling of uneasiness
+and of distrust in the maintenance of orderly government, and this
+feeling was greatly increased by the double loss of Gambetta and Chanzy.
+Gambetta was the only man in the Republican party whose ability and
+popularity were sufficient to induce the country to acquiesce in his
+wielding great power, and who was believed to have the will and the
+courage to exercise that power energetically in case of need. Chanzy
+was looked upon as the only man whose military reputation and influence
+qualified him to keep the army united and to use it with effect, in the
+case of grave political troubles.
+
+As for the President of the Republic, M. Grevy, his energy and influence
+continued to diminish; the Chamber of Deputies was becoming more and
+more discredited, and the professedly anarchical parties were certainly
+increasing in violence, and apparently in numbers and influence as well.
+The public generally, even amongst the lower orders, showed few signs
+of great attachment to the Republican Government. That Government had
+not augmented their material prosperity, had not raised their social
+position, and had not realized their dreams of absolute equality with,
+or rather of predominance over, the rich and the educated. Every form
+of Monarchical Government was repugnant to them, but nevertheless a
+moderate Republic excited no enthusiasm whatsoever. The upper classes
+were alarmed and discontented; they did not believe that their property
+was secure, and they considered the work of administration was
+deplorably carried on by the various obscure Ministers who succeeded
+each other so rapidly in office; their religious feelings were daily
+shocked, while bad harvests, bad trade, and an unpromising financial
+situation added to the general feeling of dissatisfaction.
+
+On the other hand, the 'spirited Colonial Policy,' which was now so much
+in evidence, did little to counterbalance this feeling, and the attempts
+which had been made to pander to the national vanity by the overbearing
+policy adopted towards Madagascar; the extension of French predominance
+in Tunis; annexations on the Congo; and the consolidation of the French
+Protectorate over Tonquin and Annam, had met with little success. The
+disquieting fact from the English point of view was that ill-feeling
+towards England, chiefly with regard to Egypt, had risen to a high
+pitch, and that each successive step taken by the British Government,
+and each declaration made by it, seemed only to increase the irritation.
+It was in this direction that, Lord Lyons feared, attempts would be made
+to divert public discontent by those who might be in power; and the
+procedure of the new French Government certainly justified the fear.
+The position which the French Government took up, was that of defending
+French influence and French interests in Egypt by its own independent
+means. It declared that by the abolition of the Control, a deep wound
+had been inflicted upon French dignity, while the principal security
+for the regular payment of the sums due in regard to the loans had been
+taken away. It did not hesitate to declare that any tampering with
+the Law of Liquidation, or with the lands and revenues pledged to the
+loans; or any failure to provide for the charges on the loans, would
+be regarded as a breach of international obligations on the part of
+Egypt, which would warrant the active interference of France. It hardly
+made any pretence of concealing its intention to work against English
+influence in Egypt by every means in its power, and unfortunately it was
+evident that in this anti-English policy it could reckon on the support
+of public opinion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 9, 1883.
+
+ Blowitz's[37] intelligence certainly comes from the French
+ Foreign Office, sometimes, I dare say, directly, but often only
+ through the _Temps_. The _Temps_ is published the afternoon before
+ the day on which it is dated, and some hours before Blowitz's
+ letter goes to the _Times_. Blowitz's letter always goes by
+ telegraph, the _Times_ having the exclusive use of a line for some
+ hours every night.
+
+ It seems that Ferry will succeed Gambetta in the leadership
+ of the largest portion of the Republican party. I do not think he
+ is hostile to Duclerc, but if he attains to anything at all near
+ to Gambetta's position, Duclerc will only hold office during his
+ sufferance. Probably neither would be willing to serve under the
+ other.
+
+ If, as seems likely, the death of Gambetta leads to the
+ decay of the spirit of revenge upon Germany, this will (as I
+ have said before) increase the danger of all other Powers from
+ the restlessness of France, and will in particular increase our
+ difficulties in Egypt. If any modification of the arrangement of
+ the Law of Liquidation is proposed or any other step taken which
+ can give France a pretext for interfering in defence of French
+ interests, we may have trouble. If we leave a door open for French
+ intrusion, France may get so far in, that her _amour-propre_ may
+ force her to push on at all risks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 16, 1883.
+
+ Prince Napoleon's Proclamation and his arrest have put all
+ other things out of people's heads here for the moment. He was
+ arrested, very roughly I understand, at 3 o'clock, as he drove up
+ to his own door in the Avenue d'Autin, and his papers were examined
+ and seized in the usual way on such occasions. There is not so
+ far any appearance of his having anything behind to back up the
+ Proclamation. It is said that he has rendered himself liable to
+ very severe penalties as a conspirator against the State. What
+ seems to be more generally expected is that the law enabling the
+ Government to exile the members of any family that has reigned in
+ France will be revived. If it is to be the beginning of political
+ proscriptions, in however mild a form, it will be a calamity and
+ perhaps a prelude to revolutionary times and ways.
+
+ The only good I can see in it is that it may divert attention
+ here from Egypt, for the French were getting excessively cross with
+ us on that subject. I should not have been surprised if Duclerc's
+ Declaration and Yellow Book had been much more unfriendly than they
+ are. The Declaration was, it seems, received with icy coldness in
+ the Chamber. It is creditable to Duclerc that he did not fish for a
+ cheer by a Chauvin wind up, as Freycinet used to do. But if Duclerc
+ had been popular and had been thought to be firm in the saddle, he
+ would have met with a better reception.
+
+Prince Napoleon's Proclamation did not in reality cause any great
+commotion or alarm, as it was obvious that he had no backing of
+importance; but it served as an excuse to introduce a preposterous
+Exclusion Bill directed against the members of all ex-reigning families.
+This measure created great indignation amongst the French Conservatives,
+more especially the provision which deprived the Princes of their
+Commissions in the army, and in consequence of modifications which were
+introduced. Duclerc and his colleagues resigned office, giving place to
+an ephemeral Cabinet under M. Fallieres, subsequently President of the
+Republic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Feb. 2, 1883.
+
+ Everything is at sixes and sevens here, and no one knows
+ to whom to turn in the absolute dearth of any man of decided
+ superiority since the death of Gambetta. It is curious that he
+ should come to be regretted as the mainstay of Conservatism.
+
+ I send you by the messenger a despatch from Villiers[38]
+ which seems to me to give a very clear and correct account of
+ the state of feeling in the French Army. I don't think it at all
+ overrates the dissatisfaction that exists among the officers. For
+ my own part I do not believe there is any organized movement,
+ Legitimist, Orleanist, or Bonapartist, actually in preparation
+ at this moment. But I do see that confidence in the duration of
+ the present institutions is diminishing, and that, as a cause or
+ a consequence, dissatisfaction and disquietude are increasing.
+ Something subversive may happen with very little warning beforehand.
+
+ Barring accidents, the probabilities seem to be that the
+ present Ministry may last about ten days, and that then Jules
+ Ferry may come in for some months and _apres lui le deluge_.
+ Challemel Lacour is talked of as Minister for Foreign Affairs. As a
+ diplomatist you know him better than I do. The little social (so to
+ call it) intercourse I have had with him has been pleasant enough,
+ but he has the reputation of being irritable and cross-grained.
+
+ The proceedings against the Princes are bad enough in
+ themselves, and they are of evil augury. The Reds having once
+ tasted blood, may become ravenous for more, and who can say where
+ they may look for the next victims?
+
+ Notwithstanding the critical state of home affairs, the
+ French papers find room occasionally for bitter articles against
+ us about Egypt. The great point to attend to, in order to prevent
+ the smouldering irritations bursting into a blaze, seems to be to
+ avoid touching the Law of Liquidation, or the administrations of
+ the Daira and Domains. Any alteration, however great an improvement
+ it might be in reality, would give rise to unlimited suspicion and
+ dissatisfaction here.
+
+The Prince of Wales had intended visiting Paris about this period, but
+in consequence of the violent feelings aroused by the Exclusion Bill
+and of the bitterness of the extremists against constituted dynasties,
+he was advised to keep away.
+
+ Their newspapers would have no scruple in attacking any
+ personage, however exalted, whom they believed to be opposed to
+ their deplorable bill. Indeed, the more exalted the personage,
+ and the more entitled to respect, the greater might be their
+ scurrility. Nothing can be more lamentable than all this, and I
+ am obliged to add that the general feeling towards England is not
+ particularly cordial. Taking everything into consideration, I have,
+ though very reluctantly, come to the conclusion that it is my duty
+ to report to Your Royal Highness that I cannot feel quite sure that
+ if you were at Paris something unpleasant might not happen, or that
+ at least very improper language might not be used by a portion of
+ the press; and I cannot conceal from Your Royal Highness that the
+ present moment is far from an opportune one for a visit.[39]
+
+The increasing bad feeling produced a complaint from Lord Granville,
+who considered that 'it is hard upon me, that being probably, of all
+English public men, the one who for various reasons is most attached to
+France, we should always have such difficult moments to pass when I am
+in office.'
+
+After all the fuss that had been made about Prince Napoleon's
+Proclamation, it came as a distinct anti-climax that his arrest was
+discovered to be illegal. He was accordingly released, and nothing more
+was heard of him; meanwhile it was generally believed that General
+Billot, the late Minister of War in the Duclerc Government, had actually
+made all preparations for a _pronunciamento_ in favour of the Duc
+d'Aumale, and that his project was only foiled on account of the want
+of enterprise shown by the Orleans princes themselves. General Billot
+was superseded by a certain General Thibaudin, who was considered to be
+especially well adapted for the purpose of carrying out the dirty work
+in connection with the dismissal of the Princes from the army.
+
+After a period of much uncertainty, during which for more than a month
+there was no one at the French Foreign Office to whom the Foreign
+Diplomatists could speak on foreign affairs, or even any subordinate who
+could express an opinion or give an instruction, M. Fallieres was got
+rid of, and a new administration was formed under M. Jules Ferry, M.
+Challemel Lacour becoming Foreign Minister.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 20, 1883.
+
+ I suppose Ferry must have made his Ministry by to-morrow or
+ the next day. I will not bore you with the innumerable conjectures
+ as to who his colleagues will be. It is said Thibaudin is to be
+ kept as Minister of War, long enough at all events to take the
+ measures against the Princes which a more respectable general would
+ shrink from.
+
+ I only hope the new Ministry will not try to divert public
+ attention from home difficulties by a 'spirited' Foreign or
+ Colonial Policy. Egypt is always a source of trouble ready to their
+ hand, if they want to produce excitement. I think the great thing
+ is to avoid touching the Law of Liquidation or the administration
+ of the securities for the loans; in short, to avoid giving them
+ any pretext for saying that the material interests of France are
+ injured, and the guarantee she held weakened. But it is premature
+ to speculate on these matters in ignorance of who the incoming
+ Ministers may be and what policy they will adopt.
+
+The urbane M. Challemel Lacour, in his new capacity as Foreign Minister,
+was not likely to begin by making gushing protestations of deep
+affection for England, but Lord Lyons was disposed to consider this a
+hopeful symptom. 'I know by long experience that ardent professions
+of love for England on the part of an incoming Minister are not to be
+trusted to as good signs.' Mr. Gladstone was in Paris at the time and
+paid visits to the President, Challemel Lacour, and Jules Ferry; but
+much to the relief of the Ambassador, he avoided the subjects of Egypt
+and of Commercial Treaties, and no harm was done.
+
+The Ferry administration possessed the advantage of attracting a better
+class of French politician than had lately been the case, and M.
+Waddington now reappeared upon the scene.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ March 6, 1883.
+
+ Jules Ferry appears to have hinted to Waddington that he would
+ be offered the Embassy in London, if he voted with the Government
+ on the interpellation in the Senate on the Decree putting the
+ Orleans Princes _en non-activite_. The Embassy at Vienna has, I
+ understand, been actually offered to and refused by him. He would
+ not, under any circumstances, take any Embassy but London, and
+ moreover he would in no case serve a Government of which Thibaudin
+ was a member.
+
+ Waddington asked Rivers Wilson if he could not suggest some
+ offer which might be made to France in order to place her once
+ more in cordial union with England in Egypt. There is, moreover,
+ a notice in the Havas, purporting to come from London, but very
+ likely put in more or less on authority here, to the effect that
+ France cannot, and England ought to, take the initiative of
+ proposing something. I entirely agree with you that the matter had
+ better lie still for the moment. I suppose you don't want to make
+ any such concession to France as would satisfy her, and certainly
+ matters would not be mended by our making another unsuccessful
+ proposal. I hope Waddington spoke entirely on his own hook and
+ not in concert with Challemel Lacour. It would be intolerable
+ if Challemel Lacour tried the system of indirect irresponsible
+ communications, the delight of Duclerc, which produced so much
+ annoyance and inconvenience, and in fact rendered any real
+ understanding impossible.
+
+ Jules Ferry is believed to be contemplating a conversion of
+ the 5 per cents. If he makes the attempt, it will bind him over
+ to keep things quiet abroad and at home, in order to secure the
+ success of the operation.
+
+ It is very provoking that the French should have put down the
+ New Hebrides among the places to which to transport their relapsed
+ criminals.
+
+Lord Granville, who owned that he had nothing to propose about Egypt,
+even if he wished to do so, was not at all enthusiastic at the prospect
+of Waddington coming to London, 'I am not particularly anxious to
+have Waddington instead of Tissot, he would be burning to distinguish
+himself, and very _agissant_.' Lord Granville's fears of Waddington's
+activity were founded upon the fact that he had been selected as the
+French Representative at the Coronation at Moscow, and that, therefore,
+he would find it impossible to settle down quietly at the London Embassy
+without burning to distinguish himself, after 'flourishing about Europe.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 23, 1883.
+
+ It is whispered, at least by Waddington's friends, that it is
+ intended that his special Embassy to Russia shall be a prelude to
+ his becoming regular Ambassador in London: that the idea is that he
+ shall offer a Commercial Treaty to us; that he shall by this means
+ enlist the support of some members of Parliament and influential
+ manufacturers in England, and that then he shall obtain concessions
+ for us about Egypt, on the plea that, without such concessions,
+ the Chambers could not be brought to ratify a Commercial Treaty
+ favourable to us. The statements in the newspapers about the
+ assumption of Commercial negotiations between England and France
+ are stated to be _ballons d'essai_ to see how the wind sets with
+ regard to such a policy.
+
+ I just give you all this for what it may be worth. I doubt
+ very much whether formal negotiations or a stirring French
+ Ambassador in London would be likely to lead just now to cordiality
+ between France and England. The French could hardly do anything
+ that would satisfy us about trade, and we should find it very
+ difficult to do anything that would satisfy them about Egypt. My
+ hope would rather be that we might glide back into cordiality by
+ avoiding critical questions.
+
+ In talking to me about his Embassy to Russia, Waddington
+ mentioned, amongst its advantages, that it would bring him into
+ contact with important personages of various countries, and he said
+ he should probably visit Berlin and Vienna on his way home.
+
+With Challemel Lacour at the Foreign Office there did not appear to
+be much prospect of 'gliding back into cordiality,' judging by the
+following account of an interview between him and some members of the
+Rothschild family who were frequently employed as intermediaries between
+the two Governments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 30, 1883.
+
+ Alphonse de Rothschild and his cousin Sir Nathaniel came to
+ see me yesterday and told me that they had had an interview with
+ Challemel Lacour on the subject of the proposed sale of the Domain
+ Lands in Egypt. They told me that they found Challemel Lacour
+ extremely sore about the whole Egyptian Question. He appears to
+ have distinctly refused to forward in any way the sale of the
+ Domain and to have alleged as his reason that he would not help to
+ do away with any board of management in which a Frenchman still had
+ a seat; that this would tend to diminish the number of Frenchmen
+ holding influential positions in Egypt, while his object was to
+ increase, or at all events, to maintain the existing number. As
+ indeed might have been foreseen, he was very far from desiring
+ to facilitate any financial or other arrangements required by
+ England. We shall no doubt find the French very inconvenient
+ and embarrassing in Egypt at every turn. I hope they will not
+ be dangerous, unless some disregard of positive international
+ engagements affecting French interests gives the Chauvinists the
+ pretext they are looking out for, and drives the sensible men into
+ a corner, in face of their public declarations and of popular
+ irritation.
+
+ I understand Louise Michel has been arrested. The Government
+ may gain ground by showing vigour, but unless it finds means of
+ convincing the officers in the army that it will secure their
+ position against the Radical endeavours to undermine it, things may
+ end in that fatal solution, a military _pronunciamento_.
+
+The arrest of Louise Michel had taken place as the result of one of the
+numerous riots which occurred at Paris in the spring of 1883; they were
+not of much importance, but possessed some significance as being the
+first appearance of disturbances in the streets since the suppression of
+the Commune, and were due largely to the distress caused by bad trade,
+and to artificially stimulated expenditure on building, and other modes
+of finding employment. The result of the latter expedient was to raise
+the price of labour artificially and consequently to drive manufactures
+to other places, thus creating unemployment in Paris itself. In
+connection with these disturbances there was one singular peculiarity
+in the attitude of the so-called Conservative classes. Not only the
+Royalist and Imperial parties, but a considerable number of the richer
+people who were without any strong political bias, sympathized rather
+with the people in the streets than with the Government. The upper
+classes were, in fact, so dissatisfied with the existing state of things
+that they appeared willing to run the risk of seeing the Republican
+Government discredited and ultimately overthrown by popular tumult.
+
+The following letter is an admirable illustration of the spirit in
+which the French viewed all English action in Egypt. Lord Dufferin,
+in the course of a despatch, had spoken in most appreciative terms of
+the friendly attitude adopted towards him by M. de Raindre, the French
+Agent and Consul-General at Cairo, and the British Government naturally
+supposed that it would be agreeable to the French Government if the
+despatch were communicated to them. Lord Lyons, however, who was much
+better acquainted with French opinion, thought otherwise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 15, 1883.
+
+ I am rather frightened by the praises given by Dufferin in his
+ despatch of April 29th to the 'very correct and loyal attitude of
+ M. de Raindre, the French Agent and Consul-General, and of all the
+ French officials in Egypt.' If this despatch came to the knowledge
+ of the French Government or the French public, it might do de
+ Raindre a serious injury, and lead to the immediate substitution
+ for him of an Agent whose attitude would be more correct in the
+ French sense. I am afraid also that the claim Dufferin makes
+ to have considered the interests of the French in the Egyptian
+ service, however true it is, would provoke a howl of contradiction.
+
+ I do not mean to imply that Raindre's conduct has been at
+ variance with his instructions. I don't think it is the policy
+ of the French Government at this moment to get up irritating
+ discussions with us on small everyday matters, either in Egypt or
+ in other parts of the world. The French Foreign Office seems to
+ me to be, on the contrary, more conciliatory than usual in its
+ answers respecting such matters. I mark this with satisfaction
+ because I hope that in this way, provided we can avoid irritating
+ controversies, we may return insensibly to satisfactory relations.
+ But we are far enough from such relations in reality at this
+ moment. Challemel Lacour is not given, as you know, to talk about
+ general diplomatic policy, but others do not hesitate to let us
+ understand that while they are civil about small matters, they are
+ only biding their time till an opportunity comes of opposing us in
+ effect with great ones.
+
+The course of affairs in Tonquin had not tended to restore the French
+to good humour by providing a compensation for their eclipse in Egypt,
+and the attempt to indulge in Chauvinism on the cheap had turned out
+to be a costly and unsatisfactory experiment. Had it not been for the
+provocations of the foreign press, it is possible that the spirited
+Colonial Policy with regard to Tonquin, Madagascar, etc., would have
+been abandoned quietly; but it was found intolerable to endure the daily
+administration of threats, ridicule, and supercilious advice showered
+from abroad. As it was, these expeditions did serve one useful purpose,
+namely, that of temporarily diverting attention from Egypt.
+
+The reputation of the French Republic was not enhanced by a most
+discreditable incident which occurred at Paris in the autumn. The young
+King of Spain who had been visiting some of the European capitals,
+arrived at Paris on September 29, shortly after having been created
+by the German Emperor an Honorary Colonel of an Uhlan regiment at
+Strasbourg. On the strength of this honorary distinction he was met by
+a howling mob, which proceeded to demonstrate its patriotism by insults
+such as have seldom been offered to any foreign potentate, and for which
+the President of the Republic was forced to make an apology on the
+following day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 5, 1883.
+
+ I do not remember any moment at which affairs here have
+ appeared to me so gloomy. The more I learn of the proceedings of
+ the French authorities, no less than those of the mob, the more
+ unpardonable do they appear. I have never felt the same repugnance
+ (and I have had my trials in this way) to the people with whom I
+ have to deal. It is a comfort to contrast the bearing of the King
+ of Spain with that of His Majesty's so called hosts. Jules Ferry
+ himself appears to have behaved decorously. I will forbear from
+ speculating on the ultimate effect of this deplorable affair on
+ French institutions. So far as I can see, Ferry and Wilson both
+ calculate on obtaining the advantage in a battle in the Chambers,
+ if they put off the fight till the session opens on the 23rd. In
+ the meantime, decency (if decency were at all taken into account
+ here at this moment) would seem to require that Thibaudin should
+ resign or be dismissed.
+
+ Our own political questions with the French Government do
+ not seem in a much more hopeful state than the general political
+ condition of things here.
+
+Not content with having by carelessness allowed the King of Spain to be
+insulted, the French Government prevented a correct and complete report
+of President Grevy's apology from being published in the _Journal
+Officiel_, this action being on a par with the whole disgraceful
+proceedings. As, however, the only alternative to the existing
+Government appeared to be a thoroughgoing Intransigeant Cabinet, and
+there was no telling what the latter might do both at home and abroad,
+it was hoped that Jules Ferry and his colleagues would succeed in
+holding their own.
+
+In the autumn, Challemel Lacour, who had become unpopular owing to the
+unsatisfactory campaign in Tonquin, resigned office, and his place at
+the Foreign Office was taken by Jules Ferry himself. Towards the end of
+November there arrived the news of Hicks Pasha's disaster in the Soudan,
+and although this event was not by any means unwelcome to the French,
+the chances of a speedy termination of the British occupation of Egypt
+naturally grew more remote.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 23, 1883.
+
+ I suppose there can be no hope that the disaster which has
+ overwhelmed Hicks's army is less serious than is reported. It seems
+ to be a grievous misfortune which has come at a most inopportune
+ moment for us. It is far from causing sorrow to our friends here.
+
+ I quite understand your not being keen to arbitrate between
+ France and China, and I don't think the French will be willing to
+ accept the arbitration of anybody. What they understand by our good
+ offices, is that we should help them to carry all their points
+ against the Chinese. It is supposed that the Committee will press
+ on the Government a larger vote for Tonquin than the Government has
+ asked for.
+
+ In the mean time things at home are looking gloomy in
+ France. There is likely to be a stagnation of trade and generally
+ much distress during the winter. People of all classes are
+ getting irritable, and seem to seek to vent their irritation on
+ foreign Powers. Add to this that the depression and pusillanimity
+ which followed 1870-1871, seem to be giving place to the former
+ overweening opinion of the strength of France and consequently to
+ Chauvinism.
+
+ I wrote a despatch to you by the last messenger as to the
+ effect the lowering the wine duties for Spain would have here. I
+ am never quite at ease when I think of our holding Most Favoured
+ Nation treatment at the pleasure of the French. The lowest class
+ who are gaining power are certainly not Free Traders.
+
+In consequence of the Soudan disaster the Egyptian Government became
+anxious to call in the Turks to their assistance, and this project
+excited a strong feeling in France against the admission of the Sultan's
+troops, or of any Turkish fighting men into Egypt, to take part in the
+defence against the Mahdi, that feeling being founded on the old ground
+of danger to the French position in Tunis and Algeria. But, for the same
+reason, the French were disposed to throw a heavy responsibility upon
+England for taking precautions that the Mahdi should be effectually
+stopped somewhere or other. Everything, in fact, that England did in
+Egypt was wrong in French eyes, and there was a fresh outburst over an
+arrangement made between Lesseps and the English shipowners with regard
+to the Suez Canal.
+
+In January, 1884, the British Government decided definitely upon the
+evacuation of the Soudan, and Gordon was despatched to carry out the
+operation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 19, 1884.
+
+ I do not know that in the main any marked change in public
+ opinion in France about Egypt has taken place since I wrote ten
+ days ago; but as the state of things there remains unchanged
+ for the better or becomes changed for the worse, excitement and
+ reproaches against England increase. A catastrophe with regard to
+ the garrison of Khartoum or that of Sinkat, or any massacre of
+ Europeans, would probably produce a violent outcry against us, of a
+ much more intense character than the present general upbraiding as
+ to our allowing the advance of the Soudan towards civilization to
+ be stopped, and the slave trade to be revived.
+
+ I am told confidentially that Barrere, the French Agent at
+ Cairo, writes to urge his Government to decide upon some distinct
+ line of policy, in view of the present crisis. His own idea
+ would seem to be to ingratiate himself with the Egyptians at the
+ expense of the English, to lead them to attribute all the present
+ misfortunes to England and to teach them to look to France for
+ ultimate deliverance from them. I hear that he rates Baring's
+ ability very highly, but writes very disparagingly of the other
+ Englishmen in office in Egypt. One of his topics in decrying
+ England is said to be the sum charged by her on the Egyptian
+ Treasury for the occupying troops. He is said not to be averse to
+ touching the Law of Liquidation, because he conceives that, if this
+ is done, France will get her finger into the pie again.
+
+ Tonquin is, at this moment, secondary to Egypt in interest
+ here, but the French are getting impatient for news from Admiral
+ Courbet.
+
+ Nothing particularly critical has yet taken place in the
+ Chamber.
+
+Lord Granville's reply seems to show that General Gordon was almost as
+great an optimist as himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Jan. 19, 1884.
+
+ Many thanks for your important private letter about Egypt. The
+ information may be of use to Baring.
+
+ Barrere is a very clever fellow, and has persuaded Baring that
+ he is very friendly.
+
+ Gordon went off yesterday, in a very good humour, determined
+ to help us in carrying out our policy of evacuation in the best
+ manner.
+
+ He is wonderfully optimistic, with a great contempt for the
+ Mahdi and disbelief in Arab fanaticism or love of real fighting. He
+ is not much afraid of a massacre. I trust he may be right.
+
+A fresh disaster in the Soudan--Baker Pasha's defeat--encouraged the
+idea that these reverses were symptoms of weakness on the part of
+England, and gave France a reason for desiring to interfere, and a
+_locus standi_ for asserting a claim to do so.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 11, 1884.
+
+ The large majority obtained by the Government against the
+ coalition of the extreme Right and the extreme Left on Paul Bert's
+ extravagant proposals relative to the salaries of schoolmasters and
+ schoolmistresses, has strengthened their hands and has given some
+ confidence to the Union Republicaine Party, on which they mainly
+ rely. They also succeeded in defeating a very mischievous motion
+ made by Clemenceau in the Committee of 44 to send a deputation to
+ Anzin in order to inquire into, or more properly to foment the
+ troubles in the Anzin coal districts. Nevertheless, the state of
+ the country and of Paris in particular is far from comfortable.
+ The distress of the workmen, and the folly and unreasonableness of
+ their demands and expectations are on the increase. I send you by
+ this messenger a good despatch by Crowe[40] on the violent cry for
+ protection from the competition of foreign workmen as well as that
+ of foreign goods, which has been one of the consequences.
+
+ I am afraid all this does not tend to make the Government
+ more conciliatory on foreign affairs. They are hourly expecting
+ to hear of the fall of Bac-Ninh, and if they are quite successful
+ there, they are only too likely to turn their thoughts to getting
+ a little glory out of the Egyptian question, as well as out of the
+ Madagascar, Congo, and other matters in which they are more or less
+ opposed to England.
+
+ So far as we are concerned, the effect the reconciliation
+ between Russia and Germany has had upon the French is not good.
+ So long as they had any hopes of a quarrel between Germany and
+ Russia, they felt bound to reserve their strength in order to take
+ advantage of it, and to cultivate good relations with other Powers,
+ in order to secure at least their non-interference. Now they have
+ given up the hope of a break between Russia and Germany, and are
+ at the same time confident that all the Continental Powers are
+ determined on peace. They think therefore that they may expect to
+ be _tete-a-tete_ with us and to be free to act as suits them in
+ affairs in which we are concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 12, 1884.
+
+ Your letters are most interesting, though not comforting. The
+ difficulty of keeping on friendly terms with France is not to be
+ underrated.
+
+ I await with almost equal interest the news which we shall
+ probably get this evening from [illegible] and that which I suppose
+ will come in a few days from Bac-Ninh.
+
+ I am afraid victory will make the French Government very
+ difficult to deal with; on the other hand, a defeat, which is not
+ likely, will make the Chinese intolerable.
+
+ Our own troubles, especially in the Soudan, are great. If
+ things could settle there, I am confident that Egypt would soon
+ recover the state in which she was before Hicks's defeat, and this
+ notwithstanding all the intrigues which are going on there.
+
+ Bismarck says he shall give us no trouble about the Law of
+ Liquidation, but that other nations will. What will be the best way
+ of approaching the French Government when we have made up our own
+ minds?
+
+ As to protection, it will create a very angry feeling here.
+ It will ruin the French and it will make us the monopolists of the
+ neutral markets of the world so long as we can keep at peace.
+
+ The Egyptian blister has diverted public attention from Merv.
+ The question was treated in excellent speeches in the Lords, but
+ the debate was dull and flat.
+
+ We do not make you a very handsome present in Mohrenheim. He
+ is like a diplomatist on the stage.
+
+Baron Mohrenheim, a diplomatist of a very conventional type, had just
+been transferred to Paris from the Russian Embassy in London, and was
+generally credited with strong anti-English sentiments.
+
+On the question of the financial condition of Egypt, the British
+Government finally decided to propose a European Conference, and the
+decision was communicated to the French Government. As was only to be
+expected, the English proposal produced a conflict of opinion in France.
+Some approved of calling in Europe generally, but others denounced the
+proposal as a new proof of the treachery of England, who, according
+to them, was bound to treat with France alone, and called loudly upon
+the French Government to refuse to go into a Conference on equal terms
+with other Powers. All seemed to think, however, that the moment had
+come for France to reassume a position equal with that of England, if
+not superior to it. The attitude of the French Government itself was
+more moderate. Jules Ferry accepted the Conference 'in principle,'
+and endeavoured to show that two absolutely false notions prevailed
+in England which seemed to be the great obstacles to an understanding
+between the two countries. One was that if the English withdrew their
+troops from Egypt, France would send hers in; the other, that France
+sought to re-establish the Control.
+
+The position in which Gordon now found himself in Khartoum began to
+cause Her Majesty's Government serious misgivings, and many expedients
+were suggested for relieving Ministers from their embarrassment. Amongst
+them appears a serio-comic proposition from the Baron de Billing, a
+well-known figure in Anglo-French society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 4, 1884.
+
+ I send you copies of a letter written to me by Baron de
+ Billing yesterday and of a memo annexed to it. I don't know what
+ you will think of the offer to rescue Gordon which they contain,
+ but I deem it right to lay it before you. Billing made it to me
+ verbally yesterday, and I begged him to put it in writing. The
+ inclosed papers are the result.
+
+ Billing did not tell me who the persons were by whom the
+ rescue was to be effected, but I understand that they were Arab
+ Sheikhs or something of that kind. Apparently they are in Paris,
+ for he professed to go to consult them before he sent me the memo.
+
+ He says you have known him from a boy.
+
+ '_Il se porte garant de l'honorabilite des personnes en jeu._'
+ For my part '_Je ne me porte garant de rien_' in the matter.
+
+ Billing insisted much on the importance of his receiving a
+ speedy answer.
+
+ MEMO.
+
+ '_Gordon Pasha sera remis aux autorites egyptiennes ou
+ anglaises a un des ports de la Mer Rouge ou aux avant-postes de
+ l'armee anglo-egyptienne moyennant:_
+
+ 1 deg.. _le paiement immediat par Lord Lyons d'une somme de deux
+ mille livres sterling a une personne designee par le Baron de
+ Billing, ancien charge d'affaires de France a Munich, Tunis et
+ Stockholm._
+
+ 2 deg.. _Le versement d'une somme de 48,000 livres sterling au
+ credit du Baron de Billing chez Messrs. Coutts, ses banquiers
+ ordinaires, le jour meme ou parviendra a Londres la nouvelle
+ officielle de la remise de Gordon Pasha entre les mains des
+ autorites anglo-egyptiennes._
+
+ _N.B._--1 deg.. _Un compte detaille sera rendu a Lord Lyons de
+ l'emploi des deux milles livres sterling immediatement exigibles._
+
+ 2 deg. _Gordon Pasha devra prendre l'engagement ecrit de quitter
+ sur le champ l'Egypte et de s'en tenir eloigne pendant une periode
+ de 10 ans._ (_Je crois qu'il sera possible de faire modifier cette
+ derniere pretention qui semble bien peu pratique._)
+
+ _Le Baron de Billing se porte garant vis-a-vis de Lord Lyons
+ de l'honorabilite des personnes en jeu, et il ajoute que vu son
+ experience de l'Afrique, il croit a de serieuses chances de succes._
+
+ _Un permis de sejour en blanc pour l'Egypte sera remis au
+ Baron de Billing pour un Musulman a designer par lui._'
+
+ (_Tres important._)
+
+In spite of Lord Granville's life-long acquaintance with the Baron, the
+proposal (which bears a striking resemblance to some of the incidents
+in the Dreyfus case) was declined, and nothing more was heard of him in
+connection with the rescue of Gordon.
+
+The French military operations in the Far East were terminated
+temporarily by a Treaty with China, concluded in May, under which the
+Protectorate of France over Tonquin and Annam was recognized, and there
+was some uncertainty at first as to how the commercial terms would
+be interpreted. When the Prince of Wales, who was then in Paris,
+called upon President Grevy, the latter dilated effusively upon the
+satisfaction which all nations must feel at the new opening of trade to
+them in Tonquin and Annam. On the other hand, the _Temps_, a newspaper
+of considerable authority, talked of the _ouverture au commerce
+exclusif de la France des Provinces de l'Empire celeste limitrophes de
+nos possessions de l'Indo-Chine_. 'I have observed,' Lord Lyons wrote
+sadly, 'no symptoms lately in France of anything like a decently liberal
+commercial spirit.' Nor when M. Jules Ferry was congratulated upon the
+Tonquin settlement, did that statesman let fall any hint of an intention
+to open to the rest of the world the commercial advantages which France
+had secured for herself. In fact, the chief result of the French success
+in Tonquin seemed to be, that, having at all events, got rid temporarily
+of this difficulty, a more unconciliatory line of policy than ever would
+be adopted as far as Egypt was concerned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 27, 1884.
+
+ You may have observed that, contrary to my usual habit, I
+ have been sending you lately a great many extracts from French
+ newspapers. My reason is of a very painful kind. I have thought it
+ necessary to give you specimens of the ill will towards England,
+ the suspicions of her, and the irritability respecting her which
+ seem to become more and more prevalent here. To these unpleasant
+ symptoms I might add that exclusive and illiberal commercial views
+ and extreme Protectionist ideas are in the ascendant: and that thus
+ the spirited Colonial Policy now in vogue, becomes a danger instead
+ of an advantage to foreign commerce, which it might be if it opened
+ new areas to the trade of all nations.
+
+ The Ferry Government is wafted along by the pleasant breezes
+ from Tonquin, but they must be on the look out for squalls as they
+ near the revision of the Constitution and the discussion of the
+ Budget of 1885.
+
+ The _Gaulois_ is hardly looked upon here as a serious paper,
+ but the calumnies upon Sir J. Drummond Hay which it professes
+ to have derived from a report made, I suppose _viva voce_, by
+ Ordega[41] to Ferry, are too bad. Menabrea says that the Italian
+ Minister at Tangier is a man of herculean strength and fierce
+ temper, and that he is as likely as not to wring Ordega's neck if
+ he catches him. _Libre a lui de le faire._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 28, 1884.
+
+ We must be very clumsy to invite so much indignation in France
+ and at the same time to run the risk of being turned out next month
+ for being so subservient to her.
+
+ Waddington seems in earnest to bring about a good
+ understanding, but our press, over which the Government has
+ absolutely no control, will be most offensive, until the vote of
+ censure against the Conference, which is almost sure to be brought
+ on, is decided one way or the other.
+
+ It will require all Salisbury's want of caution to try to come
+ in upon a quarrel with all Europe upon the Egyptian question.
+
+The Egyptian policy of the Gladstone Government, subsequently to the
+successful campaign of 1882, never met with much favour in any quarter
+in England, but it was not surprising, on the whole, that Lord Granville
+should be pained by French hostility, since nothing whatever had been
+done to warrant it. Had we behaved ill to France, there might have been
+a chance of returning to favour by altering our procedure; as it was,
+there was no reasonable ground of offence whatever, and therefore the
+prospect of restoring friendly relations appeared to be all the more
+remote.
+
+Lord Hartington, then a prominent member of the Gladstone Government,
+was in Paris at the beginning of June, and Lord Granville seems to have
+been much alarmed as to the language which he might use with reference
+to Egypt in conversation with French Ministers. Lord Hartington was
+probably not in the least desirous of conversing with French Ministers
+upon Egypt or upon any other subject, and wished to go _incognito_, 'as
+he was constantly in the habit of doing;' but it was represented to him
+that unless he called upon Jules Ferry it would be believed that he was
+engaged upon a secret mission, and Lord Lyons was therefore asked to
+give him some preliminary coaching.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, June 3, 1884.
+
+ I sent Lord Hartington your letter yesterday, and I had a long
+ visit from him in the afternoon.
+
+ As matters stand, what seems to me most to be dreaded with a
+ view to our relations with France is a vote of the House of Commons
+ censuring an arrangement made by Her Majesty's Government with the
+ French Government. Such a vote, and the debate by which it would be
+ preceded, would, I cannot but fear, have a truly lamentable effect.
+
+ I understand that Jules Ferry is having a memorandum on the
+ Finances of Egypt drawn up by Blignieres, and that it will dispute
+ the accuracy of Mr. Childers's information and represent that the
+ Finances were in a flourishing condition, and that there were
+ surpluses even during Arabi's rebellion, up to the time at which
+ England took the thing in hand. The memorandum will probably deny
+ there being any necessity for reducing the interest of the debt, if
+ the Finances be properly managed.
+
+ I do not know whether such a reason will be assigned to us,
+ but in fact it seems that the French object to any large loans
+ being guaranteed by England, on account of the lien, so to speak,
+ which it would give England upon Egypt. The French would prefer a
+ simple fresh issue of Unified stock.
+
+ In the meantime, the French bondholders are bestirring
+ themselves and protesting against any arrangement being made
+ without their being consulted.
+
+ Jules Ferry, however, himself thinks little of any other
+ consideration in comparison with the political success which it
+ would be to him to give France again a political footing in Egypt,
+ and as a means to this, to get a time fixed for the departure of
+ our troops. I do not think he is afraid of much disapproval here
+ of his counter-concession--the engagement that French troops shall
+ not enter Egypt, either on the departure of the English troops or
+ afterwards. Unless the engagement were very formally made and very
+ peculiarly and stringently worded, it would be felt here that it
+ did not amount to much. For though it would preclude the occupation
+ of Egypt by the French to preserve order and promote reforms in the
+ same way we occupy the country now, it would not be interpreted
+ here as preventing France using force to avenge an insult or
+ protect distinct French interests in cases which would constitute a
+ _casus belli_ as regarded any ordinary country.
+
+ I do not quite understand the exact position in which stands
+ the suggestion that the Financial question should be first
+ settled by England with the several Powers separately, and then a
+ conference be held for a day or two only to ratify what had already
+ been settled. Does this afford an opening for purely financial
+ negotiations, and admit of dropping the French political proposals
+ which appear to be so unpopular in England? I believe Jules Ferry
+ is in some tribulation about the difficulties his proposals have
+ met with in England, and is half inclined to be sorry he made them
+ so strong, though I doubt whether Waddington has made him fully
+ aware of the violence of the opposition they encounter in England.
+
+ Generally speaking, I am very unhappy about the growing
+ ill-will between France and England which exists on both sides
+ of the Channel. It is not that I suppose that France has any
+ deliberate intention of going to war with us. But the two nations
+ come into contact in every part of the world. In every part of it
+ questions arise which, in the present state of feeling, excite
+ mutual suspicion and irritation. Who can say, when and where, in
+ this state of things, some local events may not produce a serious
+ quarrel, or some high-handed proceedings of hot-headed officials
+ occasion an actual collision?
+
+The variety and number of questions upon which Lord Lyons was requested
+to pronounce an opinion have already been commented upon; now he was
+asked to consider the effect of a hypothetical vote of the House of
+Commons.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Trentham, June 4, 1884.
+
+ Many thanks for your important and pregnant letter. I quite
+ agree that the relations between England and France will be
+ disagreeable if the House of Commons rejects our proposals; but
+ this, though possible, is not so probable as Hartington thinks.
+
+ The M.P.'s neither desire a Salisbury administration; still
+ less a dissolution.
+
+ But how will our relations be, if we previously break off
+ with France? and what can you suggest for the settlement of the
+ financial difficulties of Egypt, if we obtain no sanction for a
+ change of the Law of Liquidation?
+
+ Do you think that the House of Commons would allow us to take
+ the whole debt upon ourselves, in order to save the bondholders? I
+ should be really grateful for your suggestions on this last point.
+
+From the above letter it is plain that Her Majesty's Government had no
+definite Egyptian policy, and were merely stumbling along concerned
+only, as frequently happens with British Cabinets, with the possible
+result of a division in the House of Commons. The only evidence of
+policy was a strong inclination to evade responsibility; to hand it over
+to a collection of Powers; and to fritter away such advantages as had
+been so hardly won, in the hopeless attempt to recover the goodwill of
+the French Government.
+
+Lord Lyons's reply was to the effect that nothing would have a worse
+effect than a bitter debate in the House of Commons followed by the
+censure of terms agreed upon by the French and English Governments. But
+as there was no doubt whatever that the French Government intended to
+take advantage of the Conference to place France in the same position in
+Egypt as that which she formerly held, a firm policy on the part of Her
+Majesty's Government might have a better effect than an over-yielding
+one.
+
+The Egyptian Conference met in London at the end of June and continued
+its sterile discussions for upwards of a month before finally breaking
+up, while the tone of the French press grew more and more hostile, and
+anything in the nature of a concession on the subject of the interest of
+the debt or on any other matter affecting French material interest was
+denounced in the fiercest terms. Even the craven British proposals with
+regard to the limitation of the military occupation were treated with
+contempt, and no person came in for greater abuse than M. Waddington,
+who was now established as Ambassador in London, and was constantly
+denounced for subservience to England, solely because he owned an
+English name.
+
+The Conference broke up in August, and the Cabinet, which was now being
+continually denounced on all sides for its feeble and procrastinating
+policy, decided upon despatching Lord Northbrook on a special mission
+to Cairo. Before Lord Northbrook started he had a long interview with
+Lord Lyons, who did his best to impress upon him the views, interests,
+and susceptibilities of France, and the great importance of not running
+counter to them if possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 17, 1884.
+
+ I opened my first conversation with Ferry, the day after my
+ return, with a message from you as to your desire to be on good
+ terms, and to avoid unpleasantness in treating matters between
+ the two countries all over the world. I enlarged upon this theme,
+ and made it as plain to him as I could, without letting the
+ conversation degenerate into recrimination, that if France were
+ perpetually irritating us, we on our side had the means, and should
+ not always be able to abstain from using them, of making ourselves
+ very disagreeable too. The subject was treated in the most friendly
+ way by me, and Ferry was profuse in his acknowledgments to you, and
+ in assurances; but I should have been glad if I could have brought
+ him to more practical advances towards intimacy and good fellowship
+ than I was able to do. However, the conversation may perhaps have
+ done some good.
+
+ As regards the Congo Conference, I came away with the
+ impression that there is more or less a tacit, if not very
+ explicit, understanding between France and Germany, in addition to
+ what appears in the Yellow Book; and that this understanding may
+ prove inconvenient to us.
+
+ The session has not opened very favourably for the Government.
+ The Finance Minister's hocus-pocus expedients for balancing the
+ Budget have been unanimously rejected by the Budget Committee. The
+ recent 'glories' in Tonquin hardly outweigh in public estimation
+ the growing expenses of the operations there and in China. Ferry
+ told me he disliked the protective duties on cattle and corn, but
+ that the Government could not altogether resist them, though it
+ would endeavour to make them as moderate as possible. Rouvier,
+ the new Minister of Commerce, is less Protectionist than his
+ predecessor, Herisson; but I have no confidence in the so-called
+ Free Trade principles of any Frenchman. Duties on manufactures
+ are sure to follow in the wake of duties on food, and I can never
+ forget that we hold our Most Favoured Nation treatment only at the
+ good pleasure of the French Government. The proceedings of the
+ Lyonnais are socialist and revolutionary, and a great impetus has
+ been given to Socialism by the journeyings during the recess of the
+ sub-committees of the General Committee appointed by the Chamber
+ of Deputies to inquire into the distress of the working classes.
+ Nevertheless the chances still seem to be that the Ferry Ministry
+ will weather the storms of the autumn session.
+
+ Ferry complained bitterly of the English press. He said in
+ particular that the irritating lecturing tone of the _Times_ goaded
+ the French to madness; though he himself observed that it used the
+ same tone towards the Government of its own country. I said that
+ the press on both sides of the Channel seemed to work as if for the
+ express purpose of producing ill-will between the two countries;
+ but that certainly the English Government had no power to restrain
+ it. A good understanding between the two Governments and friendly
+ proceedings on their parts to each other, would in time act upon
+ public opinion; and saying this, I preached a little more on the
+ text of the importance of the French Government's not making itself
+ unnecessarily disagreeable.
+
+Her Majesty's Government were at this time involved in domestic as well
+as external difficulties, and Lord Granville's reply to the foregoing
+letter contained a renewal of the old importunity to come over and vote
+in the House of Lords on a party question. It is quite obvious that
+Lord Granville was impelled to do so by Gladstone, and the typical
+Gladstonian reasoning is shown in the argument that Lord Lyons ought to
+vote, because being an Ambassador he was a non-party man; whereas on
+previous occasions his vote had been applied for, because he distinctly
+ranked as a party man in the Whip's list.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Walmer, Oct. 18, 1884.
+
+ Gladstone writes to me earnestly, but I think reasonably,
+ respecting your vote at the present important crisis.
+
+ He says that you must be aware of the estimate we hold of your
+ judgment and independence. But to save the House of Lords from a
+ tempest which must strain and may wreck it, some Tory Lords will
+ be moved to vote for the Franchise Bill, and he asks why the same
+ motive should not operate upon men like our Ambassadors, who he
+ believes are of no party.
+
+ I own I think that the same majority, or possibly a larger one
+ in the Lords, would be a great disaster.
+
+ If the Liberal Party take up hostility to the House of Lords
+ itself as its leading question--whether led by Gladstone himself,
+ or not,--and with a leader of the Lords who is personally in favour
+ of getting a larger career of power and utility for himself in the
+ Commons, it is difficult not to foresee the result.
+
+ With regard to immediate politics, supposing Salisbury
+ succeeds in forcing a dissolution, and with the help of the Irish
+ turns us out, what chance is there of his not being turned out in
+ six months by nearly the same process?
+
+ The Waddingtons came here to luncheon. I guessed that they
+ funked being reported as being here. He was very civil, and his
+ talk was not altogether unpromising.
+
+No one with the slightest practical acquaintance with politics could
+possibly be taken in by the Gladstonian phrase about the 'estimate of
+your judgment and independence.' Ministers when urging their docile
+supporters either in the Lords or the Commons to support a party
+measure, are not in the habit of boasting that some eminent person,
+whether an Ambassador or not, is going to give a silent vote in their
+favour, and even if they did, it would not produce the slightest effect.
+One peer's vote is as good as another's, and in the division list an
+Ambassador counts no higher than the most obscure of backwoodsmen.
+
+Anglo-French relations were not improved by the occurrences in the
+Far East, where the French, in consequence of the Tonquin expedition,
+had drifted into war with China. The Chinese fleet, composed of small
+obsolete vessels, was destroyed at Foochow by the heavily armed French
+ships in August; but as the Chinese Government showed no signs of
+yielding, the French Admiral, Courbet, was ordered to seize part of
+the island of Formosa, where valuable coal mines were known to exist.
+In order to effect his object, Admiral Courbet, with a magnificent
+disregard of all neutral Powers, proclaimed a paper blockade of Formosa,
+which naturally provoked a protestation on the part of the British
+Government. During the remainder of the year hostilities between France
+and China continued, although from time to time recurrence to the
+friendly offices of Her Majesty's Government was suggested but found
+impracticable.
+
+Egypt, however, remained the centre of interest, and the prospects of
+any amicable arrangement appeared to recede further into the distance.
+Upon the return of Lord Northbrook, the new proposals of Her Majesty's
+Government were put before the French Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 26, 1884.
+
+ I suppose Waddington's private statement to me that we must
+ not expect an answer to our Egyptian proposals before the end of
+ the year was intended to imply that we _should_ get an answer about
+ that time.
+
+ I pressed Ferry strongly on the subject the day before
+ yesterday. He assured me that he had studied our papers and was
+ occupying himself without intermission on the subject, but I could
+ not bring him to book as to the exact time we might look for an
+ answer, nor could I extract from him any hint as to what the answer
+ was to be.
+
+ I am afraid that the draft of it has gone, or is going, to
+ Berlin, and I augur anything but good from this. It seems to
+ me that without being driven to anything of the kind by German
+ interests, Bismarck has lately taken a sort of malicious pleasure
+ in treating matters in a way calculated to embarrass and discredit
+ us.
+
+ You may be quite sure that I shall leave no stone unturned
+ to get an answer as soon as possible. I don't think threats of
+ Tunisifying Egypt, or of bankruptcy, or other strong measures,
+ would tell upon the French. They would not believe that we
+ should have recourse to such measures, in face of the opposition
+ of France, Germany, Austria, and Russia, even if we had the
+ thoroughgoing support of Italy. I should hesitate to bring matters
+ to a point at which we could only execute our threats by a very
+ large display of military and naval force, or back out of them.
+ The best card in our hand, and it is not a high trump, is the
+ reluctance of the French to be thrown irretrievably into the
+ clutches of Bismarck by a distinct quarrel with us.
+
+ Ferry seemed grateful to you for the way in which you
+ sounded him through Waddington about new proposals from China,
+ but he appears to think that any eagerness on his part to receive
+ new proposals would be looked upon by the Chinese as a sign of
+ weakness, and short of absolutely giving in on the part of China,
+ an _action d'eclat_ on the part of the French forces would answer
+ best for him with the Chambers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 30, 1884.
+
+ I put your letter myself into Errington's hand this
+ morning.[42] He starts for Italy this evening.
+
+ You will see by the despatch I send with this that Ferry
+ promises an answer on the Egyptian Finances on the 15th of next
+ month, and that he intends to make counter-proposals. I cried out
+ at his mentioning so distant a date as the 15th, but he would not
+ name a nearer one. If, as I cannot but surmise, he is consulting
+ Berlin, I fear that neither speed nor conciliation to us will be
+ recommended from that quarter. I confess I cannot think of any
+ threat which would be likely to mend matters. The French would
+ probably rejoice at any crisis which might array distinctly against
+ us the three Emperors, as well as this Republic. I doubt the
+ Tonquin affair being very much of a safeguard. I should feel safer
+ if France were not getting into the habit of sending out distant
+ expeditions.
+
+ I report officially this evening Ferry's language about the
+ new Chinese proposals. The Chambers were all in favour of an
+ _action d'eclat_. I don't think Ferry could face them with another
+ doubtful negotiation on his hands which would suspend military
+ action. At any rate he does not seem to wish to hear anything of
+ Chinese proposals, short of actual surrender.
+
+At the beginning of 1885 Her Majesty's Government were confronted
+with the unpleasant fact, that whereas hitherto they had only had
+French opposition to reckon with in respect to Egypt, Bismarck had
+now engineered a European combination against them in consequence of
+dissatisfaction at the English attitude towards his colonial policy.
+The English financial proposals, more especially those which suggested
+that the interest on the debt should be reduced, and the Anglo-French
+Administration of the Daira and Domain Lands should be abolished, were
+denounced in unmeasured terms in France. Nor did it seem easy to devise
+any efficacious means either of reconciling the French to the proposals
+or of putting pressure on them. The time for putting pressure on France
+was past; earlier in the day, a representation that a refusal to consent
+to measures necessary for the well being and good administration of
+Egypt would oblige the British Government to take the country formally
+under their protection, after the fashion of Tunis, would have met with
+little opposition; but now France might go to any extremities to resist
+such an arrangement, feeling sure that in so doing she would have the
+support of Germany, Austria, and Russia. Under these circumstances the
+prospect of a financial crisis, or even of bankruptcy, produced little
+alarm, because it was felt that the support of the three Empires would
+be forthcoming in demanding that the Egyptian financial administration
+should be placed under the joint control of the Powers; and it was in
+fact only too probable that the intractability of the French Government
+would increase in proportion with the support obtained from Germany and
+the Powers which followed the German lead.
+
+It was hardly credible that the patronage of Germany was acceptable to
+the French public or entirely satisfactory to the French Government,
+as the danger, not to say the humiliation, of falling altogether into
+the hands of Bismarck, could not quite be lost sight of. The French
+Government no doubt had two objects in view; the first, to make use
+of the support of Germany and the Powers, in order to guard French
+pecuniary interests, and to improve as far as possible the political
+position of France in Egypt; the second, to avoid severing themselves
+so entirely from England as to be left wholly at the mercy of Germany.
+Unfortunately for England the second object appeared to be the one to
+which the lesser importance was attached.
+
+In short, the probabilities were, that unless we succeeded in coming to
+some arrangement with France, we should find arrayed against us all the
+European Powers, except Italy, the position in which we were placed at
+the moment, in consequence of the expedition to Khartoum, having been
+taken into account in calculating the means at our disposal to withstand
+such a coalition. It should be mentioned that the friendship of Italy
+had been purchased by an arrangement under which she was to take
+possession of Massowah and the adjacent coast.
+
+The French counter-proposals respecting Egyptian Finance were
+communicated in the middle of January.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Jan. 20, 1885.
+
+ I earnestly hope that a settlement of the Egyptian Financial
+ Question may be the result of the Cabinet to-day. That question
+ seems to me to have a disastrous effect on our foreign relations
+ everywhere.
+
+ Bismarck and Ferry are _jouant au plus fin_ with each other at
+ our expense. Each seems to think that he can use the other to help
+ in thwarting us, without risk to himself. But Bismarck has the best
+ of the game. He occupies the French thoughts, and to some extent
+ their forces, at a distance from Europe: he keeps up irritation
+ between them and us, and some of the acquisitions he encourages
+ them to make (Tonquin for instance) will in all probability
+ be a permanent cause of weakness to them. At the same time he
+ neutralizes opposition from us to his childish colonial schemes,
+ which I cannot help suspecting are founded as much on what, for
+ want of a better word, I must call spite against us, as on any
+ real expectation of advantage to Germany. Ferry hopes, by means of
+ Bismarck and the Powers who follow Bismarck's lead, to carry his
+ immediate points in regard to Egypt and other parts of the world,
+ and so increase his reputation at home for the moment; and he
+ trusts to his skill to enable him to stop before he has so entirely
+ alienated us as to be quite at Bismarck's mercy. It is the natural
+ disposition of almost all Europe to side against us, as matters
+ stand, on the Egyptian Financial Question, which makes this pretty
+ game possible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 3, 1885.
+
+ I am provoked by Ferry's tardiness in sending Waddington the
+ instructions to proceed with the Egyptian Finances Question. He
+ has evidently been waiting for the approval of Berlin. I am more
+ than ever impatient to get this question disposed of. One, and not
+ the least of my reasons, is the desire to get rid of this habit of
+ referring every moment to Bismarck.
+
+ The Tonquin and China affairs seem to get more perplexing
+ and more expensive to the French in men and money every day. It
+ seems very doubtful that Ferry will get the _action d'eclat_ he is
+ looking for there, in time for the election; and if he do not, it
+ may go hard with him in the new Chamber.
+
+ The _Gaulois_ announces that a great Anglo-French meeting is
+ to be held in Paris in the month of March, at which a resolution
+ is to be voted that England and France must remain united in the
+ interests of liberty in Europe. According to the _Gaulois_, 'Mr.
+ Cremer, secretaire general de la Workmen's Peace Association,' is
+ in communication about it with M. Clemenceau, who is to organise
+ the meeting in conjunction with Mr. Burns, _Membre de la Chambre
+ des Communes_, who would come to Paris with a delegation of English
+ workmen. If there be any truth in the story, the object of the
+ French promoters of this demonstration is probably to embarrass the
+ Ferry Government.
+
+The Mr. Burns referred to was presumably the present President of the
+Local Government Board, but the description of him as an M.P. was
+premature.
+
+Negotiations between the French and English Governments over the
+financial proposals were resumed, and eventually some sort of
+arrangement was arrived at, but in the meanwhile all interest had been
+transferred to the Soudan. The battle of Abou Klea took place on January
+19, and on February 5 there arrived the news of the fall of Khartoum
+and death of Gordon. The French were not wanting in appreciation of
+the gallantry shown by the British troops, but were prodigal of gloomy
+forebodings with regard to the future prospects of the expeditions.
+Prominent amongst these prophets of evil were Lesseps and Jules Ferry.
+Lesseps (on the strength of having once been on a tour in the Soudan
+with the ex-Khedive) considered that an attempt to advance would be
+madness, and that the army was in great danger of being surrounded.
+He thought that the only prudent course would be to concentrate the
+forces and keep them behind walls and entrenchments until the autumn.
+But even then he did not see how the army could ever get away if it
+were stoutly opposed by the Arabs, as the scarcity of water and other
+difficulties would make the Berber-Suakim route impracticable; and in
+short he was convinced that the only practical plan was to come to
+terms with the Mahdi, and that the only means of making terms with the
+Madhi would be to reinstate Ismail as Khedive and utilize his influence.
+This surprising conclusion was due to the fact that Lesseps had for a
+long time been exerting himself in every possible way to bring about the
+restoration of Ismail.
+
+M. Jules Ferry was also full of condolences upon the British position in
+the Soudan, but was, at the same time, not at all enthusiastic about the
+French position in the Far East. He admitted that the troops in Tonquin
+were sickly and that the climate was odious; that neither in Tonquin
+nor Formosa could any blow be struck which China would really feel, but
+that nevertheless 'in the interests of civilization as represented in
+those parts by France and England, it was necessary to deal a stunning
+blow (_coup foudroyant_) at the huge Empire of China.' This might be
+effected by landing an attacking force in China proper, or by blockading
+the ports, but either of these methods would involve great difficulties
+with other Powers, and the only thing that remained to be done was
+to dismember the Empire. Once China was broken up into three or four
+provinces she would become comparatively harmless. M. Jules Ferry's
+views were expressed after a dinner at the Embassy, and Lord Lyons in
+reporting the conversation remarked that his wine must be more heady
+than he imagined.
+
+Before long, however, a crisis in another part of the world temporarily
+distracted attention from Egypt and brought home to every thinking
+person the indefinite and multifarious responsibilities of British rule,
+as well as the singularly inadequate military resources available.
+Prominent British statesmen had long derided the absurdity of supposing
+that England and Russia could ever become involved in disputes in
+Central Asia, but, profiting by our embarrassments in Egypt, the
+Russian Government had adopted so aggressive a policy, that even the
+peace-loving Gladstone Government found itself on the brink of a
+collision before the end of February. This critical situation and the
+possibility of a conflict between England and Russia, far from giving
+satisfaction to the French, afforded them just cause for anxiety.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 13, 1885.
+
+ The critical state of things between England and Russia has
+ come more home to the French mind during the last few days, and
+ is looked upon with increased alarm. Whatever may be Bismarck's
+ feelings and plans, the French cannot help feeling that it would
+ be a great danger to them for him to be without counterpoise in
+ Europe. Those who believe that they see far ahead, declare that
+ Bismarck's ultimate object is Holland, and that Belgium, or a part
+ of Belgium, is to be given to France as a compensation for the
+ annexation of Holland to Germany. To this end they conceive that
+ Bismarck has aimed at embroiling Russia with England, so that the
+ one may paralyse the other; at separating England and France, and
+ at setting up an alliance between France and Germany. It is to
+ be hoped that many Frenchmen would shrink from taking part in an
+ iniquity which would be equalled only by the partition of Poland.
+ It is to be supposed that none can be so blind as not to see that
+ Bismarck will never make a territorial arrangement which would
+ increase the relative strength of France as compared with that of
+ Germany. It can hardly be doubted that Bismarck must be well aware
+ that so far from the gift of Belgium reconciling the French to the
+ loss of Alsace and Lorraine, any additional power that gift might
+ confer upon them would certainly be used, on the first opportunity,
+ for the recovery of the two lost Provinces.
+
+ To people who incline to more simple and obvious explanations
+ of political conduct, Bismarck himself seems to be rather old to
+ indulge in any hope of executing schemes of this kind. Moreover,
+ the character of the Emperor would in all probability prevent his
+ sanctioning such proceedings, while His Majesty's death would,
+ in all probability, greatly diminish, if not put an end to,
+ Bismarck's influence. Bismarck may in fact be working in order to
+ attain smaller and more immediate objects, and to gratify personal
+ feelings.
+
+ However all this may be, the French decidedly wish to prevent
+ a rupture between England and Russia. They do not relish the
+ effect upon the position of Bismarck in Europe which would be
+ the consequence of France herself, England and Russia, being all
+ hampered by being engaged in wars in the extreme East.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 14, 1885.
+
+ I doubt the Russians going quite to extremes, but the risk is
+ great.
+
+ Bismarck is behaving as ill as possible--after the mission of
+ peace and a complete making up, creating difficulties at the last
+ moment about Egyptian finances, concerning which he promised that
+ no objections would be raised by Germany, if France and England
+ were agreed. It is supposed to be with a view to getting a decree
+ against us at Cairo before the settlement.
+
+The military preparations for a possible struggle with Russia were
+typical of the manner in which British statesmen occasionally prepare
+for the worst. In order to strike terror into a Power which could
+dispose of millions of soldiers, two army corps of 25,000 men each
+were ordered to be mobilized in India, and as 'a time of emergency had
+arrived,' it was announced that the first-class army reserve and militia
+reserve would be called out; their total numbers amounting to the
+stupendous figure of about 70,000 men. By these steps it was hoped that
+the greatest military Power in the world would be overawed.
+
+From one embarrassment Her Majesty's Government were fortunately
+relieved, the basis of an arrangement with France having been arrived
+at with regard to Egyptian Finance. Mr. Gladstone, with whom Lord Lyons
+had been requested to communicate direct, wrote expressing his relief,
+but was obviously far more concerned to demonstrate the turpitude of his
+political opponents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Mr. Gladstone to Lord Lyons._
+
+ 10, Downing St., March 21, 1885.
+
+ When you so kindly wrote to me about Egyptian Finance, I did
+ not reply. Not because I was insensible or forgetful, but because
+ the unsatisfactory condition of the question made it so difficult.
+ Now, thank God, we are through, as far as Foreign Powers are
+ concerned; and we have thus far escaped from a position the most
+ hopeless and helpless that it is possible to conceive.
+
+ It remains a subject of regret, and of some surprise, that
+ the Opposition are pressing for time before we take the vote, in
+ a manner quite unusual, with almost a certainty of bankruptcy and
+ financial chaos in Egypt, and the likelihood of consequences more
+ than financial if we comply; and all this, as far as we can make
+ out, because of the disorganized condition of the Tory party. It
+ seems that the mutinous followers have exacted this condition from
+ their leaders, as some reparation for the agreement about the Seats
+ Bill, and for their other offences.
+
+ To be defeated on the agreement would be _most_ convenient
+ for the Government (for me priceless) but somewhat ruinous or
+ mischievous, I think, to all the rest of the world.
+
+ We must of course hold our ground.
+
+The rooted belief of Ministers that their continuance in office is
+absolutely essential to the welfare of the universe as well as to that
+of the British Empire is, of course, a well-known phenomenon which has
+manifested itself in more recent times in the case of both political
+parties. In 1885 the difficulties of the Gladstone Government continued
+to grow, and it was fortunate for Lord Granville's peace of mind that he
+was an optimist by nature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 25, 1885.
+
+ The incorrigible Turk has not yet sent instructions to
+ Musurus. We have tried the most serious threats, which Musurus
+ believes will be successful.
+
+ But if we do not take care, we shall soon be at war with the
+ Mahdi, with Turkey, and with the Russians.
+
+ I do not know how the latter question will finish. Being of
+ a sanguine disposition, I hope for the best. We are determined to
+ take a firm stand.
+
+ Do you believe that the French have many tricks in hand for
+ the Suez Canal Commission?
+
+Early in April there arrived the news of the fight at Penjdeh, where,
+to use Gladstone's own expression, the attack of the Russians upon
+the Afghans 'bore the appearance of an unprovoked aggression.' A
+financial panic took place, consols fell 3 per cent., Russian stocks 9
+per cent., and for a short time the impression prevailed that war was
+inevitable. In the House of Commons, Mr. Gladstone made one of those
+eloquent statements which were so widely accepted by his followers as a
+satisfactory solution of any outstanding difficulty, but which failed to
+reassure the more intelligent; and even the optimistic Lord Granville
+felt some uncomfortable qualms.
+
+ 'It is too dreadful,' he wrote on April 10th, 'jumping from
+ one nightmare into another.
+
+ 'Once at war with Russia we shall be obliged to toady Germany,
+ France, and Turkey.
+
+ 'But I cannot believe that it will come to war. It cannot be
+ a good move of the Russians to have created a blood feud with the
+ Afghans.
+
+ 'Not having a genius for war, I do not know how we are
+ effectively to carry it on against Russia, although it is not off
+ the cards that it may break her up.'
+
+Probably Lord Granville was not singular in his inability to see how a
+war on land was to be effectively carried on against Russia.
+
+In the meanwhile the French were not without their own foreign troubles.
+M. Jules Ferry had spoken of the necessity of inflicting a _coup
+foudroyant_. The _coup foudroyant_ fell in a totally unexpected fashion
+upon his own head, in the shape of a defeat of the French forces at
+Lang-Son. The news of the reverse arrived in Paris on March 25, and
+created so absurd a panic and so strong a feeling against Spirited
+Colonial Policy that Jules Ferry at once bowed to the storm and resigned
+on the 31st. He had been in office for the unprecedented period of two
+years and one month, which alone was sufficient cause for disappearance;
+nor could it be said that his administration had been colourless, for he
+had passed an important Education Bill, established the Protectorate of
+France in Tunis, and annexed Tonquin and Madagascar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, March 31, 1885.
+
+ Ferry was certainly at work quietly with negotiations for
+ peace with China, and no doubt he calculated on playing it as a
+ high trump at the Elections; and a great card it would have been
+ for him, for the war in Tonquin is extremely unpopular. The reverse
+ at Lang-Son has changed all this; the extreme Right have always
+ had a special hatred of Ferry on account of the suppression of the
+ religious communities, and Clemenceau and the extreme Left have
+ become bitterly hostile to him personally. Not many of his own
+ party cared to stick to him when their own popularity would have
+ been risked by doing so. And, besides, he had been in office for
+ two years; a very unusually long period of late, and people were
+ tired of him.
+
+ Freycinet is now trying to form a Cabinet. It is not certain
+ that he will succeed, and if he does succeed, it is very doubtful
+ whether his Cabinet will last. His idea seems to be to take into it
+ Republicans of all shades, not excluding deep Red. The Republicans
+ have been rather startled by the progress, far from great though
+ it has been, of the Conservatives and Monarchists (Orleanist and
+ Imperialist) in the constituencies; and the notion seems to be that
+ the importance to them of resisting this, may keep them together
+ and prevent them quarrelling with each other, at all events until
+ after the Elections. But anyway, each change of Ministry produces
+ a further step towards the Left, and there is a foundation for the
+ fear that there may be socialist legislation against property and
+ proprietors, and that the Government may by degrees throw away all
+ the means of resisting anarchy.
+
+ Freycinet's own tendencies would be towards peace. Now there
+ is nothing but flame and fury against the Chinese, but considering
+ the general unpopularity of the war this may to a certain extent
+ subside. He would, I think, desire to be on good terms with all
+ countries. He would hardly be so subservient to Bismarck as Ferry
+ had lately become. It so happens that personally he and I are
+ particularly good friends.
+
+Towards the end of April the British Government asked for a credit
+of eleven millions, and the eloquence of Mr. Gladstone worked his
+faithful followers up to a belief in verbiage which is almost pathetic.
+'Gladstone's magnificent speech had a great effect here,' wrote Lord
+Granville. 'It will hasten the _denouement_ one way or the other in
+Russia.
+
+'I understand that the Emperor is decidedly pacific; but he believes his
+father lost himself from want of firmness, that he himself is determined
+to be firm, and that the particular firmness which appeals to him, is
+not that which goes against the wishes of his army.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 1, 1885.
+
+ A war between England and Russia is much dreaded by the
+ French. They fear that it would leave Bismarck without any
+ counterpoise in Europe. Any influence they may have will no doubt
+ be exercised in favour of peace, but their influence at this moment
+ does not count very much. I do not know that they would have any
+ strong sympathy with Russia if hostilities broke out, but such a
+ feeling would be produced by anything which irritated them with us
+ on account of Egyptian or other matters. Anyhow we must be prepared
+ to find them exacting and susceptible.
+
+ The consequences of the war as regards the money market here
+ would be disastrous; but it is believed they would be still more
+ disastrous at Berlin.
+
+ The dangerous point is considered here to be the notions of
+ military honour, of a peculiar kind, which prevail in the Russian
+ as much as, or more than, in other Continental armies.
+
+ These military notions in the armies do not at all require
+ that the rulers of the armies should keep their words to
+ foreigners, or abide by their international engagements; but they
+ do require that, right or wrong, the rulers should not allow the
+ _amour-propre_ of the army to be wounded. The Emperor of Russia
+ probably shares these feelings, and at any rate he would certainly
+ be afraid to run counter to them. Those here who profess to
+ understand Russia declare that she has no desire to take Herat or
+ to annex any part of Afghanistan. They think that the ultimate
+ object at which she is really aiming is to extend her possessions
+ to the Persian Gulf, and that she would be tractable enough about
+ the Afghan frontier, if that question were separated from military
+ honour, or rather vanity.
+
+ I met Freycinet and Herbette at dinner yesterday. They seemed
+ to be much relieved at having got rid of the _Bosphore Egyptien_
+ difficulty, and to be really much obliged to you for the help you
+ had given to them.
+
+The _Bosphore Egyptien_, a French newspaper in Cairo which continually
+attacked the British administration in Egypt with unparalleled
+malignity, had at length worn out the patience of Sir Evelyn Baring, and
+been temporarily suspended.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Granville._
+
+ Paris, May 15, 1885.
+
+ The symptoms apparent here indicate that Bismarck is busily
+ employed in getting up a European coalition against England on the
+ Egyptian question. He has very nearly succeeded, if not quite, in
+ isolating us in the Suez Canal Commission. He would seem to have
+ put great pressure for this purpose upon Italy, who was disposed to
+ side with us, and to have frightened or cajoled Holland and Spain.
+ With Russia and Austria he seems to have made a regular cabal. It
+ has required great tact and firmness on Pauncefote's part to have
+ resisted the endeavours to turn the Commission into a political
+ conference on the whole Egyptian question, and at the same time
+ to have avoided breaking it up prematurely. Another circumstance
+ which Bismarck is using as a lever against us, is the levying by
+ the Egyptian Government of the tax upon the coupon, before the
+ Financial Convention has been ratified by all the parties to it.
+
+ He has sent Courcel here from Berlin to seduce or terrify
+ the French Government, and is said to have charged him with large
+ offers relative to establishing an international administration in
+ Egypt, and assigning to France a preponderant influence in such an
+ administration. What the real offers may be, of course, I cannot
+ say, but I think the French are half afraid of them. Probably, like
+ all Bismarck's demonstrations in so-called support of France, they
+ contain the essential elements--the employing a considerable number
+ of French troops at a distance from France, and the promoting
+ ill-will between France and England.
+
+These suspicions as to Bismarck's motives were confirmed by Lord
+Rosebery, who at the time occupied a minor post in the Gladstone
+administration, and had lately paid a visit to Germany.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Granville to Lord Lyons._
+
+ May 30, 1885.
+
+ Rosebery has not yet written out the report (which Blowitz
+ saw), but he has given me a full account from his notes.
+
+ Bismarck acknowledged that he had been thwarting us in every
+ way; but at the last conversation (influenced, Rosebery thought,
+ by an unsatisfactory conversation with Courcel) he was much more
+ conciliatory.
+
+ He was exceedingly civil to Rosebery; hostile to Gladstone,
+ and especially to Derby.
+
+ He is a great man, but he sees through a great many
+ millstones.
+
+ The Emperor is certainly unwell. Rosebery is convinced that
+ Bismarck will retire for a time on his death.
+
+Judging from the material available, no statesman ever disliked so many
+persons as Bismarck, and the objects of his antipathy were not confined
+to his own sex. Busch's book and the works of other authors contain
+frequent references to the grievances which he entertained towards women
+who were alleged to have interfered with his policy, and, whether these
+charges were well founded or not, he made no secret of his animosity
+against even so important a personage as the Empress Augusta. In fact
+there can be little doubt that it was owing to the despotic influence
+exercised by the Chancellor that the Empress, who had had the misfortune
+to incur his displeasure, was forced to leave Berlin and to reside for a
+considerable period at Coblentz.
+
+Apparently the man who inspired him with the greatest aversion was
+Gortschakoff, but it is easy to understand that from the Bismarckian
+point of view, Mr. Gladstone and Lord Derby represented a singularly
+futile type of statesman. Lord Rosebery's prophecy with regard to his
+retirement was only partially correct. In private conversation, Bismarck
+is understood to have calculated upon three years of office under the
+present German Emperor; whereas he only succeeded in remaining for two,
+and his retirement was compulsory and not voluntary.
+
+One of the notable events in Paris in 1885 was the death of Victor Hugo.
+His funeral was made the occasion of a great ceremonial, and Queen
+Victoria, who was always much interested in functions of this nature,
+desired that she should be furnished with a special report. Any one
+who happened to have been a witness of the Victor Hugo funeral would
+corroborate the accuracy of the following account, which is probably in
+striking contrast to the word pictures of the newspaper correspondents
+of the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Paris, June 4, 1885.
+
+ Lord Lyons presents his humble duty to Your Majesty and
+ in obedience to Your Majesty's commands, proceeds to state the
+ impression made upon him by the funeral of Victor Hugo.
+
+ There was nothing striking, splendid or appropriate, either in
+ the monstrous catafalque erected under the Arc de Triomphe, or in
+ the trappings of the funeral. There was nothing mournful or solemn
+ in the demeanour of the people. The impressive part of the scene
+ consisted in the vast crowds from all parts of France and from many
+ other countries. As decorations of the scene, were the innumerable
+ wreaths, some conveyed in cars and some carried in the hands of
+ those who offered them.
+
+ The aspect was that of a vast assemblage of people gathered
+ together for some ordinary demonstration, or from curiosity. On
+ the other hand, perfect order was preserved. Both those who joined
+ in the procession and those who lined the streets through which it
+ passed, maintained the good humour and civility which are seldom
+ wanting to a Paris crowd. At some points attempts were made to
+ raise anarchical or socialistic cries, but met with no response.
+ The distance from the point of departure to the Arc de Triomphe is
+ about three miles by the route taken, which was through some of the
+ finest avenues of Paris. The procession began at 11 o'clock in the
+ morning and went on until after 4 in the afternoon.
+
+ The general impression left upon Lord Lyons by the day was one
+ of weariness and unconcern. The orderliness of the people was a
+ satisfactory symptom, but the total absence of strong feeling was
+ chilling, and the studied avoidance of any recognition of religion
+ did away with all solemnity.
+
+On June 12, the Gladstone Government, having been defeated during a
+Budget debate, resigned, and left to the Conservatives the ungrateful
+task of facing an accumulation of difficulties while in a minority in
+the House of Commons. Lord Salisbury took Lord Granville's place at the
+Foreign Office and the transfer was marked by a double compliment to
+Lord Lyons. Lord Granville, who was always extremely popular with all
+those with whom he was in any way connected, with habitual kindliness
+and generosity expressed his obligations to the Ambassador. 'An ordinary
+letter of farewell and of thanks would very inadequately express my
+feelings to you. I cannot say how much I have valued the loyal and
+important assistance you have given me in most difficult circumstances.'
+
+Lord Salisbury showed his appreciation by at once asking him to come
+over to England in order to discuss the general situation, and upon
+his return to Paris in July, he was able to report that the change of
+Government in England appeared to have had a beneficial effect upon
+Anglo-French relations. 'The statement you made in the House of Lords
+has made an excellent impression. Freycinet seems to be really disposed
+to abstain from endeavouring to thwart us or to raise difficulties for
+us with regard to Egyptian Finance. He also appears to be inclined to
+come to terms with us about Newfoundland and other matters.'
+
+'I think he is sincerely desirous to put the relations between the
+two countries on a good footing, but I cannot yet say that he will be
+willing to make sacrifices for this purpose.'
+
+As Freycinet, however, showed few symptoms of being willing to retire
+from the position he had taken up with regard to the eventual British
+evacuation of Egypt, and to the resumption by France of an influence
+equal with our own, his professions of friendship did not appear to be
+of much value. Some apprehension too was caused by the ostentatious
+announcements in the French press, that the numerous military forces in
+the Far East released in consequence of the conclusion of peace with
+China would return by the Suez Canal and would therefore be 'available
+for other purposes in the Mediterranean.' What was perhaps more
+encouraging, was the increasing distaste for Spirited Colonial Policy
+combined with renewed distrust of Bismarck's intentions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 14, 1885.
+
+ I have been rejoiced by your telegram announcing that Germany,
+ Austria, and Italy agree to the issue of the Egyptian Loan Decree.
+ It looks as if you were on the eve of settling the question most
+ pressing in point of time (that of the money for Egypt), and I
+ hope it augurs well for the disposition generally of the German
+ Chancellor. The National Fete here puts a stop to all business for
+ to-day, but I shall see Freycinet about the issue of the Decree
+ to-morrow.
+
+ The debate on the Budget for 1886 elicited some curious
+ speeches in the Chamber of Deputies three days ago on the
+ 'Expeditions lointaines.' There was no difficulty in showing that
+ they had all cost more than they were worth. They were plainly held
+ by the Deputies to be unpopular in the country, and condemnation of
+ them is likely to be one of the election cries of the extreme Left.
+ But hardly any one seemed to see the way to bring them to an end.
+ In fact, it looked as if France had got into the groove which by a
+ fatality leads to annexation and conquest by strong and civilized
+ nations when they once begin to establish themselves amongst weak
+ and barbarous peoples. All this may delight Prince Bismarck,
+ whose avowed object is to find an outlet for what he calls French
+ vanity and restlessness, and a gulf to swallow up French troops
+ and treasures at a distance from Europe. From a certain point of
+ view this may not be without its advantages to other nations; but
+ it is not without danger to the good relations between France and
+ England--between whom awkward questions may arise all over the
+ world. In the present I am uneasy about Siam and more so about
+ Burmah. It is not a pleasant speculation to consider the change
+ which may be produced in no very remote future, in the condition
+ of our Indian Empire, if it be in contact with a great European
+ Power both on the north and on the east.
+
+In August, 1885, a prodigious outburst of Anglophobia occurred in Paris
+in consequence of mendacious statements published by Rochefort in his
+newspaper, charging the British military authorities in the Soudan
+with the assassination of a certain Olivier Pain. Olivier Pain was an
+ex-Communist and French journalist who had accompanied the Turks in
+the campaign of 1877, and who was reputed to be occasionally employed
+by the Turkish Government as a secret agent. In the spring of 1884,
+he had set off to join the Mahdi, and having completely disappeared
+from view, and being presumably dead, Rochefort took the opportunity
+to announce that Lord Wolseley had procured his death by offering a
+reward of fifty pounds for his head. The enterprise had been allotted to
+Major Kitchener[43]: 'un sinistre gredin nourri de psaumes et abreuve
+de whisky qui a eu le premier, l'idee de mettre a prix la tete de celui
+qu'il appelait "l'espion francais."'
+
+As, however, it was impossible to reach Lord Wolseley and the
+'sinistre gredin,' Rochefort urged that vengeance should be taken upon
+'l'Ambassadeur Lyons.' 'A partir d'aujourd'hui il est notre otage!
+Sa vieille peau est le gage de la satisfaction qui nous est due.'
+'L'Ambassadeur Lyons' was, however, also beyond reach, as he happened to
+be on leave, and it was, therefore, suggested that the few secretaries
+(of whom I was one), who were then in Paris, should be forthwith strung
+up to the lamp-posts in the Rue du Faubourg St. Honore. The astonishing
+thing was that these ravings were actually taken more or less seriously,
+and that for some time the French authorities found it necessary to
+protect the Embassy with numerous police detachments.
+
+It has always been one of the inscrutable mysteries that Rochefort,
+ever since the Commune, was allowed a toleration accorded to no one
+else, on the ground of his alleged exceptional wit and humour, whereas
+his effusions consisted almost entirely of gross personal abuse of the
+lowest type, levelled indiscriminately at prominent individuals of any
+description, and largely directed against England, whose hospitality he
+enjoyed during many years of exile.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 37: _Times_ correspondent in Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Col. the Hon. George Villiers, Military Attache at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 39: Lyons, Feb. 1883.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Sir Joseph Crowe, K.C.M.G., Commercial Attache at the
+Paris Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 41: French Minister at Tangier.]
+
+[Footnote 42: Mr. G. Errington, M.P., had been despatched by Mr.
+Gladstone on a secret mission to the Vatican in connection with the Home
+Rule agitation.]
+
+[Footnote 43: Now Lord Kitchener.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE LAST YEAR'S WORK
+
+(1886-1887)
+
+
+The sudden and unexpected declaration in September of the Union of
+Bulgaria and Eastern Roumelia which caused so much perturbation in
+Europe, and resulted in a war between Servia and Bulgaria, left the
+French quite indifferent; but the imminence of hostilities between
+England and Burmah provoked French ill-humour, which was all the
+more inexcusable because no protest had ever been made against
+French proceedings in Tonquin and Madagascar. The truth was that the
+Burmese resistance to the Indian Government was largely due to French
+encouragement. As far back as 1883 a Burmese Mission had arrived in
+Paris, and kept studiously aloof from the British Embassy; and although
+every opportunity had been taken to impress upon the French Government
+the peculiar relations between Burmah and British India, there was not
+the least doubt that the object of the Burmese had been to obtain from
+the French Government such a Treaty as would enable them to appeal
+to France in the event of their being involved in difficulties with
+England. How much encouragement they actually received is not known, but
+it was probably sufficient to effect their undoing.
+
+ The papers are abusing us about Burmah, and being quite
+ innocent of any aggression themselves in that part of the world,
+ are horrified at our holding our own there. Nevertheless, I hope
+ the Indian Government will finish the thing out of hand, for an
+ ugly state of feeling about it is growing up here.
+
+The rapidity with which the operations against Burmah were conducted
+left nothing to be desired. The campaign was over within a few weeks;
+on January 1, 1886, the annexation of Burmah was proclaimed, and the
+affairs of that country ceased to be of any further interest to the
+French Government.
+
+Lord Salisbury's tenure of the Foreign Office, which had been marked
+by so successful a policy that even Mr. Gladstone had expressed
+satisfaction, came to an end early in 1886, and he was succeeded by Lord
+Rosebery. 'The irony of events,' wrote the latter to Lord Lyons, 'has
+sent me to the Foreign Office, and one of the incidents of this which
+is most agreeable to me, is that it brings me into close relations with
+yourself.'
+
+Although the Paris press had circulated a ridiculous fiction that Lord
+Rosebery (presumably because he was personally acquainted with Bismarck)
+was anti-French by inclination, the change of Government in England was
+received in France with perfect equanimity, as had been the case in the
+previous autumn.
+
+The new Foreign Secretary, however, could not fail to be painfully
+impressed by the unsatisfactory feeling which obviously existed in
+France towards England, and found it difficult of explanation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Rosebery to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 3, 1886.
+
+ I am rather anxious about the attitude of the French. In
+ my short tenure of office they have brought up three or four
+ questions, all in the highest degree distasteful to us.
+
+ 1. The Consul at Suakim: as to which they say, with accuracy
+ which is disputed, that they had gone too far and could not
+ withdraw the appointment.
+
+ 2. Arbitration on the Somali coast troubles: as to which they
+ declare that Salisbury promised it, which Salisbury, I understand,
+ denies.
+
+ 3. The revival of the Suez Canal Commission.
+
+ 4. The announcement made to me by Waddington yesterday that
+ they should be obliged shortly to send a cargo of recidivists to
+ the Isle of Pines. I remonstrated strongly with him, and indeed
+ I cannot foresee all the consequences, should they carry their
+ intention into effect. One, however, I do clearly perceive, which
+ is that we should have to denounce the Postal Convention of 1856,
+ which gives the Messageries privileges in Australian ports, which
+ could not be sustained, and which the colonists would not for a
+ moment, under such circumstances, respect.
+
+ But these are details. What I want to point out is the
+ apparent animus displayed in these different proceedings. I shall
+ not mention them to my colleagues until I hear your view of them,
+ and anything you may be able to collect on the subject.
+
+ What does it all mean? These things did not occur during the
+ late Government? Are they directed against the new Administration?
+ I cannot view them as a chapter of accidents.
+
+ As for myself, I have entered upon this office with the most
+ sincere wish to be friendly with France. There can be no earthly
+ reason why we should not be so. It is a pity, therefore, that our
+ cordiality should be poisoned at its source.
+
+ I wish you would let me know what you think of all this. You
+ can pick up much directly, and perhaps even more indirectly, on
+ these points. Pray forgive the length of this letter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, March 5, 1886.
+
+ I have naturally been on the watch since you came into office
+ for indications of the feelings of the French Government respecting
+ the change. In answer to your letter of the day before yesterday,
+ asking my opinion, I can only say that I think the French are quite
+ as well disposed towards the new Government as they were to the
+ late one--indeed, of the two, I should say better. We come so much
+ into contact with the French all over the globe that questions
+ more or less unpleasant are always arising in smaller or greater
+ numbers, according to circumstances; and French feeling is in a
+ chronic state of irritability about Egypt.
+
+ The four subjects you mention are certainly annoying, but I do
+ not believe that the French proceedings respecting them have been
+ actuated by any animus against the present English Ministry.
+
+ I shall be somewhat staggered in this opinion, however, if the
+ French Government proposes to substitute arbitration by any third
+ Power for the understanding that the Somali coast questions shall
+ be treated by friendly negotiations between the two Governments,
+ and that meanwhile the _status quo_ shall not be disturbed. With a
+ view to proceeding with the negotiation, M. Waddington proposed to
+ Lord Salisbury on Jan. 20th, and by a written note the next day,
+ that an inquiry should be made on the spot by two Commissioners,
+ one English and one French. Lord Salisbury received the verbal
+ proposal favourably, but did not at the moment give a definitive
+ answer.
+
+ The proposal to reassemble the Suez Canal Commission is simply
+ the renewal of a proposal made by M. Waddington to Lord Salisbury
+ at the beginning of January.
+
+ The most serious of the affairs you mention appears to me to
+ be the imminent despatch of a cargo of _recidivistes_ to the Isle
+ of Pines. I have seen from the beginning the importance of this
+ _recidiviste_ question as regards public feeling in Australia,
+ and there is hardly any question about which I have taken so much
+ trouble. I have attacked successive French Ministers upon it in
+ season and out of season, but I have never succeeded in obtaining
+ any promise that _recidivistes_ should not be sent to the Pacific.
+ As I reported to you, I remonstrated with Freycinet about the
+ intention actually to send off a batch, as soon as I became aware
+ of it. I did not perceive any difference in his manner or language
+ from what they had been when some other Ministers had been in
+ office in England, but my remonstrances were equally ineffectual. I
+ am glad you had an opportunity of speaking strongly to Waddington.
+ I see troubles ahead, for the Australians have before now
+ threatened to pass Dominion laws against French ships found to have
+ escaped convicts on board, which seem to go a good deal beyond
+ international usage, not to say law.
+
+ It is time, however, for me to wind up this long story. My
+ answer to your question is that I am far from thinking that there
+ is any _malus animus_ against Her Majesty's present Government on
+ the part of Freycinet and his Cabinet. Nor do I know that there is
+ more than the usual irritability towards England among the French
+ public; but still I feel strongly that it behoves us to tread
+ cautiously as well as firmly, when we are coming upon French ground.
+
+The spring of 1886 was noticeable for another Government onslaught
+upon such members of ex-reigning families as were then residing in
+France. Of these the most conspicuous were the Orleans Princes. There
+was nothing in their conduct to cause alarm to the Republic, as they
+confined themselves to taking part in social functions, at which they
+maintained a kind of semi-state, being always attended by ladies and
+gentlemen-in-waiting after the manner of recognized Royal personages.
+This innocent procedure was sufficient excuse to work up an agitation
+against them, and to introduce an Expulsion Bill.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, May 25, 1886.
+
+ The question of the day is the expulsion of the Princes. The
+ measure, if taken, will be quite unjustifiable, discreditable to
+ the Government, and, I should say, not at all injurious to the
+ cause of the victims. Considering the people and the institutions
+ with which they had to deal, the partisans of the Orleans Princes
+ have not been so prudent and correct as the Princes themselves.
+ They have gone about twitting the Republicans with weakness for
+ permitting the very mild demonstration made by the Royalists, and
+ declaring that such want of vigour was simply a sign of the decay
+ of the Republic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The general opinion is that the Expulsion Bill will pass in
+ its present, or even in an aggravated form, and that if it does,
+ the Government will proceed to expel the Comte de Paris at least,
+ if not the Duc de Chartres, and some others. On the other hand, it
+ is not expected that the Bill confiscating the property, real and
+ personal, of the Orleans and Bonapartes will be adopted.
+
+ Much anxiety is felt respecting Boulanger's goings on with
+ respect to the army. He seems to think of nothing but currying
+ favour with the lowest ranks in the service, and with the mob
+ outside. It is believed by many people that he would not act
+ vigorously, as Minister of War, against any disturbances, but would
+ try to turn them to account and set up for himself as dictator or
+ what not.
+
+ The financial situation is very bad, and if common scandal is
+ to be listened to, the very short duration of French Ministries is
+ having the effect of making most of the individual Ministers very
+ unscrupulous and very impatient to make hay during the very short
+ time that the sun shines.
+
+The above letter contains one of the first allusions to the enterprising
+impostor Boulanger, who very nearly succeeded in making history, and
+of whom much was to be heard for some considerable space of time. His
+popularity was due in great measure to the vague discontent which
+was then prevalent in France. People thought that they saw the same
+inefficiency in the Government, the same relaxation of authority, the
+same financial difficulties, and the same venality which marked the last
+days of the Second Empire. There seemed to be no individual, in or out
+of the Royal or Imperial Dynasties, capable of exciting any enthusiasm
+or of inspiring any confidence, and public feeling was in that state of
+lassitude and dissatisfaction which might give a reasonable chance for a
+bold stroke for power.
+
+The scandalous Expulsion Bill passed both Chambers, and the Princes took
+their departure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, June 25, 1886.
+
+ The departure of the Comte de Paris from Eu has been
+ accompanied by many very sad circumstances, but I cannot help
+ thinking that his political position is improved by his expulsion.
+ His own partisans are much pleased at its having elicited from
+ him a distinct assertion of a claim to the throne, and of a
+ determination to work for the restoration of monarchy.
+
+ It is less easy to give an opinion on the position of the
+ Princes who have remained in France. It seems to be hardly
+ compatible with dignity and comfort, considering the unabated
+ hostility to them of the Reds, who seem generally to end in
+ overpowering all generous and conservative feelings in the Chambers
+ and in the Government.
+
+ Prince Napoleon and his son Prince Victor went off in opposite
+ directions, one to Geneva, the other to Brussels. The departure of
+ neither seems to have made much apparent sensation in Paris when
+ it took place, but I am far from certain that Prince Victor is not
+ really a more formidable opponent to the Republic than is the Comte
+ de Paris.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, July 2, 1886.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The topic of the day here is the conduct of the Minister of
+ War, General Boulanger. He was supposed to be an Orleanist. Then
+ he went round to Clemenceau, and was put into Freycinet's Cabinet
+ as a representative of the Clemenceau party, which though not the
+ most Red in the Chamber, is more Red than the Freycinet section.
+ Since he has been in office Boulanger has lost no opportunity of
+ ingratiating himself with the Radicals, and he has been travelling
+ about the country making speeches, the object of which has
+ evidently been to gain personal popularity for himself without
+ regard to his colleagues.
+
+ He has also by degrees put creatures of his own into the
+ great military commands. A crisis was produced, during the last
+ few days, by his quarrelling with General Saussier, the military
+ Governor of Paris, and provoking him into resigning. He is also
+ said to have used strange language in the Council of Ministers. At
+ any rate, President Grevy and the Ministers seem to have thought
+ they would be more comfortable at Paris without having a satellite
+ of Boulanger as Governor, and they have insisted upon declining
+ Saussier's resignation. From the way people talk, one would think
+ that the questions were whether Boulanger is aiming at being a
+ Cromwell or a Monk, and if a Monk, which dynasty he will take up.
+
+ There is a good deal of alarm here about foreign affairs. The
+ reports of a large concentration of Russian troops in Bessarabia
+ are supposed to confirm other indications that Russia is meditating
+ a revenge for the check she has sustained with regard to Bulgaria.
+ This, it is supposed, must bring Austria into the field. Moreover,
+ Bismarck does not seem to be in an amiable mood towards France;
+ and with or without instigation from him, Germans talk as if war
+ was inevitable.
+
+ Then the Republic here has lasted sixteen years, and that is
+ about the time which it takes to make the French tired of a form of
+ Government. The Republic has not been successful financially, and
+ trade and agriculture are not prosperous, nor is the reputation of
+ the Republican administration high for purity or efficiency.
+
+ So there is plenty to croak about for those who are inclined
+ to croak.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Paris, July 13, 1886.
+
+ The regular session of the French Chambers is to be closed the
+ day after to-morrow, and the Chambers are to spend to-morrow at
+ the Review at Longchamps, and I suppose to take part in the other
+ nuisances which makes Paris insupportable on a National Fete day.
+ I conclude the Chambers will come back in October for an extra
+ session as usual. In fact, they have not yet voted the Budget; or,
+ I had almost said, any useful measure. In Commercial matters and
+ indeed in everything relating to intercourse with other countries,
+ they have shown the narrowest and most exclusive spirit. Their
+ great feat has been the law for the persecution of the Princes,
+ which seems to be carried out as harshly as possible. I should
+ not have said that the literal wording of the law necessitated
+ or even justified the dismissal from the army of Princes who
+ already belonged to it, but I suppose that was the intention of
+ the legislators. The Duc d'Aumale's letter to the President is a
+ powerful document, but was sure to lead to his expulsion, and was
+ perhaps intended to have that effect.
+
+ Among people who ought to have good information from abroad,
+ the alarm as to a war this autumn seems stronger than among
+ the French politicians who confine themselves more closely to
+ considering French feeling at home. Certainly it comes round to
+ one in various ways from Germany that war is very generally
+ expected, or at all events talked of there. The accounts current
+ in Germany of supposed French provocations look as if there was
+ a party there trying to work up hostile feeling against France.
+ An alliance between France and Russia seems to be the bugbear. I
+ don't see symptoms at present of any war spirit in this country;
+ but of course a quarrel between Russia and Germany would be a great
+ temptation to French Chauvinism.
+
+The abhorred annual fete of July 14, 1886, possessed an interest which
+had been wanting previously, and has never since been renewed. This
+was due to the presence of a number of troops at the Longchamps Review
+who had just returned from Tonquin, and to the excitement caused by
+the first appearance of Boulanger at a big military display in Paris.
+Notwithstanding the inflated rubbish which was published the next day in
+the French press, there could not be the least doubt that the Tonquin
+troops were received without the slightest enthusiasm. In Paris the
+very word 'Tonquin' was hated; the country was associated with loss of
+life, and with heavy taxation, and nothing could have expressed more
+eloquently the disenchantment produced by a Spirited Colonial Policy,
+than the chilling reception accorded to these returned soldiers. The
+enthusiasm which should have been bestowed upon these humble instruments
+was lavished upon the charlatan who at that moment was the most
+prominent and popular figure in the eye of the French public.
+
+The military mountebank (aptly christened by Jules Ferry, 'a music
+hall St. Arnaud') had, with some foresight, provided himself with a
+high-actioned black circus horse, and those who were present on the
+occasion will never forget the moment when he advanced to salute the
+President, and other notabilities established in the official Tribune.
+Only a few days before, it was currently believed, he had terrified his
+ministerial colleagues by appearing at a Cabinet Council in uniform,
+and now as he pranced backwards or forwards on the circus horse and the
+public yelled their acclamations, President Grevy and the uninteresting
+crowd of bourgeois ministers and deputies who surrounded him, seemed
+visibly to quiver and flinch as shuddering memories of December 2 and
+other _coups d'etat_ obtruded themselves upon their recollections.
+
+From that day Boulanger became a dangerous man; the circus horse
+had done the trick; the general embodied in the public fancy the
+_clinquant_, for which the French had so long been sighing in secret;
+_l'homme qui monte a cheval_ in place of _l'homme qui monte a la
+tribune_, and for a long time he survived even that ridicule which in
+France is supposed to kill more effectively than elsewhere. Even when
+he engaged in a duel with an elderly and short-sighted civilian, M.
+Floquet, and was decisively worsted, he continued to remain a popular
+hero.
+
+Lord Rosebery, upon whom the unreasonable ill-feeling then constantly
+shown by the French towards England had made a painful impression,
+had realized in May that the Gladstone Government was doomed, and
+had wisely decided in consequence that a process of marking time
+was preferable to embarking upon anything in the nature of a heroic
+policy. Upon his retirement and the formation of a new administration,
+Lord Lyons experienced what was probably the greatest surprise of his
+life in the shape of the following letter from Lord Salisbury. In
+order to reinforce its arguments the late Lord Currie, then Permanent
+Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign Office, was sent over with it to
+Paris.
+
+[Illustration: _General Boulanger._
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Confidential. July 26, 1886.
+
+ I accepted yesterday the Queen's commission to form a
+ Government. It is a task full of difficulties; and I would have
+ gladly seen Lord Hartington undertake it. This, however, he could
+ not be induced to do; and the duty falls upon me. One of my first
+ thoughts is to provide a Foreign Secretary for the new Government:
+ for I could not, with any hope of carrying it through successfully,
+ repeat the experiment of last summer by uniting the Foreign
+ Secretaryship with the Premiership.
+
+ There is no one possessing the experience and knowledge of
+ Foreign Affairs which you have, and no one whose appointment would
+ exercise so great a moral authority in Europe. And we certainly
+ have not in our political ranks any one who could claim a tithe of
+ the fitness for the office which every one would acknowledge in
+ your case. I earnestly hope the proposal may be not unacceptable to
+ you. If that should happily be the case, a great difficulty in our
+ way will have been most successfully removed.
+
+ As there is much to be said on the matter which it would be
+ too long to write, Currie has very kindly undertaken to take this
+ letter over and discuss the matter with you. We have talked it over
+ very fully.
+
+ If you should be in need of any interval of repose, I could
+ easily take the seals for a few weeks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris. July 27, 1886.
+
+ Currie brought me your letter early this morning. In answer to
+ it I sent you at 11.30 a.m. the following telegram:--
+
+ 'I am very much gratified, and I am very grateful for the kind
+ consideration with which your proposal is accompanied, but my
+ age and the state of my health make it quite impossible for me to
+ undertake the office.'
+
+ I hope I need not assure you that I am fully sensible of the
+ kindness of your letter, and that if I cannot feel that I merit all
+ you say of me, I am at least grateful for your good opinion.
+
+ The truth is, that I could not now undertake new and laborious
+ duties with any confidence that I could discharge them efficiently.
+ I feel the need of rest, and I am not equal to beginning a new
+ life of hard work. I could not conscientiously assume the great
+ responsibility which would be thrown upon me.
+
+If the post of Foreign Secretary has ever been offered during the
+last hundred years to any other person outside the ranks of orthodox
+party politicians the secret has been well kept, and it might perhaps
+be suggested that few people would be found with sufficient strength
+of mind to decline so glittering a prize. Lord Lyons, however, as is
+sufficiently evident, found no difficulty in at once deciding upon the
+refusal of an offer which the ordinary mediocrity would have accepted
+with avidity. In the above letter he founded his refusal upon grounds
+of age and ill-health, and in private he used to express the opinion
+that after the age of forty a man's faculties began and continued to
+deteriorate. But it is not in the least likely that he would have
+accepted the honour which it was proposed to bestow upon him, at any
+period of his life. His extreme modesty and diffidence have already
+been dwelt upon, but a more valuable quality than these is a man's
+realization of his own limitations, and it is probable that Lord Lyons,
+by the exercise of his exceptionally impartial judgment, was able to
+form a more correct opinion as to his own potentialities than Lord
+Salisbury. A thorough and profound knowledge of foreign politics is
+not the sole necessary qualification of an English Foreign Secretary;
+had such been the case, Lord Lyons would have been an ideal occupant
+of the post; but in England, where the value of Ministers is gauged
+chiefly by the fallacious test of oratorical capacity, the Foreign
+Secretary is constantly obliged to make speeches in defence of or in
+explanation of his policy, and although the House of Lords is the
+most long-suffering and good-natured assembly in the world, it would
+have been no easy task for a man of sixty-nine, who had never put two
+sentences together in public, to suddenly appear in Parliament as the
+representative of one of the most important departments, to say nothing
+of public meetings, deputations, banquets, etc. It may also be doubted
+whether, in spite of his many admirable qualities, he was really adapted
+for the post. All his life, he had been merely an instrument--a highly
+efficient instrument--of the existing Government, and had received
+instructions, which had invariably been carried out with singular skill
+and intelligence. But the responsibility had not been his, and as
+Foreign Secretary the initiative as well as the responsibility which
+would have rested upon him might have imposed too formidable a strain
+upon one of so cautious a temperament. Taking into consideration these
+doubts, his advanced age, failing health, and the effect of depression
+caused by the recent death of his much loved sister, the Dowager Duchess
+of Norfolk, the refusal of the Foreign Office by Lord Lyons was only an
+additional instance of that robust common sense which was one of his
+most pronounced characteristics. Lord Rosebery, at all events, thought
+that he had decided wisely.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Rosebery to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Dalmeny, Aug. 10, 1886.
+
+ As my Foreign Office episode is at an end, I write a line of
+ good-bye, not as a Minister, but on the footing of what I hope I
+ may call friendship.
+
+ My six months' experience has led me to the conviction that
+ our relations with France are really more troublesome than with
+ any other Power. She is always wanting something of us which it is
+ impossible to give her, and she then says plaintively, 'You never
+ do anything for me.' She is quite oblivious of the fact that she
+ never loses the opportunity of playing us a trick. Witness the
+ secret expedition to the New Hebrides. Nothing would have induced
+ me to go on with any one of the negotiations with Waddington until
+ they had removed their troops from those islands. Whenever he asked
+ for an answer about anything, I always turned the conversation
+ round to that interesting spot.
+
+ With this conviction, therefore, it has been a great comfort
+ to feel that you were at Paris.
+
+ I am not surprised that you did not care about my succession!
+ It is a weary post.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Rosebery._
+
+ Heron's Ghyll, Uckfield, Aug. 17, 1886.
+
+ Your friendly letter has followed me here and has much
+ gratified me.
+
+ I think you must look back with great satisfaction to your
+ time at the Foreign Office. You have certainly won golden opinions
+ from your subordinates and from the world at large, which is
+ perhaps a less competent judge. My own official intercourse with
+ you was certainly both very pleasant to me and very satisfactory.
+
+ I attribute the difficulties with France more to the
+ inevitable consequences of our coming into contact with the French
+ in all parts of the world, than to any ill-will on either side,
+ although I do not pretend to say that the state of feeling is what
+ I could wish it to be.
+
+ Independently of any other considerations, I felt altogether
+ too old to undertake the Foreign Office. I was so convinced of
+ this, that I regarded it as what the French call an objection
+ _prejudicielle_ to entertaining the question at all.
+
+The post which Lord Lyons had declined was accepted by Lord Iddesleigh,
+who had just been removed from the House of Commons, and, as was only
+natural, it is evident that he was in the habit of consulting Lord
+Salisbury before taking any step of importance. In October, 1886, with
+the concurrence of Lord Salisbury, Lord Lyons was instructed to approach
+the French Government on the question of Egypt, and to explain the
+conditions under which it would be possible to terminate the British
+military occupation. There seems to be absolutely no doubt that Her
+Majesty's Government were perfectly sincere and honestly desirous of
+carrying out the promises that had been made at various times, and as
+subsequent history showed, it was the misguided opposition of France and
+Russia which was as much responsible as anything else for the permanent
+British occupation of Egypt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 22, 1886.
+
+ In my previous letter of to-day I have told you what M. de
+ Freycinet said to me about the Suez Canal Convention. I had a long
+ interview with him, but though I gave him plenty of opportunities,
+ he did not say one other word about Egypt. This being the case,
+ I thought it prudent to abstain, at all events at this first
+ interview, from saying anything on my side. So far then I have not
+ made known to him any part of the contents of your letter to Lord
+ Salisbury of the 18th or of his telegraphic answer.
+
+ The fact is, that from what I have made out since I came back
+ here, I am led to think that the French Government have now good
+ reason to doubt whether they would get Bismarck's support if they
+ raised the Egyptian question with a view to embarrass us. This
+ being the case, they are very much hesitating to do so, and are
+ on the look-out for signs of our impressions on the subject, and
+ would interpret any appearance of unusual anxiety on our part, or
+ any fresh offers of concessions from us, simply as indications
+ that we still thought Germany might join against us. If the French
+ Government are not pretty sure of help and sympathy from abroad,
+ they will probably not stir in the matter.
+
+ In the meantime, however, the press has been strongly excited,
+ probably by d'Aunay and Charmes. There is a very nasty article,
+ principally about the financial part of the Egyptian question, in
+ the _Debuts_ this morning.
+
+ I shall perhaps be able to see my way more clearly in a day or
+ two. In the meantime I am disposed to think the most prudent plan
+ will be to be reserved and firm about Egypt, but not to display
+ anxiety on the subject.
+
+The idea of Lord Salisbury, speaking generally, was that a somewhat
+distant date of evacuation should be foreshadowed; that if evacuation,
+as was fully intended, should be carried out, some return should be
+expected for the expenditure of British blood and treasure, and that
+the Suez Canal difficulty should be settled without further delay. He
+considered that the negotiations should be carried on with the Porte
+(Sir Henry Drummond Wolff had already been despatched on this mission),
+and that confidential communications should be made to France and
+Germany.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Oct. 26, 1886.
+
+ I shall be very anxious to know what line Waddington took on
+ his return to his post, and particularly what, if anything, he said
+ about Egypt.
+
+ Freycinet is the man chiefly responsible for the refusal of
+ France to join in our expedition to Egypt, and this no doubt makes
+ him very anxious to gain for himself the credit of some striking
+ success in getting England out of that country. So far as I can
+ make out here, the attempts that have been made to get the Powers
+ to unite in calling for a general Conference upon Egyptian affairs
+ have not met with much success. If Bismarck decidedly opposes
+ attempts of this kind, they will no doubt be abandoned. The Press
+ continue to urge strong measures against our continuing in Egypt,
+ and is not measured in its language.
+
+ The autumn session is often fatal to French Ministers. I
+ recollect Gambetta's saying to me not long before his own fall:
+ '_En automne les feuilles tombent et les porte-feuilles aussi._'
+
+It is more than likely that the instructions which M. Waddington
+received about this period were of a disagreeable nature. A well-known
+French Ambassador once remarked to me some years later, that the London
+Embassy was no very desirable post from the French diplomatist's point
+of view. 'We are sent there with the mission of getting the English out
+of Egypt, and the thing cannot be done!'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Nov. 23, 1886.
+
+ Freycinet's aim seems to be to improve his own position in
+ the Chambers and in the country by obtaining our withdrawal from
+ Egypt, and of course the object cannot be attained unless he can
+ make it appear that the withdrawal is his doing. Hence his strong
+ desire that we should negotiate with him and his dislike to our
+ negotiating with Turkey or any other Power.
+
+ The crushing defeat of the Right in the elections in the
+ Department of the Nord is another proof of their blindness in
+ misusing the chance they had after the general election. They might
+ possibly have led gradually up to a restoration by giving strength
+ to Conservative principles and measures. They could only discredit
+ themselves by joining the extreme Radicals and attempting to
+ produce mischief and confusion.
+
+ The Germans are either very dilatory, or they have some
+ _arriere pensee_ about the Zanzibar affair. Yesterday afternoon
+ Muenster was still without any instructions to make the joint
+ invitation to the French.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 3, 1886.
+
+ You will see by my despatch that Freycinet has again attacked
+ me about Egypt. He wants the negotiation to go through him, and
+ if possible to be made with him, independently of the Turks, or
+ at least virtually in conjunction with us. I have not yet seen
+ any symptoms of his being anxious really to help us in Egyptian
+ matters; and I am not generally favourable to carrying on parallel
+ negotiations, or the same negotiation in different places. The
+ danger of informal conversations between Freycinet and me is that,
+ however cautious I may be, he may somehow or other find occasion
+ to quote me, as being more _coulant_ than you. At any rate, if I
+ had to talk to him it would be very necessary for you to tell me
+ very exactly how far I could go: and above all, that I should be
+ guarded from holding any language which might by any possibility be
+ embarrassing to the line circumstances might make it advisable for
+ Her Majesty's Government to take in Parliament afterwards.
+
+ I was long enough at Constantinople to see that no dependence
+ whatever was to be placed upon what the Porte told an Ambassador
+ about his colleagues. Still I cannot say that the Turkish
+ revelation about the communications the Porte affects to receive
+ from the French and Russian Ambassadors about Egypt and about us,
+ are, in the face of them, improbable. At any rate, our views must
+ be much nearer than those we now have to the French ideas, before
+ we shall get any real help from France at the Porte.
+
+ I write, as you know, in ignorance of Wolff's opinion, as he
+ did not stop here on his way home.
+
+ Freycinet's defeat in the Chamber this afternoon is serious
+ because it followed a strong speech from himself against the
+ _Sous-Prefet_ abolition, but he has wonderful skill in patching
+ things up.
+
+Freycinet in December was defeated by one of those combinations of
+Royalist and Radicals which were not uncommon in French politics, and
+although the absurdity of the situation was obvious to every one,
+insisted on placing his resignation and that of the Cabinet in President
+Grevy's hands. A change of Government was so useless that even those
+who had combined to overthrow Freycinet endeavoured to persuade him
+to reconsider his determination. He remained obdurate, however, and
+the President, casting about for a successor, pitched at first upon M.
+Floquet, a strong Radical who was particularly obnoxious to the Russian
+Government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 7, 1886.
+
+ The chances seem to be in favour of Floquet being Prime
+ Minister. He is of the section of the Chamber called 'Gauche
+ radical,' that is to say, he falls just short of the most extreme
+ Left. Who would be his Minister for Foreign Affairs and what would
+ be his foreign policy I do not pretend to say. The incident in
+ his life most talked about is his having cried out, '_Vive la
+ Pologne!_' and used some expressions taken as disrespectful to
+ the late Emperor of Russia, when His Majesty was at the Palais de
+ Justice, on his visit to Paris during the Exhibition of 1867. The
+ Russian Ambassadors have, I believe, declined or avoided exchanging
+ courtesies with him when he has since been in situations, such
+ as that of _Prefet de la Seine_, and President of the Chamber of
+ Deputies, which have brought him into communication with the rest
+ of the diplomatic body. Russia at this moment is paying so much
+ court to France that she might perhaps get over this.
+
+ The Left of the Chamber have hitherto been opposed to the
+ Tonquin and Madagascar Expeditions and to an adventurous and
+ Chauvin policy altogether; but if in power they would probably go
+ in for pleasing the Chamber and the bulk of the people out of doors
+ even more unreservedly than Freycinet did.
+
+ I should have regretted Freycinet's fall more, if he had
+ not taken up the Egyptian question in the way he did. Our
+ communications with him on that subject were becoming very
+ uncomfortable. I am not very sanguine, however, about their being
+ more satisfactory with his successor.
+
+The notion, however, of having M. Floquet as Prime Minister frightened
+every one except the extreme Radicals so much that that gentleman was
+unable to form an administration, and the choice of the President
+ultimately fell upon a M. Goblet, who was Radical enough for most people
+and not much hampered by pledges and declarations. The office of Foreign
+Minister remained vacant, but, much to the relief of Lord Lyons, it was
+definitely refused by M. Duclerc. Lord Lyons had, by this time, had no
+less than twenty-one different French Foreign Ministers to deal with,
+and of these Duclerc was the one he liked least. No suitable person
+seemed to be available, and it was in vain that, one after the other
+French diplomatists were solicited to accept the office. At length a
+Foreign Minister was found in M. Flourens, a brother of the well-known
+Communist who was killed in 1871. M. Flourens was completely ignorant of
+everything concerning foreign affairs, and his appointment was perhaps
+an unconscious tribute to the English practice of putting civilians at
+the head of our naval and military administrations.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Iddesleigh._
+
+ Paris, Dec. 21, 1886.
+
+ I have not yet had the means of improving my acquaintance
+ with Flourens, but I expect to have some conversation with him
+ to-morrow. He had not a word to say about Bulgaria when I saw him
+ on Friday. He did not seem to have known anything about foreign
+ affairs before he took office, nor to expect to stay long enough in
+ office to become acquainted with them. Some people suppose that he
+ is to make way for the return of Freycinet as soon as the Budget is
+ passed. Anyway, the Goblet Ministry is only the Freycinet Ministry
+ over again without the strongest man, who was undoubtedly Freycinet
+ himself. When Parliament meets, things will be just as they were.
+ There will still be in the Chamber 180 Deputies on the Right,
+ ready to vote any way in order to make mischief and discredit the
+ Republic; about 100 Deputies on the extreme Left, intimidating the
+ Government and forcing it into extreme Radical measures, they being
+ able to count in all emergencies upon getting the vote of the Right
+ to turn out a Ministry; and lastly there will be 300 remaining
+ deputies, who cannot agree enough amongst themselves to form a
+ majority that can be relied upon, who do not at all like violent
+ radical measures, but who are too nervously afraid of unpopularity
+ to show resolution in opposing the extreme Left.
+
+ So far the Comte de Paris's declaration seems simply to have
+ made the ultra-Monarchists furiously angry, and not to have induced
+ any great part of the Right to think of taking the wise course it
+ recommends.
+
+ I do not see any outward signs here of the strained relations
+ between France and Germany and the imminent war between the two
+ countries which the _Standard_ announces. But it is true that among
+ the French themselves some suspicion and distrust of Boulanger's
+ aims are becoming more apparent.
+
+The hackneyed saying: _Plus cela change, plus c'est la meme chose_, was
+never more appropriate than in the case of the change from a Freycinet
+to a Goblet Government; one section of uninspiring ministers had merely
+given place to another, and no one in France seemed in any way the
+better for it.
+
+On New Year's Dav, 1887, President Grevy broke out into Latin in
+congratulating the Diplomatic Corps on the already long continuance
+of peace, but a more accurate view of the situation was expressed by
+a French newspaper in the sentence: 'Jamais annee nouvelle ne s'est
+ouverte au milieu d'autant de promesses de paix et de preparatifs de
+guerre que l'annee 1887.' 'I do not know,' wrote Lord Lyons, 'which is
+the nation which wishes for war. France certainly does not, she is, on
+the contrary, very much afraid of it. But one would feel more confidence
+in peace if there appeared less necessity in all countries to be
+perpetually giving pacific assurances. There are rumours of a defensive
+alliance between Russia and France. The bond of union between the two
+countries, if it exists, must be simply a common hatred of Germany.'
+
+At the beginning of the year 1887, the Germans professed to be in
+dread of an attack from France, while the French complained that they
+were threatened by Germany. In France it was believed that in August,
+1886, preparations had been actually made to mobilize the German army,
+and the language held by Boulanger was to the effect that the military
+power of France would be found to be very different to what it was in
+1870. Meanwhile an unsuccessful attempt had been made by those two old
+Parliamentary hands, Freycinet and Ferry, to get rid of Boulanger, who
+was now becoming to be considered as equally dangerous both in France
+and Germany.
+
+It was probably the apprehension caused by the presence of this
+adventurer, whose incapacity was as yet imperfectly realized, that was
+responsible for the state of tension and alarm which prevailed in France
+during January and February, 1887.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._[44]
+
+ Paris, Jan. 18, 1887.
+
+ I saw M. Grevy this morning, and found him, as it seemed to
+ me, really alarmed at the possibility of France being attacked
+ by Germany. The only overt act he spoke of, on the part of
+ Germany, was the increase of the strength of the German garrisons
+ in the neighbourhood of the French frontier. Grevy himself is
+ most peaceful, and quite sincerely so. His natural character and
+ temperament, and his interest too, tend that way. He would hardly
+ be able to hold his own as President in case of war, and there is
+ very little chance of France going to war as long as he is the head
+ of the State. Flourens also spoke to me of danger to France and
+ Germany when I saw him this afternoon.
+
+ I think the alarm of Grevy and Flourens was sincere, though I
+ do not share it myself at this moment.
+
+ In France there is no desire to go to war, and I doubt whether
+ she is able, or at all events fancies herself able, to cope with
+ Germany.
+
+ It is perhaps more difficult to keep her on good terms
+ with us. Egypt is a sore which will not heal. There was a nasty
+ discussion about Newfoundland Fisheries in the Senate yesterday. I
+ send you a full report officially. Happily, so far, it has not had
+ much echo in the public.
+
+Alarm with respect to Germany continued to grow, and was fed by private
+communications from Bismarck, who sent by unofficial agents messages
+to the effect that 'he was all for peace, but that it was impossible
+for him to stand the way that France was going on.' These messages came
+through Bleichroeder and members of the _haute finance_ in Paris, who
+expressed the opinion that if Boulanger remained in office, war with
+Germany was certain. The _haute finance_ is by no means invariably
+correct in its political judgment, but it seems highly probable that the
+war scares prevalent in 1887 were promulgated with the object of getting
+rid of the troublesome firebrand upon whom so much public attention was
+concentrated. The position of Boulanger, however, was a strong one, and
+to dislodge him was a work of no slight difficulty. Ever since the day
+when he had been taken into Freycinet's Cabinet he had contrived by
+adroit advertising to keep himself before the public, and to distinguish
+himself from his colleagues as exercising a separate and commanding
+influence in the Chambers and with the public. In the army he had
+managed to make himself feared by the higher officers and assiduously
+courted popularity with the rank and file. In the political world he
+had at first been regarded as being ultra democratic, but now excited
+suspicion by paying court to the Conservatives, and by endeavouring, not
+entirely without success, to obtain their good will.
+
+On the whole, there was a very general impression that he was ambitious,
+self-seeking, and thoroughly unscrupulous; but there were few means of
+forming an opinion as to what his special plans really were, if indeed
+he had formed any. Still he successfully flattered the belief of the
+French that they were fast emerging from the eclipse in which their
+military power and reputation were involved in 1870, and there were
+not wanting those who asserted that he was inclined to seek a war, in
+the hope of conducting it with success, and so establishing himself as
+a military dictator. Others, influenced by their wishes, indulged in
+the hope that he might be meditating a Monarchist restoration under an
+Orleanist or Bonapartist Dynasty. Unsubstantial and improbable as these
+suppositions may have been, it was plain that in the army and among the
+public at large there prevailed a vague notion that he might be the man
+of the future, a notion fostered by the absence of any one recognized in
+France as possessing conspicuous and commanding abilities, and by the
+craving for a real personality after a long succession of second-class
+politicians.
+
+The embarrassment with regard to Germany created by the presence of
+so disturbing an element in the Government as Boulanger did not,
+contrary to what might have been expected, tend to improve Anglo-French
+relations, and a letter from Lord Salisbury expresses in forcible
+terms his dissatisfaction at difficulties which seemed to have been
+gratuitously created.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Feb. 5, 1887.
+
+ The French are inexplicable. One would have thought that under
+ existing circumstances it was not necessary to _make_ enemies--that
+ there were enough provided for France by nature just now. But
+ she seems bent upon aggravating the patient beast of burden that
+ lives here by every insult and worry her ingenuity can devise. In
+ Newfoundland she has issued orders which, if faithfully executed,
+ must bring the French and English fleets into collision. At the
+ New Hebrides, in spite of repeated promises, she will not stir. In
+ Egypt she baulks a philanthropic change out of pure 'cussedness.'
+ In Morocco she is engaged in appropriating the territory by
+ instalments, threatening to reach Tangier at no distant date. And
+ now, just as we are entering on pacific negotiations, the French
+ Government sent orders to do precisely that which, a month ago,
+ Waddington promised they should not do, namely run up the French
+ flag at Dongorita.[45] It is very difficult to prevent oneself
+ from wishing for another Franco-German war to put a stop to this
+ incessant vexation.
+
+ We have protested earnestly about Dongorita, which has more
+ the air of a studied insult than any of the others. As to the
+ Newfoundland Fisheries, if they execute their threats, they render
+ the passage of a Bait Bill next year a matter of certainty. We
+ have strained the good will of the colonists very far in refusing
+ to allow it this year. The other matters will, I suppose, be the
+ subject of slow negotiations.
+
+ D'Herbette has made at Berlin more practical suggestions as to
+ naming a date for the annexation of Egypt than we have yet had from
+ the French Government. I hope the large majorities will persuade
+ the French that the national feeling is in this instance not in
+ favour of scuttle.
+
+All that Lord Lyons, who was always most anxious to make the best case
+he could for the French, was able to say in their defence, was that he
+hoped that it was an exceptionally dark moment, and that there must be a
+change shortly for the better.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 18, 1887.
+
+ The French seem to be more confident of peace and altogether
+ in better spirits than they were a few days ago, but I do not know
+ that they have any positive facts or distinct information to go
+ upon. The hopes of a certain number of them rest upon the belief
+ that the Goblet Ministry is likely to be upset as soon as the
+ Budget is finally disposed of, and that thus Boulanger will be got
+ rid of.
+
+ The newspaper accounts of Wolff's mission to Constantinople
+ have brought Egypt on the tapis again, and as anxiety about
+ Germany falls into the background, irritation against England
+ comes prominently forward. There are, however, some symptoms of
+ a return among wiser men to more prudent and reasonable views
+ respecting the relations of France towards England. These men are
+ alarmed especially respecting the hostility towards France which is
+ apparent in Italy, and they see the folly of making enemies on all
+ sides. If there should be a new Ministry it might possibly pursue
+ a policy more friendly towards England with regard to Egypt and
+ other matters. The Egyptian question would no doubt become less
+ difficult if a change should remove M. Charmes from the Foreign
+ Office and put into his place, as Political Director there, a man
+ less prejudiced about Egypt.
+
+ In the meantime much amusement has been caused by an escapade
+ of Madame Flourens. On Saturday last she called upon Countess Marie
+ Muenster, and found with her Count Hoyos, the Austrian Ambassador.
+ Madame Flourens announced loudly that her husband had resigned
+ the Foreign Office, because Boulanger had attempted, without his
+ knowledge, to send a letter direct to the Emperor of Russia by the
+ French Military Attache, who was to start for St. Petersburg.
+ Hoyos fetched Muenster himself out of an adjoining room, to hear the
+ story. Madame Flourens, it appeared, supposed that Flourens was on
+ the point of announcing his resignation to the Chamber of Deputies.
+ It turned out, however, that Flourens had made a scene with
+ Boulanger at the Council of Ministers, had gone away in a huff,
+ but had been subsequently calmed by M. Grevy and M. Goblet; no
+ letter to the Emperor had been sent, and the resignation had been
+ withdrawn. The story had of course spread all over the town. In
+ defiance of truth, a _communique_ contradicting it was inserted in
+ the _Agence Havas_, with no other effect than that of discrediting
+ the _communiques_ which the Government is apt to put into the Havas.
+
+There is so little mention of women in Lord Lyons's correspondence that
+Madame Flourens's indiscretion comes as a welcome relief, although in
+all probability it got the unfortunate Count Muenster into trouble with
+Bismarck, and afforded an excuse for fresh bullying. Count Muenster,
+who had been for many years Ambassador in London, where he had been
+extremely popular, found the transfer to Paris singularly unpleasant,
+more especially as in order to make things thoroughly uncomfortable for
+him, Bismarck had provided an entirely new Embassy Staff.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Feb. 19, 1887.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ We are thinking of renewing our negotiations with respect to
+ the Suez Canal in a serious spirit. But before we sign anything we
+ shall want some satisfaction about Dongorita and the New Hebrides,
+ and possibly about the Corvee.
+
+ I think it was very shabby of the French to open the Dongorita
+ affair upon us, just after we had made so material a concession
+ upon the subject of the bait in Newfoundland.
+
+ Waddington is gloomy and rather ill-tempered--either from the
+ fogs or the crisis. I have not had any further talk with him about
+ Egypt lately. I think he avoids the subject. Wolff tells me that
+ the French Charge d'Affaires at Constantinople is a mere creature
+ of Nelidoff's. Our negotiations are dragging on with little
+ prospect of success. We are willing to fix a distant date for our
+ leaving, if we receive a treaty power to go back whenever internal
+ or external security are threatened. The tone in which both France
+ and Turkey have received this proposal may be best expressed by the
+ colloquial phrase 'Damn their impudence!' I do not expect to carry
+ what I want at present, but before modifying these terms, I should
+ like to know what is going to happen in Europe.
+
+Sir Henry Drummond Wolff was at this time at Constantinople endeavouring
+to negotiate the Convention with regard to the evacuation of Egypt,
+and the French and Russian Embassies were actively engaged in the
+senseless opposition which eventually prevented the ratification of the
+Convention. The above letter from Lord Salisbury is an additional proof
+of the honest desire of the British Government to carry out the rash
+undertakings which had been given in the past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, Feb. 25, 1887.
+
+ The general feeling here seems to be that war has been
+ escaped, but still there is a good deal of discontent against the
+ foreign policy of the Goblet Cabinet. It seems to be considered
+ that the understanding between Italy, Austria, and Germany is as
+ good as made, and that the result of it will be to put an end to
+ any fear of war between Russia and Austria. On the other hand, it
+ is thought that Russia will feel it too necessary to watch Germany
+ for it to be prudent of her to make an alliance with France, while
+ without the alliance of Russia, France of course cannot face
+ Germany, particularly as she has almost hostility to expect from
+ Italy and no great sympathy to look for from England. The policy
+ which has thus isolated France from the other Powers is seen to
+ have been a mistake, and there seems to be a disposition to throw
+ the blame on the Goblet Ministry. If the Goblet Ministry should
+ fall, it is not improbable that the new Government might take
+ the line of being conciliatory to the neighbouring countries and
+ to Italy and England in particular. I am not very sanguine about
+ this, but if in the meantime no irritating questions come to excite
+ public opinion against us, there may possibly be a chance that
+ a change of Ministry here would make our relations with France
+ smoother.
+
+ My hopes that a change towards England may be in contemplation
+ have perhaps been strengthened by a visit which I have just had
+ from a person wholly unconnected with the French Ministry who
+ evidently came to ascertain what were the particular points with
+ regard to which the relations between France and England might be
+ improved. I said that instead of thwarting us in our endeavours
+ to improve the condition of Egypt and put it in a state to stand
+ alone, the French might help us; and they could not expect
+ comfortable relations with us if they endeavoured to stir up other
+ Powers to make difficulties with us about Egypt. I mentioned also
+ the New Hebrides question, which most certainly ought and might
+ be settled at once. I alluded also to those various matters all
+ over the world which might be treated in a cordial and not in an
+ antagonistic spirit.
+
+ P.S.--I have strong reasons for thinking it very important
+ that Waddington should not have the least inkling of my having had
+ the above interview, or any communication of the kind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ Feb. 26, 1887.
+
+ I will not mention to Waddington the interview which you have
+ had as to English grounds of complaint. I have not seen him for ten
+ days: he must have taken huff at something.
+
+ I think, as the French are coming to their senses, it might be
+ well to mention unofficially to Flourens that I am quite ready to
+ resume the negotiations about the Suez Canal; and that I have good
+ hope of bringing it to a successful issue, but that I am hindered
+ by the flag that is floating at Dongorita, and by the delay of the
+ French in performing their promises as regards the New Hebrides. We
+ are being a good deal reproached here, on account of our apparent
+ submission to this breach of faith. If these two matters are
+ corrected, I shall find it possible, and shall be very glad to
+ renew the Suez Canal discussion either at Paris or here.
+
+ I have seen Karolyi to-day--an unusual occurrence--and for the
+ first time have had the admission from him that a war with Russia
+ was not an impossible contingency.
+
+ The Russians are very quiet; and the negotiations about
+ Bulgaria do not really advance a bit.
+
+M. Flourens, in spite of his complete inexperience, seems to have
+realized the simple fact that it was not advisable to quarrel with
+England just at the moment when relations with Germany were in a
+critical condition; but unhappily the public did not appear to be in
+an accommodating mood. The statements published in the English press
+respecting the Drummond Wolff mission had caused great irritation,
+and what was perhaps more serious, had alarmed the French again
+about the security of the coupons. As long as they felt sure that
+the coupons would be paid regularly, and that there was no fear of
+future reduction, they were reasonably patient, unless some specially
+severe blow, such as a reduction of the numbers and salaries of French
+officials, as compared with English, was struck at their _amour propre_.
+Now, however, they were beset with the fear that, under what they
+considered to be English mismanagement, they were about to lose their
+money as well as their influence.
+
+In March the Goblet Ministry was already in difficulties, and it was
+believed that Freycinet was likely to return to power, although what the
+precise advantages were of these continual changes, no one was capable
+of explaining.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ March 8, 1887.
+
+ By taking credit to himself at the expense of his
+ predecessors, in the interpellation yesterday, Goblet has stirred
+ up the bile of a large party in the Chamber, and the determination
+ to turn his Cabinet out, if possible, has revived with fresh
+ vigour. It is supposed that the attempts will be made as soon as
+ the Corn Duties Bill is disposed of. It seems to be thought that,
+ if it succeeds, Freycinet must be Prime Minister; but there appears
+ to be a strong feeling against his having the Foreign Office again.
+ He is thought to have got France into uncomfortable relations with
+ many of his neighbours. In the treatment of the Egyptian question
+ he is believed to have sacrificed cordiality with England to a
+ desire to regain the popularity he had lost by the policy which
+ led to England's occupying her present position in Egypt; while
+ his attempt to get up an opposition to England on the part of the
+ European Powers and his worrying way of dealing himself with the
+ British Government about Egypt, are thought simply to have excited
+ public opinion on both sides of the Channel and to have provoked
+ ill will, without in the least improving the position of France.
+ There can be no doubt that Freycinet looked upon a success with
+ regard to Egypt as a personal necessity for himself, and was much
+ influenced in his policy towards England by this feeling.
+
+ It is apprehended that unless the _prestige_ of Boulanger is
+ put on high again by strong language from Germany, there will be no
+ difficulty in obtaining, as a matter of course, his fall, with the
+ rest of the Cabinet of which he is a part. M. Grevy is believed to
+ be very anxious to be rid of him.
+
+ I hear on good authority that the Russians have been trying
+ again, though without success, to come to a special understanding
+ with the French Government.
+
+To say that M. Grevy was very anxious to be rid of Boulanger was
+probably an understatement, for he could not conceivably have desired
+anything so ardently. But the 'Music Hall St. Arnaud' was by no means
+at the end of his tether, and had contrived to advertise himself by
+egregious conduct with regard to the Army Committee of the Chamber
+of Deputies. That Committee had drawn up a military Bill, based upon
+three years' service, and Boulanger, on the pretext that it was 'not
+sufficiently faithful to democratic principles,' had, without consulting
+any of his colleagues, written a letter condemning the provisions of
+the bill and proposing something quite different. This letter was
+thoughtfully communicated to the press before it reached the Committee,
+and the outraged members of the Committee as well as his colleagues
+were at last goaded into resistance. The Chamber condemned the attitude
+of the General towards the sacrosanct representatives of the nation;
+the General himself beat a hasty and prudent retreat under cover of an
+apology; the Moderate Republicans denounced him as a would-be dictator,
+and the Ultra-Radicals accused him of cowardice in consequence of his
+apology. Most men under the circumstances would have felt disposed to
+resign office, but in the case of Boulanger it was probably immaterial
+to him whether he was blamed or praised, so long as he could keep his
+name before the public.
+
+It was, and probably is still, a regulation in the British Diplomatic
+Service, that its members should retire at the age of seventy, and, as
+a rule, an Ambassador who had attained that age, usually considered
+himself fit to discharge his duties for a further period. Lord Lyons,
+however, was an exception. His seventieth birthday fell due in April,
+and a month beforehand he wrote to announce that he wished to resign.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, March 22, 1887.
+
+ Towards the end of the next month, the time will come when
+ I shall be superannuated, and I feel very strongly that it will
+ not come too soon. It will not be without a pang that I shall
+ find myself no longer a diplomatic servant of the Queen, who has
+ ever received my endeavours to obtain her approval with the most
+ generous indulgence. But the labour and responsibility of this post
+ are becoming too much for me, and I shall be anxious to be relieved
+ from them when the time fixed by the regulations arrives.
+
+ I need not assure you that I shall much regret the termination
+ of the official connexion with you from which I have derived so
+ much satisfaction.
+
+It may not unfairly be presumed that resignations of important official
+posts are habitually welcomed by Governments, as they not only remedy
+stagnation in the public service, but frequently provide opportunities
+for political patronage. It is plain, however, that the prospect of
+losing Lord Lyons was looked upon by Lord Salisbury as a genuine
+misfortune, and he did his best to induce him to reconsider his decision.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ March 26, 1887.
+
+ I have considered your letter of the 22nd, stating that you
+ felt very strongly that the time of your superannuation would not
+ come too soon; and though it was a matter of very deep regret to me
+ to receive such an announcement from you, it was not altogether a
+ matter of surprise; for I remembered the language you had used to
+ me when I tried to induce you to join us as Foreign Secretary last
+ July.
+
+ The loss which the Diplomatic Service will suffer by your
+ retirement will be profound, and, for the time, hardly possible to
+ repair. Your presence at Paris gave to the public mind a sense of
+ security which was the result of a long experience of your powers,
+ and which no one else is in a position to inspire.
+
+ In face of the expressions in your letter I feel as if I were
+ almost presuming in suggesting any alternative course of action.
+ But it struck me that possibly you might be willing to make your
+ official career terminate with the end of your current appointment,
+ rather than with the precise date of superannuation. The effect of
+ this would be to prolong your stay at Paris till next December.
+
+ My reasons from a public point of view will, I hope, strike
+ you at once. We are passing through a very anxious European crisis.
+ If any fateful decisions are taken this year, it will be within the
+ next three or four months. It will add very much to our anxiety to
+ know that the reins at Paris are in new hands, which have never
+ held them before. This mere fact may even be an element of danger.
+ The avalanche hangs so loosely, that any additional sensation or
+ uneasiness may displace it. If we could avoid a change till the
+ winter it would be a great public advantage, even if the change
+ should be inevitable.
+
+ I hope you will forgive me for having pressed this on you in
+ the interests of the public service. Whatever your decision may be,
+ I give you the warmest thanks for the kind and loyal support which
+ you have always given to the policy which it has been my duty to
+ carry out.
+
+An appeal of this kind from an official chief could not well be
+disregarded, setting aside the fact that but few officials can have
+experienced the compliment of being assured that their continued service
+was essential to the peace of Europe. With well justified misgivings,
+Lord Lyons therefore consented to remain on until the end of the year,
+knowing perfectly well that his physical energies were on the point of
+exhaustion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, March 29, 1887.
+
+ I am deeply touched by your letter of the 26th, and I feel
+ that, after what you say in it, I should be extremely ungrateful if
+ I were not ready to sacrifice a great deal to meet your views.
+
+ For my own part I feel that the work and responsibility here
+ are an increasing strain both upon my mind and upon my bodily
+ health, and I am beset with misgivings lest, even in ordinary
+ times, I may be unable to discharge my duties with energy and
+ efficiency, and lest, in an emergency calling for much labour,
+ I may break down altogether. This being the case, it would
+ undoubtedly be a great relief and comfort to me to retire on
+ becoming superannuated towards the end of next month.
+
+ Begging you to take the misgivings into full consideration,
+ and to be sure that they have not been conceived without good
+ reason, and that they are strongly and very seriously felt by
+ me, I place myself in your hands. If after giving full weight to
+ them, you still think that it would be a satisfaction to you that
+ I should continue to hold this post till the winter, and that it
+ would be a great public advantage to avoid a change till that time,
+ I am ready to stay on, and trusting to your indulgence to do my
+ best.
+
+ I should, of course, look upon it as quite settled that in any
+ case I should retire at latest when my current appointment comes to
+ an end at the close of the present year.
+
+ If you wish me to hold on, I must ask you what, if any,
+ announcement respecting my retirement should be made. Up to this
+ time I have simply stated to people who have questioned me,
+ that nothing was definitely settled. I did not mention to any
+ one my intention to write my letter of the 22nd expressing to
+ you my wish to retire, nor have I made any one acquainted with
+ my having written it, except of course Sheffield, who, as my
+ private secretary, made a copy of it for me to keep. The question,
+ therefore, as to announcing my retirement remains intact.
+
+ I cannot conclude without once more saying how much I am
+ gratified by the appreciation of my services expressed in your
+ letter, and how truly I feel the kindness shown by it.
+
+The offer was accepted by Lord Salisbury in singularly flattering terms,
+Queen Victoria also expressing much satisfaction at the consent of the
+Ambassador to remain at his post. From Lord Salisbury's language, it
+might be inferred that he was in some doubt as to whether his own tenure
+of office was likely to be prolonged.
+
+ I have had no hesitation in availing myself of your kind
+ consent--though you seemed to doubt whether on reflection I should
+ do so. Of course I fully understand that you do not feel equal to
+ the amount of exertion which you would take in a more favourable
+ condition of health. But this circumstance will not detract
+ from the great value of your counsel and judgment, nor from the
+ authority which by so many years of experience you have acquired.
+
+ I quite understand that towards the close of the session of
+ Parliament you will require the holiday you have been accustomed
+ to take in recent years. I hope also to get to a bath at that
+ time--whether I am in office or not.
+
+Why Lord Salisbury should have spoken so doubtfully is not clear, unless
+instinct warned him of Miss Cass, who was the first to strike a blow
+at the Unionist administration. At the end of March there reappeared
+the mysterious emissary who has been already mentioned. There are no
+means of actually establishing his identity, but there can be little
+doubt that it was M. de Chaudordy, who represented the French Foreign
+Office at Tours and Bordeaux during the war. M. de Chaudordy had made
+friends with Lord Salisbury at the time of the Constantinople Conference
+in 1876, and he was, therefore, a suitable person to utilize for the
+purpose of making advances towards a better understanding between the
+two Governments.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, March 29, 1887.
+
+ In a private letter which I wrote to you on the 25th of last
+ month, I mentioned that I had received a visit from a person wholly
+ unconnected officially with the French Government, who appeared to
+ have come to ascertain what were the particular points with regard
+ to which the relations between the English and French Governments
+ might be improved. The same person has been to me again to-day,
+ and has only just left me. This time he did not conceal that it
+ was after being in communication with Flourens that he came. He
+ enlarged on the embarrassing and indeed dangerous position in which
+ France was placed by the adherence of Italy to the Austro-German
+ Alliance, and said that M. Flourens was ready to make almost any
+ sacrifice to secure the good will of England. I said that there
+ could be no great difficulty in this, if only France would abstain
+ from irritating opposition to us, and would settle promptly and
+ satisfactorily outstanding questions. My visitor answered that
+ Flourens conceived that he had sent conciliatory instructions
+ to Waddington which would settle these questions, and that both
+ Waddington and Florian[46] (who had come on leave) reported that
+ there was decidedly a _detente_ in the strain which had existed in
+ the Anglo-French relations. I said that I was delighted to hear it,
+ and that it showed how ready you were to welcome all conciliatory
+ overtures. My friend seemed on this occasion, as on the last, to
+ wish me to tell him some special thing which Flourens might do
+ to please you. I said that I should at any rate mention a thing
+ which he might do to avoid displeasing you. He might prevent the
+ French setting up an opposition to financial proposals in Egypt in
+ cases in which all the other Powers were ready to agree. My friend
+ spoke of Flourens's readiness to give to Russia on the Bulgarian
+ question advice which you might suggest, and he mentioned various
+ things which he thought M. Flourens might be ready to do to please
+ England. These things appeared to me to be rather too grand and
+ too vague in character to be very practical. I said, however, that
+ I would always bear in mind what he had told me of M. Flourens's
+ good dispositions, and would speak frankly and unreservedly to the
+ Minister whenever I could make a suggestion as to the means of
+ acting upon those dispositions in a manner to be satisfactory to
+ England.
+
+ The conclusions I drew from the conversation of Flourens's
+ friend were that the French are horribly afraid of our being led
+ to join the Italo-Austro-German Alliance, and that they have been
+ urged by Russia to exert themselves to prevent this. I do not
+ conceive that the French expect to induce us to join them against
+ the Germans and the German Alliance. What they want is to feel sure
+ that we shall not join the others against France and Russia.
+
+It is somewhat curious that M. Flourens, who was evidently desirous
+of establishing better relations with England, should have selected
+an unofficial person for communication, rather than approach the
+Ambassador himself; but perhaps, being quite ignorant of diplomatic
+usage, he considered it necessary to shroud his action in mystery.
+The Triple Alliance dated in reality from 1882, Italy having joined
+the Austro-German Alliance in that year; but a new Treaty had been
+signed in the month of February, 1887, and caused the French to feel a
+well-justified alarm. In fact, their position was anything but a happy
+one, for it was generally believed that the Emperor Alexander III. had
+resolved, since the abortive attempt on his life, that he would never
+ally himself with Revolutionists, and that he considered the French to
+be arch-Revolutionists. Perhaps this belief may have accounted in some
+measure for Flourens's amiable professions towards England.
+
+In the month of April there occurred one of those incidents which
+are the despair of peaceably minded politicians and the delight of
+sensational journalism and of adventurers of the Boulanger type. A
+certain M. Schnaebele, a French Commissaire de Police, was induced to
+cross the German frontier, and thereupon was arrested and imprisoned.
+The act had the appearance of provocation and naturally caused a
+prodigious uproar in France; Flourens endeavouring to settle the
+matter diplomatically and Boulanger seizing the opportunity to display
+patriotic truculence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, April 26, 1887.
+
+ So far as one can judge at present the French are irritated
+ beyond measure by the arrest at Pagny, but generally they still
+ shrink from war. It will not, I conceive, be difficult for
+ Bismarck to keep at peace with them, if he really wishes to do so.
+ The danger is that they are persuaded that he is only looking out
+ for a pretext, and that however much they may now give way, he will
+ be bent upon humiliating them till they _must_ resent and resist.
+ I don't see that so far the German Government have treated the
+ Pagny affair as if they wished to make a quarrel of it. The German
+ _Charge d'Affaires_ has taken many messages from Berlin to Flourens
+ in the sense that if Schnaebele shall prove to have been arrested
+ on German soil, all satisfaction shall be given. But, then, in the
+ Press of the two countries a controversy is raging as to which side
+ of the frontier he was arrested on, and as to whether or no he was
+ inveigled over the frontier.
+
+ The French undoubtedly shrink from war, but they do not
+ shrink from it as much as they did ten years ago; and if the press
+ should get up a loud popular cry, there is no Government strength
+ to resist it. I conceive that at this moment the Government is
+ pacific, and that it does not believe the army to be yet ready.
+ But if, as is no doubt the case, the Germans also believe that the
+ French army is not as ready now as it will be two or three years
+ hence, they may be impatient to begin. In the mean time, so far
+ as I can make out, the Pagny affair is being treated by the two
+ Governments with each other, in correct form diplomatically, and
+ without any apparent willingness to embitter matters. I cannot say
+ as much for the press on either side, though there are symptoms of
+ prudence and caution in the moderate French papers.
+
+The Schnaebele incident was disposed of by his release from prison and
+transfer to another post at Lyons; but the agitation did not subside
+readily, and a bill brought in by Boulanger to mobilize an army corps
+caused much disquietude at the German Embassy. It was now generally
+known that Bismarck considered Boulanger a danger and desired his
+removal from the War Office; but the very knowledge of this feeling and
+the support accorded to him by the League of Patriots and other noisy
+organizations rendered this step all the more difficult.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 13, 1887.
+
+ I have not heard of any new incident between France and
+ Germany, but the suspicion and susceptibility with which the two
+ nations, and indeed the two Governments, regard each other, are
+ certainly not diminishing.
+
+ In France home politics are in so peculiar a state as to be
+ positively disquieting. The Budget Committee and the Ministry have
+ come to an open breach, and the Committee intend to propose to
+ the Chamber a resolution which apparently must, if carried, turn
+ out the Goblet Cabinet. This the Chamber would be willing enough
+ to do, if it could see its way to forming another Government. The
+ plan would be to form a Ministry with Freycinet as Prime Minister,
+ but not as Minister for Foreign Affairs, and without Boulanger.
+ But then they are afraid to try and upset Boulanger, while they
+ feel that to form a new Government and put Boulanger in it would
+ be, or might be, taken in Germany as a plain indication that they
+ are warlike at heart. It is an emergency in which the Chief of
+ the State should exert himself; but Grevy's caution has become
+ something very like lethargy. In the mean time they are letting
+ Boulanger grow up into a personage whose position may be a danger
+ to the Republic at home, even if it does not embroil the country
+ in a foreign war. The redeeming point in all this is that the
+ Government does seem to feel that it would not do to be upon bad
+ terms with England, and that it would be wise to be conciliatory
+ toward us.
+
+The Goblet Ministry soon found itself in hopeless difficulty over
+the Budget, and it was plain that another aimless change of men was
+inevitable. Goblet's Government had lasted for five months (inclusive
+of a prolonged recess), and the real question of interest was whether
+Boulanger was to be a member of the new Government or not. If he was
+included in it, it was apprehended that the suspicions of Germany would
+be aggravated; and on the other hand, it was doubtful whether any
+Government could be formed without him. An ultra-patriotic demonstration
+in Paris against German music, in the shape of Wagner's operas, was
+eloquent of the state of feeling between the two nations at the time,
+and the Government found that the only course open to them was to close
+the theatre where the obnoxious productions were to have appeared.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 20, 1887.
+
+ Freycinet appears to have agreed with Grevy to try and form a
+ Cabinet and to be hard at work at the task. Of course the question
+ is whether Boulanger is or is not to be in the new Cabinet? It was
+ believed this morning that Grevy and Freycinet had decided upon
+ offering to keep him as Minister of War. As the day has gone on,
+ however, the belief has gained ground that Freycinet has not found
+ colleagues willing to run the risk of war which the maintenance
+ of Boulanger would produce, and that he is to propose to Grevy a
+ Cabinet from which Boulanger is to be excluded. He is, however,
+ to make it an essential condition with Grevy that he is to have
+ the power to dissolve the Chamber of Deputies in his hands, as
+ without this power he does not feel able to form a Cabinet without
+ Boulanger, or indeed any Cabinet at all. In the mean time the
+ Reds are getting up in all directions addresses and petitions in
+ favour of Boulanger, with a view to forcing Grevy's and Freycinet's
+ hands and working on their fears. If Boulanger is got rid of, the
+ immediate danger of war will probably be escaped for the moment.
+ Boulanger's own character, and the position in which he has placed
+ himself, make him threatening to peace; and the opinion held of him
+ in Germany and the irritation felt against him there make him still
+ more dangerous.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, May 24, 1887.
+
+ The last news is supposed to be that Floquet, the President
+ of the Chamber, has undertaken the task of forming a Ministry,
+ and that he will keep many of the outgoing Ministers, Boulanger
+ included. The goings and comings at the Elysee; the singular
+ selections of men to be Prime Ministers, or quasi Prime Ministers,
+ and the apparent want of firmness and inability to exercise any
+ influence on the part of the President of the Republic, have
+ certainly not increased the reputation of M. Grevy. Floquet will,
+ I suppose, be unacceptable to Russia, for the Russians have always
+ ostentatiously kept up the show of resentment against him for the
+ cry, offensive to the Emperor Alexander II., which he raised when
+ that monarch visited the Palais de Justice during the Exhibition
+ of 1867. Boulanger has lately declared that he does not want to
+ continue to be Minister, but that if he is Minister, he will,
+ whatever Germany may say, continue his mobilization scheme, and not
+ relax in his preparations to resist an attack from Germany, and to
+ avert the necessity of submitting to humiliation.
+
+ I think, in fact, that things look very bad for France both
+ at home and abroad. I can only hope that as the phases of the
+ Ministerial crisis change from hour to hour, you may receive by
+ telegraph some more satisfactory news before you get this letter.
+
+In course of time a new Ministry was formed under M. Rouvier, and the
+important fact attaching to it was that Boulanger had been got rid of.
+Otherwise there was nothing much to distinguish the new Ministers from
+the old, and they seemed disposed to angle for popularity in the country
+much in the same way as Freycinet and Goblet.
+
+The object of removing Boulanger had been to reassure and placate
+Germany, but no sooner had this been done, than the Government appeared
+to feel alarmed at the danger of incurring unpopularity in the country,
+and hastily announced that the new Minister of War would continue to
+follow in the footsteps of his predecessor.
+
+Again, it had been understood that one of the objects of the new
+Government would be to put an end to the isolation of France by
+placing itself on more cordial terms with the neighbouring nations
+and especially with England; but what it appeared anxious to profess,
+was the intention of stoutly refusing to accept or even acquiesce
+in the Anglo-Turkish Convention respecting Egypt. All this, as Lord
+Lyons observed, might proceed in great measure from ignorance and
+inexperience, and might be mitigated by the knowledge of affairs and
+sense of responsibility which accompany office, but still it was
+disquieting: all the more disquieting, because the French Foreign
+Minister never failed to intimate that France would never be a party to
+an arrangement which would confer upon England an international right
+to re-occupy Egypt under certain circumstances after evacuation, whilst
+France was to be formally excluded from enjoying an equal right.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 12, 1887.
+
+ Baron Alphonse de Rothschild came to see me this afternoon,
+ and told me that the last accounts he had received from Berlin
+ caused him to feel more than usual alarm as to the feelings of
+ Prince Bismarck and of the Germans in general towards France. They
+ did not indeed imply that Germany was actually contemplating any
+ immediate declaration of war, but they did show that in Germany
+ war with France was regarded as a contingency that could not be
+ long postponed, and of which the postponement was not desirable
+ for German interests. The Germans did not seem to be prepared to
+ incur the opprobrium of Europe by attacking France without having
+ the appearance of a good reason for doing so, but they did seem to
+ be looking out impatiently for a plausible pretext for a rupture;
+ far from being sorry, they would be very glad if France would
+ furnish them with such a pretext. Prince Bismarck was evidently
+ not disposed to facilitate the task of M. Rouvier's Government,
+ notwithstanding the pledges it had given of its desire for peace
+ abroad, and the efforts it was making to promote moderation at home.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild had, he told me, seen M. Rouvier to-day
+ and made all this known to him. He had pointed out to him the
+ danger which arose from the sort of coalition against France of
+ the Powers of Europe, had dwelt on the importance of making almost
+ any sacrifice to break up this coalition, and had especially urged
+ the imprudence of allowing coldness, if not ill-will, to subsist
+ between France and England.
+
+ M. Rouvier had expressed an anxious desire to establish
+ cordial relations with England.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild had answered that the time had come
+ to show this by acts, and had strongly pressed M. Rouvier to
+ settle without any delay the outstanding questions which produced
+ irritation between the two countries. M. Rouvier had expressed his
+ intention to do so, and Baron de Rothschild had reason to believe
+ that this was also the desire and intention of M. Flourens.
+
+ I said that I heard this with great pleasure, and that
+ I had received with much satisfaction assurances to the same
+ effect respecting M. Flourens's sentiments, which had come to me
+ indirectly through various channels. I must, however, confess that
+ I had not found in M. Flourens himself any disposition to push
+ assurance to this effect beyond generalities. I had not seen any
+ strong practical instances of a desire on his part to give a speedy
+ and satisfactory solution to outstanding questions.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild observed that what he had said on this
+ point to M. Rouvier had appeared to make a considerable impression
+ on him.
+
+ I said that it so happened that I should in all probability
+ have the means of testing this almost immediately. I had in fact
+ only yesterday strongly urged M. Flourens to close a question, that
+ of the New Hebrides, which was creating suspicion and annoyance to
+ England and causing great inconvenience in consequence of the very
+ strong feeling about it which prevailed in the colonies. The two
+ Governments were entirely in accord in principle upon it, and in
+ fact it was only kept open by the pertinacity with which the French
+ Government delayed to take the formal step necessary for closing it.
+
+ Baron de Rothschild went on to tell me that in speaking of
+ the relations with England, M. Rouvier alluded to the convention
+ negotiated by Sir Drummond Wolff at Constantinople, and said that
+ he did not see why it should produce any lasting disagreement
+ between France and England. Whether it was ratified or not, France
+ might be as conciliatory as possible towards England in dealing
+ with the matter in future. In answer I suppose to a remark from
+ Baron de Rothschild, M. Rouvier would seem to have said that the
+ Comte de Montebello[47] appeared to have gone far beyond his
+ instructions in the language he had used to the Porte.
+
+ I asked Baron de Rothschild whether M. Rouvier had also
+ said that the Comte de Montebello had received any check or
+ discouragement from the Government at Paris.
+
+ Passing on from this, Baron de Rothschild told me that before
+ concluding the conversation, he had pointed out to M. Rouvier that
+ the great addition of strength which the Ministry had received
+ from the vote of the Chamber yesterday, would enable them to act
+ with more independence and vigour, and that they might now settle
+ questions with England, and establish good relations with her
+ without being under the constant fear of a check in the Chamber of
+ Deputies.
+
+ There can be no doubt that, in fact, the position of the
+ Rouvier Ministry has been immensely strengthened by the large vote
+ they obtained yesterday on the interpellation put forward against
+ them on the subject of Monarchical and Clerical intrigues. It is
+ earnestly to be hoped, for their own sakes, and for the sake of
+ France, that they will turn it to account in order to pursue a more
+ reasonable and conciliatory policy towards England, and to take
+ stronger and more effectual means of preserving order in Paris. The
+ riot at the Lyons railway station seems to have done Boulangism
+ harm even among the ultra-Radicals, and to have been the main cause
+ of Boulanger's having been thrown over by Radical speakers in the
+ Chamber yesterday. But it is a very dangerous thing to give the
+ Paris mob its head.
+
+M. Rouvier's friendly assurances with regard to England had, of course,
+been imparted to the Baron in order that they might be communicated
+to the British Embassy, but the action of the French Government
+appeared to have very little in common with them; nor was there any
+reason to assume that Montebello was exceeding his instructions in
+opposing at Constantinople the ratification of the Anglo-Turkish
+Convention with regard to Egypt. The egregious action which forced
+the Sultan to withhold his consent to the Convention, and thereby
+perpetuated the British occupation of Egypt, was not the result of the
+unauthorized proceedings of the French Ambassador, but the consequence
+of the deliberately considered joint policy of the French and Russian
+Governments. Incidentally, it may be pointed out that the fruitless
+attempt to negotiate the Convention was yet another convincing proof
+of the absolute honesty of British policy with regard to Egypt, and
+the following letter from Lord Salisbury shows no satisfaction at the
+frustration of Sir H. Drummond Wolff's mission.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Salisbury to Lord Lyons._
+
+ July 20, 1887.
+
+ I am afraid the temper of the French will not make the
+ settlement of the Egyptian question more easy. I do not now see how
+ we are to devise any middle terms that will satisfy them. We cannot
+ leave the Khedive to take his chance of foreign attack, or native
+ riot. The French refuse to let us exercise the necessary powers
+ of defence unless we do it by continuing our military occupation.
+ I see nothing for it but to sit still and drift awhile: a little
+ further on in the history of Europe the conditions may be changed,
+ and we may be able to get some agreement arrived at which will
+ justify evacuation. Till then we must simply refuse to evacuate.
+ Our relations with France are not pleasant at present. There are
+ five or six different places where we are at odds:--
+
+ 1. She has destroyed the Convention at Constantinople.
+
+ 2. She will allow no Press Law to pass.
+
+ 3. She is trying to back out of the arrangement on the Somali
+ coast.
+
+ 4. She still occupies the New Hebrides.
+
+ 5. She destroys our fishing tackle, etc.
+
+ 6. She is trying to elbow us out of at least two
+ unpronounceable places on the West Coast of Africa.
+
+ Can you wonder that there is, to my eyes, a silver lining even
+ to the great black cloud of a Franco-German War?
+
+On account of the tension existing between France and Germany, and
+of the agitation produced by the transfer of Boulanger to a command
+at Clermont-Ferrand, it was feared that the National Fete of July 14
+would be marked by serious disturbances; these fears were happily not
+realized, although Boulanger's departure from Paris a few days earlier
+had formed the pretext for a display of embarrassing Jingoism. The
+French Government were so apprehensive of an anti-German demonstration,
+that, although Count Muenster received the usual invitation to attend
+the Longchamps Review, M. Flourens privately begged him to absent
+himself, and the two German military attaches, instead of joining the
+War Minister's Staff in uniform, went to the Diplomatic Tribune in plain
+clothes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Lord Lyons to Lord Salisbury._
+
+ Paris, July 15, 1887.
+
+ The National Fete of yesterday passed off quietly enough.
+ There are said to have been cries in various places of 'Vive
+ Boulanger,' and 'A bas Grevy,' but nowhere was there anything which
+ assumed anything like the proportions of a demonstration. There do
+ not appear to have been any cries at all in the army.
+
+ The low French papers keep up a constant fire of scurrilous
+ language against the Germans and even against the Germany Embassy.
+ This sort of thing seems to be taken more seriously and to cause
+ more irritation in Germany than it would in most countries. Count
+ Muenster naturally enough did not come to the President's stand, to
+ which he and the other Ambassadors were as usual invited to see
+ the Review. The German military attaches did not go in uniform
+ with the staff of the Minister of War, but saw the Review from the
+ Diplomatic Tribune in plain clothes. In fact, ill will between
+ France and Germany seems to be on the increase. It looks as if the
+ Germans would really be glad to find a fair pretext for going to
+ war with France. On the other hand, Boulangism, which is now the
+ French term for Jingoism, spreads, especially amongst the reckless
+ Radicals and enemies of the present Ministry. And even among the
+ better classes, warlike language and, to some degree, a warlike
+ spirit grows up with a new generation, which has had no practical
+ acquaintance with war. Abject fear of the German armies is being
+ succeeded by overweening confidence in themselves.
+
+ The present Ministry seem to have been afraid of unpopularity
+ if they abandoned altogether Boulanger's absurd mobilization
+ scheme. The Germans seem to be taking this quietly. Perhaps they
+ look on with satisfaction at the French incurring an immense
+ expenditure for an experiment apparently without any practical use
+ from a military point of view. Perhaps they believe, as many people
+ do here, that the Chambers will never really vote the money.
+
+ It is supposed that the session will be over next week, and I
+ trust that then you will be disposed to receive an application from
+ me for leave. I am getting quite knocked up by the Paris summer,
+ and am in urgent need of rest and country air.
+
+The foregoing letter was one of the last communications received from
+Lord Lyons at Paris, and his official career practically terminated a
+few days later, when he left on leave, destined never to return to the
+post which he had so long occupied, for the unfavourable view which
+he held with regard to his physical condition was only too completely
+justified.
+
+He appears to have passed the months of August and September quietly
+with his near relatives in Sussex. Towards the end of October he
+must have learnt with some surprise that, whereas in March he had
+been most urgently begged by Lord Salisbury to remain at his post
+until the end of the year, a successor to him, in the person of Lord
+Lytton, had been appointed, and that there was no necessity for him to
+return to Paris. If he, as would have been the case with most people,
+really felt aggrieved at this change of circumstances, there is no
+trace of resentment shown in his correspondence. On the contrary, he
+warmly welcomed the new appointment, and at once set about making
+arrangements for his successor's convenience. On November 1, he made
+a formal application to be permitted to resign his appointment, was
+created an Earl, and the few remaining letters (the latest bearing the
+date of November 20) deal with business details, and unostentatious
+acts of kindness to various persons who had been in his service or
+otherwise connected with him. The very last of all was a characteristic
+communication to Sir Edwin Egerton, the Charge d'Affaires at Paris,
+respecting the payment of the fire insurance premium on the Embassy.
+
+The close of his life was destined to coincide dramatically with the
+close of his official career. Intellectually there were no signs of
+decay; but physically he was even more worn out than he realized
+himself. On November 28, whilst staying at Norfolk House, he was
+stricken with paralysis, and a week later he was dead, without having
+in the meanwhile recovered consciousness. Thus the end came at a moment
+singularly appropriate to his well ordered existence, and to no one
+could the time-honoured Latin epitaph have been applied with greater
+accuracy.
+
+In an earlier portion of this work some attempt has been made to
+portray Lord Lyons's personality and to explain the causes of his
+success as a diplomatist, but the best criterion of the man is to be
+found in his letters, which have been reproduced verbatim, and may be
+said to constitute a condensed record of the most interesting episodes
+in English diplomatic history during a space of nearly thirty years.
+Throughout this long series there is hardly to be found an unnecessary
+sentence or even a redundant epithet; there is a total absence of any
+straining after effect, of exaggeration, of personal animosity or
+predilection, or of any desire to gain his ends by intrigue or trickery.
+On the other hand, they are marked by profound mastery of detail, sound
+judgment, inexhaustible patience, an almost inhuman impartiality, and
+an obviously single-minded desire to do his best for his country as one
+of its most responsible representatives. Such, then, was the character
+of the man, and the general public is probably quite unconscious of the
+inestimable value to the country of officials of this particular type.
+
+It was Lord Lyons's fate twice to represent this country at most
+critical periods during wars, in the course of which, England, while
+desiring to observe the strictest neutrality, aroused the bitterest
+hostility on the part of the belligerents. In spite of untiring efforts
+he had the mortification of seeing the relations of England, first with
+the United States and then with France, gradually deteriorate, and never
+experienced the satisfaction, which no one would have appreciated more
+highly than himself, of seeing those unfriendly relations converted into
+the condition which now happily prevails; but it may be fairly said
+of him that no one ever laboured more assiduously and efficiently to
+promote peace and good will between England and her neighbours; that he
+never made either an enemy or apparently a mistake, and that no other
+diplomatist of his day enjoyed to an equal degree the confidence of
+his chiefs, and the regard of his subordinates. Overshadowed by more
+brilliant and interesting personalities, the unobtrusive services of
+Lord Lyons are unknown to the rising generation, and probably forgotten
+by many of those who have reached middle age; but in the opinion of
+the statesman who amongst living Englishmen is the most competent to
+judge, he was the greatest Ambassador who has represented this country
+in modern times, and by those whose privilege it was to serve under him,
+his memory will ever be held in affectionate remembrance.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 44: Lord Salisbury had taken over the Foreign Office upon the
+death of Lord Iddesleigh on January 12, 1887.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Dongorita. A town on the Somali coast.]
+
+[Footnote 46: Secretary of French Embassy at London.]
+
+[Footnote 47: French Ambassador at Constantinople.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+LORD LYONS IN PRIVATE LIFE.
+
+BY MRS. WILFRID WARD.
+
+
+It is not uncommon to find a seeming contradiction between the official
+and the private characters of the same individual. Extreme reserve, for
+instance, even an astonishing power of silence in conducting official
+work, may not indicate the same power of silence in private life, or the
+same reserve in the life of the affections. In Lord Lyons there was no
+such contrast, and no attempt to depict him could pretend to penetrate
+his extreme reserve as to his deeper feelings. This reticence on his
+part must severely limit any account of his _vie intime_. Moreover,
+curiously enough there is another difficulty in describing him which
+lies in quite an opposite direction. Lord Lyons had a keen sense of
+the ridiculous, and he loved the absolute relaxation of talking pure
+nonsense which, however amusing at the moment, would hardly bear the
+strain of repetition. Indeed, very little can be added to the history
+of the public life of a man so absolutely reticent as to his feelings,
+his thoughts, and his opinions, which he further concealed rather than
+revealed by an almost burlesque habit of talking nonsense among his
+intimates.
+
+It would be easy to give many instances of his gift for silence when he
+did not wish to be 'drawn' by his interlocutor. A little story told to
+me by the late Sir Edward Blount is a case in point.
+
+Sir Edward, waiting to see Lord Lyons at the Embassy, heard talking in
+the next room which lasted some time, and soon distinguished the voice
+of M. Blowitz. As soon as he was alone with Lord Lyons he said that he
+felt obliged to warn him that, if he had liked, he could have overheard
+his conversation with the journalist.
+
+'You might,' was the answer, 'have overheard what was said by M.
+Blowitz, but you could not have heard anything said by me for the good
+reason that I said nothing at all!'
+
+It was never known to anybody, as far as it is possible to ascertain,
+whether Lord Lyons had ever even contemplated marriage, though he
+certainly did not recommend celibacy. 'Matrimony,' he constantly used to
+repeat--slightly varying the phrase in his favourite _Rasselas_--'may
+have thorns, but celibacy has no roses.'
+
+There was at one moment, while he was attached to the Embassy at Rome,
+a rumour that he was engaged to be married. Hearing something of it he
+inquired of a lady friend whether she could tell him to whom he was
+supposed to be attached, and later on he discovered that she was herself
+the person in question!
+
+His nature was certainly lonely, and I believe from quite early in life
+he was conscious of suffering from loneliness. I have been told of a
+letter of his written from school in which this was quite clearly set
+forth. In later life he would never have expressed so much. What he felt
+and thought on any intimate question can, I think, only be inferred by
+his comments on life in general, or on the sorrows and joys of others.
+Once only I believe did he take any part in directly influencing the
+lives of young people in the critical question of marriage. The daughter
+of an old friend, with a courage in her confidence which seems to me
+almost phenomenal, told him the story of a mutual affection existing
+between her and a young man who did not seem to her parents to be a
+sufficiently good match. Lord Lyons listened with the utmost attention,
+and eventually interceded with his old friend, speaking of the terrible
+danger of causing irremediable pain to two young hearts, and was the
+means of making these young people happy. Was there, perhaps, in this
+action some reminiscence of a possible past happiness lost by himself?
+No one can even make the faintest surmise as to whether this was the
+case. He made no allusion to his own past when telling the story.
+
+Of his childhood I know little, but there is a toy preserved in the
+family that gives a curious and characteristic foretaste of what he
+was to become. It is a miniature escritoire fitted with pen and paper
+and seals, and also soap and towels, etc. All this was supposed to
+belong to the children's dog, who was promoted in their games to the
+position of an Ambassador, and described as 'His Excellency.' There are
+still existing despatches written to and by 'His Excellency' in the
+handwriting of the four children.
+
+I think he must have been too old to have joined in his sister Minna's
+bit of naughtiness when at Malta she put snuff in the guitar of a young
+exquisite who had provoked their mirth, and whose name was Benjamin
+Disraeli.
+
+He used to say that among his most vivid recollections of his boyhood
+while at Malta, was the unexpected return of his father and the fleet.
+The children had been deeply engaged in preparing theatricals which were
+postponed on account of their father's arrival. He remembered his guilty
+feeling that he ought to be glad, and that he was not glad at all!
+
+It was not at first intended that Bickerton Lyons should enter the
+diplomatic service; he began life in the navy. But Bickerton, unlike
+his brother Edmund, had no vocation for the sea. The sorrow of Edmund's
+loss, who died at Therapia, from a wound received when commanding his
+ship in the Sea of Azoph during the Crimean war, was a shadow that never
+passed from the lives of the other three. Bickerton was deeply attached
+to both his sisters and their families. Annie married Baron Wurtzburg,
+and Minna married Lord Fitzalan, afterwards Duke of Norfolk. Other
+relations with whom he was in close intimacy all his life were his aunt,
+Mrs. Pearson and her children, especially her daughters, Mrs. Lister
+Venables and Mrs. Little, who both survived him.
+
+All his life Lord Lyons was devoted to children, and especially so to
+the large family of the Duchess of Norfolk, with whom he was able to
+indulge his domestic tastes and his love of fun. He spent with them the
+greater part of every holiday, and in the last twenty-five years of his
+life they were frequently with him in Paris. My mother, Lady Victoria,
+the eldest of the family, married very young, and my aunt Minna, the
+second daughter, became a Carmelite nun. Mary, the eldest of the sisters
+who remained at home, was Lord Lyons's constant companion and secretary.
+I think she was the only person who did not experience the strong sense
+of his reserve which so impressed those who had to do with him even in
+everyday intercourse. In a very serious state of health which followed
+his work at Washington he depended greatly on the companionship of his
+nieces. I have been told that for months he could not raise his head,
+and the only thing he could do by himself was to play with glass balls
+on a solitaire board. During this interval in his career, before he
+accepted the Embassy at Constantinople, he had more leisure than usual
+for the society of his sister's family, but he had always been devoted
+to them when they were quite little children, and was once described as
+'an excellent nursery governess.' He said to his sister: 'I could never
+have married; it would not have been right, as I could never have loved
+my own children as much as I love yours.'
+
+Into this near association with him my sisters and I were more
+closely drawn after the death of our parents. We had lost our mother
+in the winter of 1870, and my father, James Hope-Scott, died in the
+spring of 1873. It was then that my grandmother took us to live with
+her at Arundel, and we were added to the large family party who had
+often stayed with him in Paris. My own earliest recollections of my
+great-uncle are tinged with an awe which no amount of time spent with
+him ever quite overcame; but it did not prevent great enjoyment of all
+the fun we had with him. He was certainly very indulgent to the younger
+members of the family circle, particularly my brother, who was some
+years younger than the rest of us, and this was especially the case when
+we were his guests.
+
+I think that what inspired awe was the immense strength of character,
+the reserved force, the severely controlled natural irritability. He
+had, too, a humorous vehemence of expression which seemed at times to be
+a safety valve to the forces he had under control, and was a reminder of
+their existence.
+
+I suppose that nothing could be imagined more stately and more regular
+than life at the Embassy in those days. The Ambassador himself lived
+in a routine of absolute regularity and extremely hard work. He got up
+at seven, had breakfast at eight, and was, I think, at work by nine
+o'clock. His very small leisure, when he was alone, was mostly spent
+in reading. And this was carefully classified in three divisions. In
+the morning he read history or science, in the evening, between tea and
+dinner, biography; while, for an hour before he went to bed he read
+novels. While in France he never left the Embassy. Once a year he did
+leave it for his annual holiday--generally spent in England. He used to
+boast how many nights in succession--I think in one year it amounted
+to over 300--he had slept in the same bed. Every afternoon when we
+were with him, he drove with my grandmother, generally in the Bois de
+Boulogne, and in the warm weather we always stopped at some _cafe_ for
+us children to have ices. He also took us to the circus once during each
+visit until, in later life, he became afraid of catching cold. He still
+occasionally went to the theatre, to which he had been much devoted as
+a younger man. We all dined downstairs, and he used to like my youngest
+sister and my brother to sit at a little table near the big one and have
+dessert. He insisted on this, and was rather pleased than otherwise at
+the scolding he received from an English friend for keeping them up
+so late. In later life he used to speak of the pretty picture the two
+children had made.
+
+I recollect the extraordinary general sense of importance as to
+his movements in those days, partly on account of their phenomenal
+regularity. I could not imagine him ever acting on impulse, even in the
+matter of going up or downstairs. I cannot picture him strolling into
+his own garden except at the fixed hour. This without intention added to
+the dignity of his life which seemed to move like a rather dreary state
+procession.
+
+I wonder if the servants who never saw him break through his routine,
+or lose one jot of his dignity, ever guessed at how shy he was of them,
+or suspected the rather wistful curiosity he felt about their lives.
+I think it was Pierre, the butler, who lived with his family in the
+_entresol_ between the two floors of reception rooms in the Embassy.
+Lord Lyons was much interested in their family life, and liked to
+speculate as to what went on there. One inconvenient result of his
+extreme shyness was that when he really wished to alter any detail as
+to the daily routine, he could not bring himself to impart his wishes
+to any of the servants. I have often heard him say how tired he was of
+the same breakfast which never varied in the least, and he would add
+that his Italian valet Giuseppe was so convinced that it was the only
+breakfast he liked that when he travelled, the man took incredible
+pains that the coffee, the eggs, the rolls, the marmalade, the two
+tangerine oranges in winter and the tiny basket of strawberries in
+summer, should not differ an iota from those served up every morning
+at the Embassy. But Lord Lyons could never summon up courage to speak
+to him on the subject. On certain days Pierre undertook Giuseppe's
+duties, and for many years Lord Lyons wished that Pierre would arrange
+his things as they were arranged by Giuseppe, but he never told him
+so. While he grumbled, he was amused at the situation and at himself.
+Indeed, his keen sense of the ridiculous and his endless enjoyment of
+nonsense explain a good deal of his life. He used to say that as he was
+too shy to look at the servants' faces, he had learnt to know them by
+their silk stockinged calves. When he dined alone he made an amusement
+of identifying the six or seven pairs of calves, and was proud of his
+success in this odd game of skill.
+
+I recall one ludicrous instance of his shyness with servants. It was
+his custom annually when he came to stay with us to shake hands with
+the old family nurse, and on one occasion, meeting her on the stairs,
+he leant across the banisters to perform the ceremony with such
+_empressement_ and effort that he broke one of the supports. He always
+afterwards alluded to the extraordinary emotion he had shown in this
+greeting. Nothing is so unaccountable as shyness, but it was curious
+that a man who had seen so much of public life and of society should
+have so much of it as he had. I remember once helping him to escape
+with, for him, astonishing speed across the garden of a country house,
+when a very agreeable woman, whom I believe he really liked, had come
+to call; he was as full of glee as if he were a boy running away from a
+school-master.
+
+[Illustration: THE BRITISH EMBASSY, PARIS.
+
+_F. Contet, Paris. Phot._]
+
+I don't think that in Paris he ever gave way to such impulses; they were
+the relaxation of a shy nature in the holidays.
+
+To return for one moment to Paris. He occasionally gave a big official
+dinner which I don't think he at all enjoyed, and of which we knew
+nothing. But he certainly enjoyed small gatherings, especially if they
+included old friends who were passing through Paris, although not one
+word of ordinary sentiment would probably pass his lips, nor would one
+of the day's arrangements be changed. He certainly enjoyed the society
+of his women friends, and I liked to watch him talking to Mrs. Augustus
+Craven, the author of the _Recit d'une Soeur_. Two characteristic
+sayings of his about the Cravens I remember. He was always pleased at
+showing his knowledge of the most orthodox and strict views of Roman
+affairs. He used to say that Mrs. Craven could never make amends for
+her conduct at the time of the Vatican Council--when her _salon_ was a
+centre for 'inopportunist' Bishops--unless she went back to Rome and
+gave 'Infallibilist tea-parties.'
+
+Mr. Augustus Craven, her husband, was intensely mysterious in manner,
+and Lord Lyons used to call him 'the General of the Jesuits.' Once, on
+meeting him in London, he asked him if his wife were with him. Mrs.
+Craven was staying with Lady Cowper, and Mr. Craven answered with
+solemn, slow and mysterious tones: 'She is at Wrest,' and my uncle said
+'Requiescat in Pace,' with equal solemnity.
+
+I think that with all his natural British prejudices he liked French
+people and their ways. He used to maintain that Frenchwomen were more
+domestic and kept earlier hours than Englishwomen. He certainly liked
+French cooking. He spoke once in tones of horror of an Englishman who
+had committed the monstrosity of putting pepper on young green peas--a
+crime of which a Frenchman was incapable.
+
+Many of his opinions, however, like Dr. Johnson's, were evoked by the
+spirit of contradiction, and it was chiefly with English people that I
+heard him talk about the French.
+
+In the holidays in England reading aloud was one of his chief pleasures.
+He read much poetry to us at one time, but later I think he had to
+give this up as it tired him. At Arundel he wrote his letters in the
+dressing-room opening out of his bedroom. We used to sit there waiting
+for him before the appointed time, making drawings in red ink, of which
+there was always a large supply, when he would make a mock solemn
+entrance, as of a stiff professor. We were allowed to scribble during
+the reading, but, woe betide us! if we showed any inattention. He read
+'Marmion,' Southey's 'Thalaba,' and, I think, 'The Curse of Kehama,'
+also much of Byron, the 'Siege of Corinth,' with especial enjoyment. He
+knew many pages of Byron by heart, and we used to get him to repeat any
+amount while out walking. 'Rejected Addresses,' 'Bombastes Furioso,'
+'The Rape of the Lock' were also among the many things he liked to
+recite. I wish I could remember half the things he read or repeated
+to us. I am sure there was no Tennyson, and certainly no Browning. He
+used to jeer at the obscurity of both the Brownings, and to mutter such
+phrases as the 'thundering white silence' of Mrs. Browning with intense
+scorn. I think he may have met the Brownings when he was in Rome. He saw
+a good deal of Fanny and Adelaide Kemble at that time. He liked Adelaide
+much the best of the two, and used to quote with delight a saying of
+hers as to the Brownings. When she was told of the birth of their son
+she exclaimed: 'There are now then not one incomprehensible, or two
+incomprehensibles, but three incomprehensibles!'
+
+He was always amused at the Kemble grand manner. He used to imitate the
+dramatic utterance with which Fanny Kemble frightened a young waiter
+who had brought her some beer. 'I asked for _water_, boy; you bring me
+_beer_!'
+
+At that same time he knew Sir Frederick Leighton, and they once had a
+pillow fight! Who could imagine that pillow fight who only knew him as
+Ambassador in Paris? He always spoke as if he had enjoyed life in Rome;
+he was devoted to the theatre, and he had much congenial society. He
+used to say, too, that Pius IX. was the most agreeable sovereign with
+whom he ever had diplomatic relations.
+
+Lord Lyons's literary tastes were not those of the present generation.
+He declared that he only liked verse that rhymed and music with a tune.
+He loved the sonorous sound of Byron as he loved the solemn cadence of
+Latin verse. All the time the love of absurdity was never far off. He
+would suddenly imitate the action of a schoolboy repeating Latin verse,
+first with his arms and then with his feet! A stout, very dignified
+elderly man, in some path in the garden, punctuating the verse with the
+action of his feet, is sufficiently surprising. Occasionally he would
+have the oddest freaks of this kind, and I remember an afternoon when he
+took a whim of pretending to be imbecile; he made the most extraordinary
+faces, and not a word of sense could be got from him.
+
+Once in a steamer on the lake of Lucerne he insisted on his nieces
+joining him in impersonating a typical family of English tourists
+out for their holiday. He was the _paterfamilias_, one niece was his
+wife, another the German governess, a third his child. In the middle
+of the performance he found that he was being regarded with surprise
+and curiosity by some English society friends whose acquaintance with
+him had hitherto been exclusively in the character of a very dignified
+ambassador.
+
+My aunt, Mary Howard, used to read aloud to him by the hour, and we all
+enjoyed these times immensely. It would be difficult to say how often we
+had 'Pickwick,' 'Cranford,' 'Rasselas,' 'The Rose and the Ring,' and
+'Mrs. Boss's Niece.' I have never met anybody outside that circle who
+ever even heard of 'Mrs. Boss's Niece;' it is a serious loss. To quote
+at all appropriately from any of his favourites was to be exceedingly
+in his good books for the rest of the day. Like the late Lord Salisbury
+he delighted in Miss Yonge; he could not have too many pairs of twins,
+or too large a family circle to read about. He loved the analysis of
+domestic life, and would have been ready to canonise any really and
+genuinely unselfish character. Detective stories were a great joy. 'The
+House on the Marsh,' and 'Called Back,' were among the most successful.
+He used to prolong discussion as to the solution of the mystery, and
+would even knock at our doors very late at night if he thought he had
+identified the murderer, and mutter in dramatic undertones, 'So-an-so
+was the man who did it.' But the detective story was never read before
+dinner, and to look into the book meanwhile was a crime. Anybody who
+peeped to see the end of a novel 'deserved to be dragged to death by
+wild horses.' And there must be no skipping. Only descriptions of
+scenery--to which he had the strongest objection--might be left out.
+
+The annual holiday was, for the most part, spent with the Duchess of
+Norfolk at Arundel, and later at Heron's Ghyll. Sometimes he went to
+Germany to take the waters, in company with his eldest sister, Baroness
+Wurtzburg. When in England he always paid a certain number of country
+house visits. These generally included Knowsley and Woburn. The visits
+that were paid every year, I think without exception, were those to
+Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, and to an old schoolfellow--Major Trower,
+who had been with him at Winchester. Major Trower was one of four old
+Wykehamists who remained close friends. The other two had died some time
+before. I think the visit to Raby was annual. He specially enjoyed the
+society of the Duchess of Cleveland and of Lady Mary Hope. He was at
+Raby in the September before he died, and I believe that was the last
+visit he ever paid. The famous visitors' book there always amused him,
+and he was fond of quoting from it. One of his own contributions I
+remember was written with mock modesty. He took from Lockhart's Spanish
+ballads the lines:--
+
+ ''Twere better to be silent before such a crowd of folk,
+ Than utter words as meaningless as he did when he spoke.'
+
+His recollections of the society of his youth in these houses had some
+amusing details. I think it was at the Duchess of Bedford's that there
+was a Christmas tree, off which each young man visitor was given a piece
+of flowered silk for a waistcoat. Early next morning, at Mr. Lyons's
+suggestion, one of the young men, provided with a list of the names and
+addresses of the tailors employed by the others, went up to London and
+brought back all the waistcoats made up in time to be worn at dinner
+that evening. He used to speak with some amusement of the ungraciousness
+of Rogers, the poet, whom he met at the Derbys'. On one occasion Rogers
+had lost his spectacles, and Mr. Lyons went a long way in the big house
+to find them. Rogers who was drinking tea took the spectacles, but did
+not thank him, and, a moment later, when he heard Mr. Lyons refusing
+sugar, he observed to the company: 'That young man, having nothing else
+to be proud of, is proud of not having sugar with his tea!'
+
+I don't suppose that he talked much as a young man, and probably he
+followed the rule he always preached, that young men should speak
+'little but often.'
+
+Among the few serious sayings to be quoted from him was that the great
+axiom in diplomacy was 'Never do anything to-day that can be put off
+till to-morrow.'
+
+In speaking of Leo XIII. and his successful policy with Bismarck, he
+said: 'Those very clever men succeed by doing what no one expects. My
+success has been made by always doing what was expected of me. I always
+did the safe thing.'
+
+In conversation he enjoyed a Johnsonian style of repartee. One retort of
+his had an excellent practical result. He acted as a special constable
+in London during the Chartist Riots. Hearing a woman in the dense crowd
+cry out, 'Let me faint, let me faint,' he turned to her at once, and
+said: 'Pray do, madam,' whereupon she recovered immediately.
+
+Soon after the Berlin Conference when the Disraeli party were making the
+most of the accession of Crete, a visitor at the Embassy, gushing over
+its charms concluded with the assertion that Crete was the loveliest
+island in the world. Whereupon Mr. William Barrington (now Sir William
+Barrington) said drily: 'Have you seen all the others?' This amused
+Lord Lyons immensely, and some years afterwards when a young lady who
+was and is still famous for her powers of conversation had talked at
+him for some time, he adopted the same method. After a good many other
+sweeping assertions she said of some work that had just come out: 'It is
+the best written book that has appeared this century.' 'Ah,' he said,
+'have you read all the others?' Being alone with her soon afterwards I
+was not surprised at her inquiring of me dubiously whether I liked my
+great-uncle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It need hardly be said that, in the matter of his personal religion,
+Lord Lyons was very reticent. He was absolutely regular in his
+attendance at the Sunday service in Paris and in England. He was very
+fond of the singing of English hymns.
+
+He never had any sympathy with the ritualist party in the Church of
+England, and was inclined to be sarcastic as to those whom he designated
+'Puseyites,' as was then the custom.
+
+One who knew him very well told me that for a time he was somewhat
+unsettled in the matter of definite religious belief. There is also
+evidence that in middle life the idea of joining the Catholic Church
+had been present to him as a possibility. As far as can be known it
+was during the last summer of his life that he began to consider the
+question practically. It is not surprising that Lord Lyons, when he
+took the matter up, showed the same characteristics in its regard that
+he had shown in any serious question throughout his life, namely, the
+greatest thoroughness and care in studying the Catholic religion and
+in carrying out its practical side, reserve as to deep sentiment, not
+without humorous touches which were intensely characteristic. Newman's
+works formed the chief part of his study during those summer months.
+A letter written in that August says of him, 'He is always reading
+Newman.' It was not until shortly before his death that he spoke on the
+matter to any of the family. A note in the writing of his secretary and
+intimate friend--Mr. George Sheffield--says that he spoke of it six
+weeks before his death. Lord Lyons had known Bishop Butt for many years
+when he was parish priest at Arundel, and it was to him that he applied
+for advice. He studied the Penny Catechism most carefully, learning the
+answers by heart, like a child. He began to fulfil the practices of a
+Catholic with great regularity. He went to Mass daily at ten o'clock,
+and adopted little habits of self-denial and showed greater liberality
+in almsgiving. The last honour he ever received was the offer of an
+earldom on his retiring from the Paris Embassy. He suggested to Dr. Butt
+that it would be a good act of mortification to refuse this honour, but
+the Bishop would not advise him to do so. He began, against his usual
+custom, to give money to crossing-sweepers or beggars in the streets,
+and I am told by my aunt, Lady Phillippa Stewart, that, after returning
+from my wedding, he said to her: 'Is it not customary after an event
+of this kind to give money in alms?' He then suggested that he should
+make some offering to the hospitals and asked her to write out the
+names of those she thought would be the most suitable. It was about
+ten days before my marriage in November, 1887, that I first heard of
+his intentions. I learnt it in a fashion very characteristic of him. I
+was not staying in the house, but I had been dining with him when he
+remarked casually: 'Really, my austerities are becoming alarming. I have
+given up soup for dinner and jam for breakfast.' This struck me as a
+novel proceeding, as I knew his fondness for jam and that the ordinary
+routine of dinner beginning with a clear soup was a fixed ceremonial
+with him. That night I questioned my aunt, who told me that he had been
+for some weeks preparing to join the Church. It was at this time that
+he said to one of the family: 'I am now ready to be received as soon
+as the Bishop likes.' He also characteristically consulted his nephew,
+the Duke of Norfolk, as to whether he ought to inform Lord Salisbury of
+his intention of becoming a Catholic. He did not, during these weeks,
+know that he was in any danger. The last time I saw my great uncle was
+at my wedding. He had a stroke about ten days afterwards, and to all
+appearance became unconscious. Dr. Butt, knowing what his intentions had
+been, had no hesitation in giving him conditional Baptism and Extreme
+Unction. I was at the funeral at Arundel, and saw the coffin lowered
+into the vault in the Fitzalan Chapel, where his sister Minna had been
+placed two and a half years earlier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I feel most strongly as I conclude these very imperfect notes, how
+entirely Lord Lyons belonged to a generation of Englishmen now long
+passed away. The force of will, the power of self-devotion, the dignity,
+the reticence, the minute regularity, the sense of order, the degree
+of submission to authority and the undoubting assertion of his own
+authority towards others--all were elements in a strong personality.
+There are, no doubt, strong men now, but their strength is of a
+different kind. Englishmen to-day are obliged to be more expansive
+and unreserved. No fixed routine can be followed now as then; no man
+can so guard his own life and his own personality from the public
+eye. Lord Lyons was not of the type that makes the successful servant
+of the democracy. Fidelity, reticence, self-effacement, are not the
+characteristics that are prominent in the popular idea of the strong man
+to-day. But no one who knew Lord Lyons can doubt that those qualities
+were in him a great part of his strength. He was and must always be to
+those who knew him very much of an enigma, and it certainly would not
+have been his own wish that any great effort should be made to interpret
+his inner life to the world at large.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Aali Pasha, i. 146, 150, 151, 155, 161, 166, 167, 172;
+ and the Paris Conference, i. 153.
+
+ Abdul Aziz, Sultan of Turkey, i. 151, ii. 175;
+ effort for Navy, i. 152;
+ dismisses Fuad Pasha, i. 155;
+ unpopularity of, i. 161, 163;
+ visit to France, i. 169, 170;
+ to England, i. 171, 173.
+
+ Abdul Hamid, ii. 108, 208;
+ policy of, ii. 137;
+ reported conspiracy against, ii. 167;
+ suzerainty in Tunis, ii. 246;
+ overthrow of, i. 168.
+
+ Aberdeen, Lord, ii. 11.
+
+ Abolition proclamation, i. 93.
+
+ Abou Klea, battle of, ii. 343.
+
+ Adams, Mr., U.S. Minister in London, i. 38, 43, 59, 63, 71, 72, 98, 99.
+
+ Adams, Sir Francis, charge d'affaires at Paris, ii. 72;
+ telegram on Anglo-French sympathies, ii. 136;
+ Minister at Berne, ii. 220.
+
+ Adrianople, railway to Constantinople, i. 176.
+
+ Aehrenthal, Count, i. 342.
+
+ Afghanistan, Lytton's policy in, ii. 209;
+ attacked by Russia, ii. 348, 352.
+
+ Africa, west coast, ii. 409.
+
+ _Alabama_ incident, i. 97, 98, 99, 105, 300;
+ question revived, i. 162, 189.
+
+ Alaska, bought by America, i. 168.
+
+ Albanian league, ii. 228.
+
+ Alderson, Capt., sent to report on army of the Potomac, i. 128, 129.
+
+ Alexander, Emperor of Russia, i. 187, 255, 273, 333, 354, ii. 52,
+ 54, 404;
+ visit to Berlin, ii. 76;
+ friendliness to England, ii. 80;
+ attempt on life of, ii. 207.
+
+ Alexandretta, ii. 150, 151.
+
+ Alexandria, ii. 172, 188, 273;
+ Anglo-French Naval Demonstration at, ii. 283;
+ massacre at, ii. 285;
+ bombardment of, ii. 288.
+
+ Algeria, position of French in, i. 199, 268, 271, 382, ii. 159, 249.
+
+ Alsace and Lorraine, question of cession, i. 321, 332, 334, 358,
+ 361, 369;
+ French hopes of recovery of, ii. 103, 135, 195, 197, 247, 346;
+ trade of, ii. 14.
+
+ America, army, i. 45, 47, 48, 79, 109;
+ methods of recruiting, i. 110, 116;
+ finance, i. 57;
+ slave trade, i. 20;
+ affairs in central, i. 13;
+ relations between North and South, i. 20, 29, 31;
+ relations with England, i. 12, 15, 16, 45, 46, 79, 129, 189.
+
+ American Civil War, i. 34, 343;
+ Blockade question, i. 33, 36, 37;
+ privateering, i. 42;
+ Confederate Government, i. 53;
+ Southern Confederacy, i. 31, 33, 34, 36;
+ position of Consuls, i. 83, 121;
+ Southern activity, i. 82, 83;
+ Revolutionary Party, i. 80;
+ proposed foreign intervention, i. 90, 91, 92, 96;
+ rising prices, i. 94;
+ vessel building in England, i. 101, 102;
+ position of foreigners during, i. 106-109;
+ seizure of British vessels, i. 100, 104, 105;
+ Irish in, i. 109, 114, 115;
+ Germans in, i. 115;
+ British officers sent to follow operations, i. 128;
+ M. Mercier on, i. 85.
+
+ Anarchical plots, i. 187.
+
+ Ancona district, Austrian troops in, i. 3.
+
+ Anderson, at Fort Sumter, i. 35.
+
+ Anderson, Mr., attache at Washington, i. 87.
+
+ Andrassy, Count, ii. 85;
+ and the Eastern Question, ii. 127, 134, 138;
+ and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194.
+
+ Andrassy Note, ii. 95.
+
+ Anglo-Russian Agreement, ii. 143, 160.
+
+ Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. 140-142;
+ disclosed to Waddington, ii. 148;
+ made public, ii. 151;
+ irritation in France, ii. 152, 159, 163.
+
+ Annam, French in, ii. 103, 307, 327.
+
+ Anti-Slavery party in England, i. 118.
+
+ Antonelli, Cardinal, i. 3, 4, 184.
+
+ Anzin, ii. 323.
+
+ Arabi Bey, rebellion of, ii. 258, 273, 278;
+ Minister of War, ii. 279, 283;
+ campaign against, ii. 295, 296.
+
+ Arago, Emmanuel, succeeds Gambetta as Minister of War, i. 361.
+
+ Archibald, Consul, on the kidnapping of recruits, i. 112.
+
+ Arcolay pamphlet, i. 220.
+
+ Argyll, Duke and Duchess of, i. 41.
+
+ Armenia, ii. 131, 137;
+ patriarch question, ii. 55.
+
+ Army Purchase Bill, ii. 9, 12.
+
+ Arnim, Count, Minister at Rome, i. 347;
+ Ambassador at Paris, ii. 14, 16, 27, 30, 60, 68, 140;
+ and Thiers, ii. 31;
+ on French policy, ii. 45;
+ Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 46.
+
+ Arundel, Lyons at, i. 139, ii. 222, 418, 422, 428.
+
+ Ashman, Mr., i. 50.
+
+ Asia Minor, Russian policy in, i. 268, ii. 133, 137.
+
+ Athens, i. 149; Lyons attache at, i. 1.
+
+ Atlantic, coast defence, i. 40.
+
+ Augusta, Empress, Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 80, 354.
+
+ Aumale Duc d', ii. 2, 7, 16, 44, 48, 51, 56, 64, 311, 368.
+
+ d'Aunay, M., ii. 300, 376.
+
+ Austria, relations with Prussia, i. 186, 193, 202;
+ relations with France, ii. 35;
+ military power of, i. 268;
+ and the Eastern Question, ii. 85, 127;
+ in the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. 153;
+ in the Ancona district, i. 3.
+
+ Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194, 199, 205, 398.
+
+ Austro-Prussian War, failure of French policy in, i. 177.
+
+ Azoph, Sea of, ii. 417.
+
+
+ Bac-ninh, ii. 324.
+
+ Baden, Grand Duchy of, and Confederation, i. 208, 266, 276, 285, 293;
+ French policy in, i. 190, ii. 36;
+ proposed neutrality, i. 302.
+
+ Bagdad railway, ii. 151.
+
+ Bahamas, the, i. 130.
+
+ Baker Pasha, defeat of, ii. 323.
+
+ Balkan Peninsula, ii. 223.
+
+ Bapaume, i. 355.
+
+ Bardo, Treaty of the, ii. 243.
+
+ Baring, Major (Earl of Cromer) in Egypt, ii. 189, 322, 352;
+ letter to Lyons, ii. 203;
+ and "Modern Egypt," ii. 295.
+
+ _Barracouta_, H.M.S., i. 100.
+
+ Barrere, M., ii. 322.
+
+ Barrington, Mr. (Sir William), ii. 128, 426.
+
+ Bateman, Sir Alfred, ii. 253.
+
+ Batoum, ii. 137, 138, 143.
+
+ Baucel, M., i. 228.
+
+ Bavaria, i. 193;
+ and Confederation, i. 266;
+ proposed neutrality, i. 302.
+
+ Bayazid, ii. 142.
+
+ Baynes, Admiral, i. 23.
+
+ Bazaine, General, i. 317, 320;
+ capitulation, i. 329.
+
+ Beaconsfield, Lord, ii. 144.
+
+ Beatrice, Princess, ii. 162.
+
+ Beauregard, General, i. 35.
+
+ Beaury, plot against Napoleon III., i. 285.
+
+ Bedford, Duchess of, ii. 425.
+
+ Belfort, i. 370, 374.
+
+ Belgium, Prince Napoleon on, i. 193;
+ French in, i. 211;
+ trade relations with France, ii. 25;
+ neutrality of, i. 298, 302;
+ foreign policy towards, i. 303, 355, ii. 113, 124, 206;
+ secret Treaty, i. 320, 340;
+ in Constantinople Conference, ii. 109;
+ Bismarck's policy in, i. 254, ii. 74, 83, 345.
+
+ Belgium, King of, i. 212, 216.
+
+ Belgrade, Fortress of, i. 161;
+ evacuated by the Turks, i. 163.
+
+ Belligerent Rights, Exposition of French Jurists on, i. 44, 46, 50.
+
+ Benedetti, French Ambassador at Berlin, i. 293;
+ on Franco-Prussian situation, i. 299;
+ affront to, i. 300, ii. 206;
+ despatch from, i. 304;
+ meeting with King of Prussia at Ems, i. 305.
+
+ Benjamin, Mr., i. 122.
+
+ Berlin, Congress at, ii. 147.
+
+ _Berlin Post_, "Is War in Sight" article, ii. 72.
+
+ Berlin, Treaty of, i. 342, ii. 227;
+ Layard on, ii. 160.
+
+ Bermuda, i. 130.
+
+ Berne, ii. 256.
+
+ Bernstorff, Count, Prussian Ambassador in London, i. 196, 256, 259,
+ 260, 268, 293, 304, 309, 317, 323, 337;
+ on Belgian affairs, i. 218;
+ letter from Bismarck, i. 261.
+
+ Bert, M. Paul, ii. 323.
+
+ Berthaut, General, Minister of War, ii. 115.
+
+ Bessarabia, ii. 142, 367.
+
+ Bessborough, Lord, ii. 11.
+
+ Beust, Count, Austrian Minister, i. 162, 272, 314, 320; ii. 202, 231;
+ and the Belgian question, i. 229;
+ letter to Metternich, ii. 35.
+
+ Beyens, Baron, Belgian Minister, i. 213.
+
+ Biarritz, i. 197.
+
+ Biggar, Mr., ii. 234.
+
+ Billing, Baron de, plan to relieve Gordon, ii. 326.
+
+ Billot, General, ii. 311.
+
+ Bisaccia, Duc de, French Ambassador in London, ii. 57.
+
+ Bismarck, Prince, i. 162, 192, 387;
+ and Luxemburg railway affair, i. 168, 213;
+ and German Confederation, i. 247, 251, 276;
+ at Ems, i. 293;
+ and the Vatican, ii. 30, 68;
+ relations with Emperor, ii. 62, 120;
+ and disarmament negotiations, i. 254, 260-5, 270-3, 275, 278, 301;
+ foreign policy of, i. 179, 211, 214, 218, 314, 355, ii. 14, 29, 49,
+ 54, 70, 72, 74, 77, 82, 124, 205, 345, 358;
+ with regard to Austria, ii. 42;
+ and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194;
+ and Belgium, i. 303;
+ and the Eastern Question, ii. 90, 97, 231;
+ and Egypt, ii. 150, 297, 325, 338, 339, 352;
+ and France, ii. 16, 60, 136, 283, 286, 384;
+ during war, i. 314;
+ peace negotiations, i. 345, 348, 357, 361, 365, 370, 374, 380,
+ ii. 20, 30, 82;
+ and payment of indemnity, ii. 3;
+ colonial policy, ii. 60;
+ and French colonial schemes, ii. 244-5, 251, 259, 264, 268, 342;
+ and Russia, i. 338;
+ and Russo-Turkish War, ii. 109;
+ Suez Canal transaction, ii. 94;
+ and claims of Prussia in Tunis, i. 200;
+ and Favre, i. 316, 318, 321, 323, 324, 352;
+ interviews with Malet, i. 319;
+ with Thiers, i. 329, 331, 342, 353, 358;
+ French views of policy, ii. 107;
+ and Arnim, ii. 46;
+ and Boulanger, ii. 401;
+ and Clarendon, i. 250, 279;
+ and Gramont, i. 307;
+ and Count Muenster, ii. 388;
+ and Napoleon III., i. 221, 254, 333;
+ and Odo Russell, i. 338;
+ and Waddington, ii. 168;
+ on himself, ii. 61;
+ on French Press, i. 271-2;
+ and the German Press, i. 305;
+ power of, ii. 53, 73;
+ illness of, ii. 290.
+
+ "Bismarck, his Reflections and Reminiscences," quoted, i. 338.
+
+ Bizerta, ii. 243.
+
+ Black Sea Conference, i. 341, 350, 366;
+ clauses in Treaty of Paris, concerning, i. 337;
+ French policy in, i. 337, 339;
+ Russia policy in, ii. 127.
+
+ Blairgowrie, Lord Russell at, i. 119.
+
+ Blanqui, revolutionary leader, i. 385.
+
+ Bleichroeder, ii. 384.
+
+ Blignieres, M. de, ii. 171, 204;
+ in Egypt, ii. 189, 238, 261, 278;
+ resignation of, ii. 279;
+ on Egyptian finances, ii. 330.
+
+ Blockade, international law concerning, i. 97.
+
+ Blount, Sir Edward, ii. 415.
+
+ Blowitz, M., _Times_ correspondent, ii. 70, 241, 308, 416.
+
+ Blue Books, publication of, i. 101, 102, 300.
+
+ Boer War, i. 49;
+ pay of men in, i. 110.
+
+ Bonaparte, Prince Pierre, i. 244.
+
+ Bonapartist Party, policy of, i. 349, 356, 364, ii. 15, 17, 66, 106,
+ 191.
+
+ Bordeaux, i. 345, 349.
+
+ Bosnia, ii. 127, 134, 141, 143;
+ annexation of, i. 342;
+ insurrection in, ii. 84.
+
+ _Bosphore Egyptien_, suspended, ii. 352.
+
+ Boston, i. 73, 75;
+ harbour, i. 64.
+
+ Boulanger, General, ii. 121;
+ policy, ii. 367, 384, 385, 393, 403;
+ and the army, ii. 365, 383;
+ popularity of, ii. 366;
+ at Longchamps, ii. 369;
+ mobilization scheme, ii. 401, 411;
+ transferred to Clermont-Ferrand, ii. 409.
+
+ Bourbaki, General, i. 327, 354;
+ on the military situation, i. 327;
+ at Bourges, i. 348;
+ defeated, i. 359;
+ army not included in armistice, i. 360.
+
+ Bourges, Bourbaki at, i. 348.
+
+ Brassey, Mr., application for railway concession, i. 176.
+
+ Bray, Bavarian Minister, i. 302.
+
+ Brodie, attache at Washington, i. 87.
+
+ Broglie, Duc de, at Black Sea Conference, i. 341;
+ French Ambassador in London, ii. 22, 23, 24;
+ in French politics, ii. 64, 67, 100;
+ becomes Prime Minister, ii. 111;
+ unpopularity of, ii. 113.
+
+ Browning, Mr. and Mrs., ii. 422.
+
+ Bruce, Sir Frederick, i. 140, 141.
+
+ Bruennow, Baron, i. 186, ii. 38.
+
+ Buchanan, President (U.S.A.), i. 12, 19, 23, 29;
+ invitation to Prince of Wales, i. 25;
+ letter from Queen Victoria, i. 26.
+
+ Bucharest, i. 149.
+
+ Buffet, M., i. 282.
+
+ Bulgaria, i. 166-8, ii. 142, 143;
+ proposed limits of, ii. 130;
+ Union with Eastern Roumelia, ii. 360;
+ Russia in, ii. 367, 391, 399.
+
+ Bull's Run, Fight of, i. 47-50, 110.
+
+ Buelow, Count von, ii. 53, 74, 87.
+
+ Bulwer, Sir Henry, at the Constantinople Embassy, i. 145, 146;
+ opinion on a Turkish Navy, i. 152.
+
+ Bulwer, Lady, i. 146.
+
+ Bunch, Mr., British Consul at Charleston, i. 42, 51-53, 72, 94.
+
+ Burmah, ii. 358;
+ English in, ii. 360;
+ annexation of, ii. 361.
+
+ Burnley, Mr., Charge d'Affaires in Washington, i. 134, 136.
+
+ Burns, Mr., ii. 343.
+
+ Busch, M., ii. 130;
+ quoted, ii. 82, 344, 352.
+
+ Butt, Bishop, ii. 427.
+
+ Buyak Dere, ii. 138.
+
+
+ _Cagliari_ case, i. 8-11.
+
+ Cairo, intrigues at, ii. 87, 258;
+ British troops enter, ii. 285;
+ Northbrook mission to, ii. 332.
+
+ Calais, ii. 22.
+
+ Calcutta, i. 223.
+
+ Calice, Baron, ii. 130.
+
+ Cambridge, Duke of, i. 379.
+
+ Canada, i. 15, 119;
+ defences of, i. 40, 43, 49, 60, 72, 74, 80, 132, 134, 291;
+ despatch of troops to, i. 54;
+ Reciprocity Treaties, i. 17, 123.
+
+ _Caradoc_, the, i. 146.
+
+ Carafa, Signor, Neapolitan Foreign Minister, i. 9, 11.
+
+ Carey, Capt., ii. 194.
+
+ Carnarvon, Lord, resigns office, ii. 123.
+
+ Cass, Miss, ii. 398.
+
+ Cass, General, i. 12.
+
+ Cayenne, i. 243.
+
+ Ceylon, i. 223.
+
+ Chalons, i. 204;
+ French army at i. 307.
+
+ Chambord, Comte de, i. 364; ii. 2, 9, 18, 21, 25, 56, 57, 64, 66;
+ proclamation of, ii. 7;
+ White Flag manifesto, ii. 47.
+
+ Chanzy, General, at Le Mans, i. 348, 354, 359;
+ suggested President, ii. 118, 197;
+ death of, ii. 305.
+
+ Charles X. of France, i. 254.
+
+ Charleston, fighting at, i. 34, 51;
+ prices in, during war, i. 94.
+
+ Charmes, M., ii. 376, 387.
+
+ Chartres, Duc de, ii. 3, 365.
+
+ Chase, Mr., Secretary of Treasury, U.S., i. 43, 119.
+
+ Chasseurs d'Afrique, ii. 118.
+
+ Chatsworth, Lyons at, ii. 222.
+
+ Chattanooga, i. 120.
+
+ Chaudordy, Comte de, i. 325;
+ and the elections, i. 338;
+ policy at Tours, i. 339;
+ on the recognition of the Government, i. 357, 362;
+ on cession of territory, i. 329;
+ and Black Sea Conference, i. 366, 371;
+ at Constantinople Conference, ii. 109, 398.
+
+ Cherbourg, i. 303.
+
+ Cherif Pasha, ii. 174, 204.
+
+ Childers, Mr., ii. 330.
+
+ China, French Treaty with, ii. 327;
+ French war with, ii. 337.
+
+ Chios, ii. 159.
+
+ Chislehurst, Empress Eugenie at, i. 327;
+ reported review by Napoleon at, ii. 21;
+ death of Napoleon at, ii. 36.
+
+ Choiseul, ii. 231.
+
+ Christ Church, Oxford, Lord Lyons at, i. 1.
+
+ Christiania, i. 345.
+
+ Christians in Turkey, i. 160, 165, 167.
+
+ Civita Vecchia, i. 8, 180, ii. 55.
+
+ Claremont, Colonel, British military attache in Paris, i. 194, 196,
+ 245, 351, 377;
+ on French army, i. 281.
+
+ Clarendon, Lord, interest in Lyons, i. 6, 8, 174;
+ and the _Cagliari_ case, i. 9;
+ succeeds Lord Russell as Foreign Secretary, i. 149;
+ on Roumanian affairs, i. 156;
+ on Franco-Prussian relations, i. 201;
+ and Napoleon III., i. 203;
+ return to office, i. 205;
+ and proposed Turco-Greek Conference, i. 210;
+ on foreign affairs, i. 214, 216;
+ on French politics, i. 231, 237, 241;
+ on disarmament, i. 247, 251, 256, 301;
+ views on the plebiscite, i. 287;
+ on North American colonies, i. 292;
+ and party voting, ii. 11;
+ Bismarck's tribute to, i. 279;
+ death of, i. 294;
+ his private correspondence, i. 221;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 207, 215, 217, 225, 234, 236, 247, 259, 260,
+ 266, 276, 282, 287, 293;
+ letters to Loftus, i. 267, 251.
+
+ Clemenceau, M., ii. 201, 350;
+ open letter from de Blignieres to, ii. 279.
+
+ Clermont-Ferrand, ii. 409.
+
+ Cleveland, Duchess of, ii. 424.
+
+ Coasting trade with U.S.A., i. 17.
+
+ Cobden, on intervention in American Civil War, i. 92.
+
+ Cochin China, ii. 103.
+
+ Cologne, i. 193.
+
+ Commercial Treaties, Anglo-French negotiations, i. 239, 241, 243,
+ 245, 284, 368, 372; ii. 3, 7, 8, 14, 33, 43, 163, 165, 206, 252,
+ 261, 265, 269, 315.
+
+ Commune, termination of, i. 388.
+
+ Compiegne, i. 206.
+
+ Congo Conference, ii. 334.
+
+ Connecticut, i. 113.
+
+ Conolly, General, ii. 102.
+
+ Conscription Act, in U.S., i. 115.
+
+ Constantinople i. 5;
+ Embassy at, offered to Lyons, i. 144;
+ position of British ambassador at, i. 147;
+ intrigues, i. 149, 151;
+ discontent among Mussulmans, i. 167;
+ railway scheme, i. 176;
+ Russian policy in, ii. 52, 124;
+ Moustier's policy in, i. 206;
+ Conference at, ii. 106, 107, 108, 109, 398.
+
+ Corfu, ii. 224.
+
+ Cotton trade with America, i. 31, 88, 89;
+ during the war, i. 115, 118, 122.
+
+ Courbet, Admiral, ii. 322;
+ in Chinese war, ii. 337.
+
+ Courbevoie, i. 381.
+
+ Courcel, overtures from Bismarck, ii. 353.
+
+ Coutouly, M., ii. 182.
+
+ Couza, Prince, i. 149, 150, 157;
+ deposed, i. 153.
+
+ Cowley, Lord, i. 70, 225;
+ on Eastern question, i. 170;
+ on Ambassadors' votes, ii. 9;
+ visit to Napoleon, i. 197;
+ letter to Lord Lyons, i. 165.
+
+ Cowper, Lady, ii. 421.
+
+ Crampton, Sir John, i. 41, 42.
+
+ Craven, Mr. and Mrs. Augustus, ii. 421.
+
+ Cremer, Mr., ii. 342.
+
+ Crete, i. 148, 180, 300, ii. 159, 426;
+ insurrection in, i. 160, 163, 208;
+ proposed cession to Greece, i. 163, 206;
+ Omar Pasha sent to, i. 166;
+ settlement in Turco-Greek Conference, i. 210.
+
+ Cridland, Mr., i. 122.
+
+ Crimean war, allusions to, i. 4, 49, 129, 170, ii. 229, 417.
+
+ Cromer, Earl of. _See_ Baring.
+
+ Crowe, Sir Joseph, ii. 196, 253, 323.
+
+ Cuba, United States and, i. 13, 15.
+
+ _Curacoa_, H.M.S., i. 12.
+
+ Currie, Lord, ii. 371.
+
+ _Cuvier_, the, French gunboat, ii. 22.
+
+ _Cygnet_, H.M.S., i. 100.
+
+ Cyprus, ii. 143, 150, 151.
+
+ Czacki, Mgr., ii. 233.
+
+ Czarewitch, ill-will to Prussia, i. 255, 260.
+
+
+ _Daily Telegraph_, letter on Lyons' opinions, ii. 129.
+
+ Daira Land, administration of the, ii. 340.
+
+ Dallas, Mr., U.S. Minister in London, i. 18, 38.
+
+ Damietta, ii. 188.
+
+ Danube, Russian policy, ii. 145.
+
+ Dardanelles, the, i. 350, ii. 123, 224.
+
+ Daru, Count, i. 243, 247, 251, 256, 261, 282;
+ on disarmament, i. 258, 265, 274, 301;
+ on political situation in France, i. 244;
+ on Bismarck's policy, i. 257;
+ and the plebiscite, i. 289.
+
+ Davies, Jefferson, i. 89, 121, 123.
+
+ Dayton, Mr., i. 46.
+
+ _Debuts,_ anti-English articles in, ii. 180, 376.
+
+ Decazes, Duc, ii. 50;
+ French Foreign Minister, ii. 56;
+ and the suzerainty of Tunis, ii. 60;
+ and ministerial crisis, ii. 67;
+ on foreign affairs, ii. 68;
+ and the war scare, ii. 71, 83;
+ policy in Russo-Turkish war, ii. 109;
+ internal policy, ii. 90, 100, 112;
+ suggests secret treaty to England, ii. 113.
+
+ Declaration of Paris, allusions to, i. 38, 42.
+
+ Denmark, Bismarck and, i. 272, 278;
+ Danish War, i. 177;
+ position before Franco-Prussian War, i. 302;
+ and Russia, i. 355.
+
+ Derby, Earl of. _See_ Stanley.
+
+ Dervish Pasha, ii. 284.
+
+ Des Michels, M., ii. 231.
+
+ Dilke, Sir Charles, ii. 197;
+ and Anglo-French commercial negotiations, ii. 253, 263, 269;
+ his Cherbourg speech, ii. 244.
+
+ Disarmament negotiations, i. 246 _et seq._
+
+ Disraeli, Benjamin (Lord Beaconsfield), ii. 61;
+ quoted, ii. 138, 417;
+ on Franco-Prussian relations, i. 208;
+ on Anglo-French relations, ii. 73.
+
+ Dix, Maj.-General John A., Report to, on recruiting system, i. 112-3,
+ 131;
+ and raid of St. Albans, i. 135.
+
+ Doellinger movement, ii. 31.
+
+ Domain Land, administration in, ii. 340.
+
+ Dongorita, ii. 386, 388.
+
+ Douglas, Governor, i. 19, 43.
+
+ Dragoman system, Lyons dislike of, i. 146, 150, 175.
+
+ Dresden, Lyons attache at, i. 2.
+
+ Duclerc, M., ii. 154;
+ forms a Ministry, ii. 293;
+ refuses office of Foreign Minister, ii. 380.
+
+ Ducrot, General, ii. 111, 115.
+
+ Dufaure, M., in the National Assembly, i. 365;
+ President of the Council, ii. 119;
+ resigns office, ii. 167.
+
+ Dufferin, Lord, ii. 284, 287;
+ in Egypt, ii. 297, 299, 317.
+
+ Dulcigno, ii. 274;
+ demonstration at, ii. 228;
+ surrender of, ii. 232.
+
+ Dundas, Admiral, i. 5.
+
+ Dunkirk, ii. 22.
+
+ Dupanloup, Mgr., Bishop of Orleans, ii. 114.
+
+
+ Eastern Question, i. 221 _et seq._;
+ reopened, ii. 84, 89, 95;
+ Salisbury's circular on, ii. 132.
+
+ Edinburgh, Duke of, offer of throne of Spain to, i. 200.
+
+ Egerton, Sir Edwin, ii. 412.
+
+ Egypt, affairs of, ii. 128, 154, 163, 203;
+ crisis in, ii. 171;
+ controllers appointed, ii. 189;
+ question of independence, i. 240;
+ Dual Note presented, ii. 270;
+ proposed Foreign Commission, ii. 273;
+ Turkish Commission in, ii. 284;
+ Conference on situation, ii. 285, 333;
+ Italy refuses to join England in, ii. 293;
+ Loan Decree, ii. 357;
+ question of evacuation, ii. 389;
+ Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. 405, 409;
+ financial affairs, ii. 330;
+ proposed Conference on, ii. 325;
+ French counter-proposals, ii. 341;
+ settlement of, ii. 347;
+ English policy in, ii. 89, 109, 123, 133, 139, 153, 187-9;
+ Anglo-French action in, ii. 182;
+ Anglo-French relations in, ii. 246, 258, 296, 302, 304, 375;
+ French policy in, ii. 103, 386;
+ fears of English annexation, ii. 135;
+ French retirement from, ii. 291, 293;
+ National Party in, ii. 273;
+ foreign interests in, ii. 104;
+ Derby's policy in, ii. 122.
+
+ Elliot, Sir Henry, ii. 216.
+
+ Elysee, the, New Year's reception at, ii. 305.
+
+ Emancipation of Slaves, i. 95.
+
+ Emly, Lord, letter to Czacki, ii. 234.
+
+ Ems, interviews at, i. 305;
+ visit of Emperor of Russia, i. 293.
+
+ Enfida estate dispute, ii. 238.
+
+ England, relations with the Papal Government, i. 4;
+ and the Neapolitan Government, i. 9;
+ and with U.S.A., i. 12;
+ and Belgian independence, i. 212;
+ commercial relations with France, i. 239, ii. 25.
+ (_See_ Commercial Treaties);
+ expenditure on armament, i. 278;
+ position in Franco-Prussian question, i. 203, 205, 314, 317;
+ and peace negotiations, i. 334;
+ military forces of, ii. 288;
+ military preparations in Central Asia, ii. 346;
+ press in, ii. 335.
+
+ Erlanger, Baron Emile d', ii. 93.
+
+ Errington, M.P., Mr. G., ii. 236;
+ secret mission to the Vatican, ii. 339.
+
+ Erskine, Mr., British Minister at Athens, i. 149.
+
+ Eugenie, Empress, on foreign affairs, i. 179, 180, 191;
+ visit to the East, i. 236, 239;
+ proposed visit to India, i. 222;
+ on Queen Victoria's postponed visit, i. 197;
+ on Spanish affairs, i. 205, 207;
+ and the war, i. 308, 309, 316;
+ on home affairs, i. 235, 245;
+ withdrawal from politics, i. 241;
+ press attacks on, i. 244;
+ a fugitive, i. 310;
+ at Chislehurst, i. 327, ii. 22;
+ Bismarck on, i. 271.
+
+ European Conference at Constantinople, ii. 85, 106;
+ at Berlin, ii. 125, 126, 147.
+
+ Exclusion Bill, ii. 309, 311.
+
+ Expulsion Bill, ii. 365, 366.
+
+
+ Fabrice, General von, i. 387, ii. 3.
+
+ Faidherbe, General, defeat at St. Quentin, i. 359.
+
+ Fair Trade League, ii. 255.
+
+ Fallieres, M., ii. 309, 312.
+
+ _Faon_, the, French gunboat, ii. 22.
+
+ Fashoda, i. 71.
+
+ Favre, Jules, Minister for Foreign Affairs, i. 313, 315, 332, 341,
+ 349, 356, 358, 361, 377, 381, 386, ii. 3, 16;
+ war policy, i. 310;
+ meeting with Bismarck, i. 316-324;
+ advises diplomatists to leave Paris, i. 322;
+ at Black Sea Conference, i. 350;
+ Bismarck refuses safe conduct to London, i. 353;
+ and peace negotiations, i. 360;
+ policy attacked, i. 362;
+ in the National Assembly, i. 368;
+ Lyons appreciation of, i. 359, 368.
+
+ Fazyl Pasha, and the Young Turk Party, i. 167.
+
+ Ferrieres, i. 321.
+
+ Ferry, M. Jules, i. 361;
+ Prime Minister, ii. 230;
+ policy in Tunis, ii. 240;
+ and Gambetta, ii. 249;
+ forms a Ministry, ii. 312;
+ at Foreign Office, ii. 320;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 330, 338;
+ policy in China, ii. 339;
+ resignation of, ii. 349;
+ on Soudan affairs, ii. 344.
+
+ Fielding, Hon. Percy, i. 348.
+
+ Fire Island, kidnapped recruits at, i. 112.
+
+ Fitzmaurice, Lord, i. 316;
+ "Life of Granville," quoted, i. 342.
+
+ Flahault, M. de, i. 92.
+
+ Fleury, General, i. 217;
+ proposed Minister at Florence, i. 230;
+ and Russo-French Alliance, i. 273;
+ Lord Clarendon on, i. 231.
+
+ Floquet, M., ii. 404;
+ duel with Boulanger, ii. 370;
+ fails to form an administration, ii. 380.
+
+ Florence, i. 2;
+ Lyons appointed secretary of legation at, i. 6;
+ Lyons appointed Minister at, i. 11;
+ Fleury's mission to, i. 230.
+
+ Florian, Count, ii. 399.
+
+ Flourens, M. Gustave, organizes riot in Paris, i. 330.
+
+ Flourens, M., appointed Foreign Minister, ii. 381;
+ policy, ii. 398, 406.
+
+ Flourens, Mme., ii. 387.
+
+ Fontainebleau, i. 197, 375.
+
+ Foochow, Chinese fleet destroyed at, ii. 337.
+
+ Formosa, blockade of, ii. 337, 344.
+
+ Forsyth, Mr., i. 14.
+
+ Fort Issy, i. 382.
+
+ Fort Lafayette, i. 131.
+
+ Fort Sumter, i. 34, 50.
+
+ Fort Warren, i. 71, 74, 75.
+
+ Fournier, M., French Ambassador at Constantinople, ii. 169, 182, 205;
+ withdrawn from Constantinople, ii. 210.
+
+ Fourtou, M., ii. 114.
+
+ France, internal affairs, i. 190, 238, 280, ii. 105, 147, 164, 306,
+ 402;
+ republic declared, i. 237, 310;
+ Constitutional Government in, i. 283, 290;
+ Bismarck on, i. 271;
+ government of National Defence, i. 311, 336 _et seq._;
+ National Assembly, i. 363;
+ public v. monarchy in, i. 364;
+ elections in, i. 227, 360, ii. 97, 114, 116, 237, 363;
+ unrest among peasantry, ii. 297;
+ finances, i. 236, 358;
+ Protection v. Free Trade, ii. 321, 328, 335.
+ (_See_ Commercial Treaties);
+ press campaigns against England, ii. 178, 307, 310, 328, 333, 376;
+ anti-German attacks, ii. 411;
+ military power of, i. 257, 268, 369, ii. 59, 102, 356;
+ Lord Stanley on, i. 162;
+ Villiers' report, ii. 310;
+ and disarmament, i. 246, 258, 277;
+ navy of, ii. 59;
+ policy in U.S.A., i. 13, 42, 44, 46, 54, 67, 70, 77, 81;
+ in the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. 153;
+ in Belgium, i. 211, 303;
+ in North Africa, i. 199;
+ in Eastern Question, ii. 134;
+ occupation of Rome, i. 3, 183-187;
+ proposes cession of Crete to Greece, i. 163.
+
+ Franco-Prussian War, apprehensions of, i. 185, 195;
+ war declared, i. 301;
+ causes of, i. 305;
+ panic in Paris, i. 306;
+ suggestion for armistice, i. 312, 314, 347;
+ Bourbaki on the military situation, i. 327;
+ peace party, i. 328;
+ suggestion for European Congress, i. 367;
+ suggested terms of Peace, i. 348;
+ armistice agreed on, i. 360;
+ preliminaries of Peace signed, i. 369;
+ harshness of conditions, i. 373;
+ Neutral Powers and, i. 371;
+ the war indemnity, i. 369, ii. 3, 29, 41, 45;
+ effects on the Embassy, i. 347.
+
+ Frankfort, i. 140, 236, 370.
+
+ Frederick William IV., King of Prussia, ii. 41, 62;
+ in the San Juan dispute, i. 19;
+ on German unity, i. 208, 247, 266;
+ and army, i. 207, 247-9, 252, 254-6, 348;
+ on disarmament, i. 266, 275, 277;
+ at Ems, i. 293, 305;
+ and Clarendon, i. 201, 204;
+ friendship for Arnim, ii. 46;
+ relations with Bismarck, ii. 54, 57, 62, 73, 120;
+ attempt to assassinate, ii. 146;
+ ill-health, ii. 80, 354.
+
+ Frederick William, Crown Prince of Prussia, on Franco-Prussian
+ relations, i. 207;
+ in the Franco-Prussian War, i. 309;
+ peaceful policy, i. 247;
+ English sympathies, i. 342, 343;
+ conversation with Odo Russell, ii. 80;
+ relations with Bismarck, ii. 57, 63, 74.
+
+ Free Trade, decline in France, i. 241, 245, 290, 372, ii. 3, 27, 163.
+ (_See_ Commercial Treaties and Protection);
+ Lyons on, i. 284, ii. 27.
+
+ Frere-Orban, M., visit to Paris, i. 219.
+
+ Freycinet, M. de, ii. 119, 154, 200, 350;
+ succeeds Waddington at Foreign Office, ii. 204;
+ his ideal ambassador, ii. 211;
+ refuses office in Gambetta Ministry, ii. 262;
+ forms Ministry, ii. 277;
+ retires from office, ii. 291, 378;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 281-91, 356, 377, 392;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 223.
+
+ _Friedland_, the, sent to Tunis, ii. 238.
+
+ Fuad Pasha, Grand Vizier, on Turkish finance, i. 146;
+ and the Paris Conference, i. 153;
+ dismissal of, i. 155;
+ alluded to, i. 151, 155, 166, 167, 171.
+
+
+ Galliera, Duchess of, ii. 43.
+
+ Gallipoli, ii. 127.
+
+ Gallway, Colonel, sent to report on army of the Potomac, i. 128, 129.
+
+ Galt, Mr., Canadian Finance Minister, i. 60.
+
+ Gambetta, minister of war, i. 325-329, 336, 338, 345, 349, 351, 355,
+ 356, 358, 360;
+ resigns office, i. 361;
+ recovery of influence, ii. 98;
+ dispute with Grevy, ii. 118;
+ interview with Prince of Wales, ii. 156;
+ growth of power, ii. 168;
+ on foreign policy of France, ii. 205;
+ resignation of, ii. 277;
+ and Ferry, ii. 249;
+ administrative qualities, ii. 262;
+ fall from office, ii. 296;
+ shot, ii. 301;
+ death, ii. 305;
+ policy and views of, i. 362, 363, 365, 370, ii. 8, 64, 67, 99, 106,
+ 119, 133, 147, 166, 197, 198, 226, 237, 266;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 177, 181, 261, 290;
+ St. Hilaire on, ii. 229.
+
+ Gambia, the, ii. 198.
+
+ Garibaldi, invades Papal States, i. 178;
+ embarrassing foreign policy, i. 177;
+ in Franco-Prussian war, i. 324.
+
+ _Gaulois_, on Sir J. Drummond Hay, ii. 329.
+
+ Genoa, i. 8.
+
+ Germany. _See also_ Prussia and Franco-German War;
+ Confederation question, i. 190, 192, 201, 204, 205, 207, 251, 266,
+ 276, 277, 343;
+ and need of seaboard, ii. 60;
+ relations with Russia, ii. 42, 324;
+ military power, i. 275, ii. 80, 356.
+
+ Gibraltar, i. 200, ii. 288.
+
+ Gladstone, on American struggle, i. 89;
+ on Belgian independence, i. 212, 214, 218;
+ on a peer's vote, i. 225, ii. 336;
+ and disarmament, i. 250, 259;
+ on the plebiscite, i. 283, 289, 290;
+ and the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 298;
+ on peace negotiations, i. 334;
+ Russian sympathies, ii. 109;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 228, 231;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 274, 329;
+ visit to Paris, ii. 313;
+ Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 353, 354;
+ resigns office, ii. 356;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 334, ii. 347.
+
+ _Globe_, and the Anglo-Russian Agreement, ii. 143.
+
+ Goblet, M., Prime Minister of France, ii. 380;
+ foreign policy, ii. 389;
+ difficulties of, ii. 392.
+
+ Godeaux, M., ii. 172.
+
+ Gontaut, M. de, ii. 29.
+
+ Goodenough, Captain, i. 128.
+
+ Gordon, General, sent to Soudan, ii. 321, 343;
+ in Khartoum, ii. 326;
+ death of, ii. 343.
+
+ Gortschakoff, Prince, i. 181, 209, 248, 273, ii. 42, 77, 80, 85, 88,
+ 90;
+ Bismarck's abuse of, ii. 168.
+
+ Goschen, Mr. (afterward Viscount), at Constantinople, ii. 210, 223.
+
+ Gozze, Count, i. 6.
+
+ Gramont, Duc de, i. 289, 299, 302, 303, 340;
+ on the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 294;
+ and war, i. 307;
+ letter from Napoleon, i. 304;
+ Bismarck on, i. 320;
+ publishes letter of Beust, ii. 35, 36.
+
+ Grant, General, i. 133, 372.
+
+ Granville, Lord, at the Foreign Office, i. 294, 301, 343, 383;
+ policy in Franco-Prussian War, i. 313;
+ interview with Thiers, i. 316;
+ on revolution in Paris, i. 379;
+ Free Trade policy, ii. 27, 257;
+ Egyptian policy, ii. 274, 277;
+ succeeded by Lord Derby, ii. 54;
+ on the Eastern Question, ii. 231;
+ and Franco in Tunis, ii. 250;
+ on peers' voting, ii. 12;
+ on Waddington, ii. 314;
+ succeeded by Salisbury, ii. 356;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 294, 297, 317, 337, 340, 373, ii. 9, 23, 241,
+ 242, 270, 289, 323, 324, 329, 332, 346, 348, 353;
+ letter to Gladstone, ii. 274.
+
+ Great Lakes, fortification of, i. 60.
+
+ Greece, ii. 183;
+ financial immorality, i. 163;
+ increase of power, i. 164;
+ and Turkey, i. 166, 209, ii. 89;
+ and the Eastern question, i. 160, ii. 131, 223;
+ frontier question, i. 206, ii. 207, 227, 229.
+
+ Greece, King of, ii. 225.
+
+ Greeley, Mr. Horace, i. 96.
+
+ Green, Mr., at Bucharest, i. 149, 153, 158.
+
+ Grevy, M., i. 328;
+ in the National Assembly, i. 365, 368, ii. 16;
+ dispute with Gambetta, ii. 118;
+ becomes President, ii. 167;
+ loss of prestige, ii. 202;
+ and Boulanger, ii. 367, 393;
+ New Year's reception, ii. 305;
+ and peace policy, ii. 382, 383.
+
+ Grey, General, letter to Clarendon, i. 211.
+
+ Griffith, Mr., i. 28.
+
+ Grousset, Paschal, i. 383.
+
+
+ Halifax, i. 73, 74.
+
+ Halim, ii. 261;
+ proposed to make Khedive, ii. 280.
+
+ Hammond, Mr., Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs, views and opinions
+ of, i. 63, 64, 77, 86, 294, 299;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 172.
+
+ Hauseman, ii. 46.
+
+ d'Harcourt, Emmanuel, ii. 91, 100, 144.
+
+ Harney, General. i. 19, 23.
+
+ Harper's Ferry, i. 20.
+
+ Hartington, Lord, ii. 330, 332, 371.
+
+ Hartmann, nihilist, ii. 207.
+
+ Hatfield, Lyons at, ii. 222.
+
+ Havannah, i. 54.
+
+ Hay, Sir J. Drummond, ii. 329.
+
+ Haymerle and the Austro-German Alliance, ii. 194.
+
+ Head, Sir Edmund, Governor-General of Canada, i. 39, 50.
+
+ Heneage, Mr., i. 132.
+
+ Herat, ii. 352.
+
+ Herbert, Sir Michael, i. 90.
+
+ Herbette, M. d', ii. 386.
+
+ Heron's Ghyll, Lyons at, ii. 424.
+
+ Herzegovina, ii. 141;
+ annexation of, i. 342;
+ insurrection in, ii. 84;
+ and the Andrassy Note, ii. 96, 127.
+
+ Hesse, i. 285.
+
+ Hicks Pasha, disaster in Soudan, ii. 320, 325.
+
+ Hobart Pasha, ii. 136.
+
+ Hohenlohe, Prince, ii. 31, 69, 292.
+
+ Hohenzollern, candidature for Spain, i. 294, 296, 305.
+
+ Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Prince Charles of, chosen Hereditary Prince
+ of Roumania, i. 155-157;
+ invested at Constantinople, i. 158.
+
+ Holland, i. 217;
+ and Luxembourg, i. 165, 168;
+ foreign designs on, i. 304, 355, ii. 83;
+ suggestions for protection of, ii. 113;
+ foreign relations, ii. 124;
+ in Constantinople Conference, ii. 109;
+ Bismarck's policy, ii. 345.
+
+ Hope, Sir James, i. 133.
+
+ Hope, Lady Mary, ii. 424.
+
+ Hope-Scott, James, ii. 418.
+
+ Hotham, Captain, ii. 22.
+
+ Hovas, Queen of the, ii. 301.
+
+ Howard, Lady Mary, ii. 418, 423.
+
+ Hoyos, Count, ii. 387.
+
+ Hudson, Sir James, note to the Sardinian Government, i. 10.
+
+ Hugo, Victor, i. 224, 363, 370, 371;
+ death and funeral, ii. 354.
+
+ Hungary, policy of Russia concerning, ii. 134.
+
+ Hussein Khan, ii. 216.
+
+
+ Iddesleigh, Lord, Foreign Secretary, ii. 375;
+ death of, ii. 383.
+
+ Ignatieff, General, Russian Minister at Constantinople, i. 148, 158;
+ mission to London, ii. 109;
+ foreign policy, ii. 128, 130.
+
+ Imperialists, policy of, ii. 56.
+
+ India, ii. 137, 205.
+
+ International Law on blockade, i. 97.
+
+ Irish emigrants in U.S.A., i. 15, 16, 25, 69;
+ liability to service, i. 109, 114, 115;
+ secret societies, i. 40.
+
+ Irish Church Bill, i. 224, ii. 10, 11.
+
+ Irish Nationalists, ii. 232.
+
+ Isabella, Queen, in France, ii. 22.
+
+ Ismail, Khedive, i. 221, 222, 239;
+ and Suez Canal Shares, ii. 85;
+ and Russo-Turkish War, ii. 110, 155, 171;
+ warning to, ii. 177;
+ deposed, ii. 185;
+ proposal to restore, ii. 344.
+
+ Italy, ii. 55;
+ neutral policy, i. 298, 302;
+ Bismarck on, i. 321;
+ Eastern policy, i. 164;
+ and Prussia, i. 178, 193;
+ and Savoy, i. 382;
+ policy in Tunis, ii. 240, 248.
+
+
+ Jahde, i. 228.
+
+ James river, America, i. 83.
+
+ Janina, ii. 183.
+
+ Jecker bonds, i. 218.
+
+ Jenner, Mr., i. 87.
+
+ Johnstone, Mr. Horace, i. 127.
+
+ Joinville, Prince de, ii. 3, 7, 34.
+
+ _Journal officiel_, i. 315, ii. 320.
+
+ Juarez, i. 13.
+
+
+ Karolyi, ii. 391.
+
+ Kars, ii. 143.
+
+ Kemble, Adelaide, ii. 422.
+
+ Kemble, Fanny, ii. 422.
+
+ Kennedy, i. 140.
+
+ Kentucky, i. 60.
+
+ Kern, M., Swiss Minister at Paris, ii. 255.
+
+ Khaireddin Pasha, ii. 167, 196.
+
+ Khartoum, ii. 322; Gordon in, ii. 326;
+ expedition to, ii. 341;
+ fall of, ii. 343.
+
+ Khedive. _See_ Ismail.
+
+ Kiel, i. 204.
+
+ Kitchener, Major (Lord), Rochefort's abuse of, ii. 358.
+
+ Klazko, Mgr., i. 272, 278, 294.
+
+ Knollys, Viscount, ii. 152.
+
+ Knowsley, Lyons at, ii. 222, 424.
+
+ Kroumirs, the, ii. 240, 301.
+
+
+ Lacour, M. Challemel, ii. 211, 257, 310;
+ becomes Foreign Minister, ii. 312;
+ on Egyptian question, ii. 316;
+ resignation of, ii. 320.
+
+ Lagarde, the Abbe, i. 385.
+
+ Land Bill (English), i. 294.
+
+ Landsturm Bill, ii. 62.
+
+ Lang-Son, French defeat at, ii. 349.
+
+ Lascelles, Sir Frank, i. 377.
+
+ La Tour d'Auvergne, La Prince de, i. 208, 233, 234, 240, 241, 308, 310.
+
+ La Valette, M. de, i. 206, 218, 223, 234, 242, 256, 261, 287, 298,
+ 300-303;
+ on home policy, i. 229;
+ and disarmament, i. 247;
+ on the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 295;
+ on political situation, i. 285.
+
+ Layard, Mr. (Sir Henry), i. 295, 347;
+ reports from Constantinople, ii. 123, 127;
+ the Anglo-Turkish Convention, ii. 140, 142, 143;
+ on Treaty of Berlin, ii. 160;
+ withdrawn from Constantinople, ii. 209;
+ letter to Lyons, ii. 137, 138.
+
+ League of Patriots, ii. 402.
+
+ Leboeuf, on France's readiness for war, i. 307.
+
+ Le Flo, General, ii. 29;
+ conversation with Alexander of Russia, ii. 52, 54.
+
+ Legh, Mr. (Lord Newton), ii. 220.
+
+ Legitimists, policy of, i. 228, 364, 368, ii. 15, 18, 25, 56;
+ and Comte de Chambord, ii. 7;
+ proposed fusion with Orleanists, ii. 21;
+ White Flag Manifesto, ii. 47.
+
+ Leighton, Sir Frederick, ii. 423.
+
+ Le Mans, Chanzy at, i. 348, 359.
+
+ Leo XIII., ii. 425.
+
+ Lesseps, M. de, ii. 86;
+ and Suez Canal Shares, ii. 90, 93, 321;
+ on Soudan expedition, ii. 343.
+
+ Levy, Mr., and the Enfida estate, ii. 238.
+
+ Lhuys, Drouyn de, i. 241.
+
+ _Liberte_, publishes secret negotiations, i. 301.
+
+ Lincoln, President Abraham, i. 29, 34, 47, 60, 65, 69, 81, 88, 93,
+ 98, 100, 115, 140;
+ issues proclamations of Emancipation, i. 95;
+ and the U.S. Army, i. 110.
+
+ Lindau, employed as secret agent by Bismarck, ii. 46.
+
+ Lindsay, Major-General, i. 129.
+
+ Lisbon, i. 144.
+
+ Little, Mrs., ii. 417.
+
+ Lobanoff, Prince, ii. 130.
+
+ Loftus, Lord Augustus, British Ambassador at Berlin, i. 250, 295;
+ despatches from, i. 218, 273, 276, 285, 293;
+ interview with Bismarck, i. 254, 261, 270, 275;
+ letters to Clarendon, i. 254, 270.
+
+ Longchamps, Reviews at, ii. 368, 369, 410.
+
+ Longworth, Mr., i. 161.
+
+ Lord Mayor, in Paris, ii. 64.
+
+ Lords, House of, Lyons vote in, i. 226, ii. 9, 336.
+
+ Lorraine. _See_ Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+ Louis XVI., i. 254.
+
+ Louis Philippe, i. 254.
+
+ Louis, Prince Imperial, ii. 102;
+ death of, ii. 190-193.
+
+ Lumley, British Minister at Brussels, ii. 75.
+
+ Luxembourg, report of cession to France, i. 165;
+ Prussia refuses consent to sell, i. 168;
+ conference in London, i. 169;
+ railway affair, i. 211, 257;
+ Commission in London, i. 219.
+
+ Lynch Law, i. 21.
+
+ Lyons, strength of garrisons at, i. 268, 349.
+
+ Lyons, Richard Bickerton Pemell, Lord, early life, i. 1;
+ succeeds to the peerage, i. 11;
+ Mission to Naples respecting _Cagliari_ case, i. 8-11;
+ appointed Minister at Florence, i. 11;
+ offer of the Washington Legation, i. 11;
+ with Prince of Wales in Canada, i. 25; a G.C.B., i. 76;
+ visits to Canada, i. 119, 134;
+ returns to London on account of ill-health, i. 89, 136;
+ resigns U.S. Legation, i. 139;
+ receives the degree of D.C.L., i. 144;
+ appointed to the Embassy at Constantinople, i. 144;
+ to Paris Embassy, i. 177;
+ removes with Embassy to Tours, i. 322;
+ to Bordeaux, i. 345;
+ returns to Paris, i. 375;
+ invited to represent England at Berlin Congress, ii. 125;
+ proffered resignation, ii. 394;
+ offer of Foreign Secretaryship, ii. 371;
+ termination of office, ii. 411;
+ created an earl, ii. 412;
+ death, ii. 412;
+ his personal characteristics, ii. 213-222, 412;
+ in private life, ii. 415.
+
+ Letters from Lyons--
+ to Lord Clarendon, i. 149, 152, 153, 206, 213, 219, 224, 227, 228,
+ 230, 233, 235, 239, 241, 244, 248, 256, 273, 280, 283, 285, 288,
+ 290.
+ to Earl Cowley, i. 154, 158, 174.
+ to Lord Derby, i. 156, ii. 54, 66, 95, 102, 107, 111, 112, 117,
+ 119, 127.
+ to Sir C. Dilke, ii. 254, 255.
+ to Lord Granville, i. 296, 299, 301, 303, 305, 308, 312, 315, 322,
+ 325, 329, 338, 350, 355, 356, 361, 365, 367, 371, 374, 376, 380,
+ 382, 385, 386, ii. 2, 7, 13, 15, 21, 24, 26, 34, 36, 37, 39, 47,
+ 48, 50, 223, 225, 226, 229, 230, 233, 235, 239, 243, 247, 248,
+ 249, 258, 261, 262, 263, 265, 271, 275, 278, 280, 281, 283, 286,
+ 292, 296, 298, 300, 302, 303, 308, 309, 312, 313, 314, 315, 317,
+ 319, 320, 321, 323, 326, 328, 330, 334, 338, 339, 341, 342, 345,
+ 350, 351, 352.
+ to Mr. Green, i. 158.
+ to Mr. Griffith, i. 28.
+ to Mr. Hammond, i. 127, 132, 309, 346.
+ to Sir Edmund Head, i. 39, 50.
+ to Lord Iddesleigh, ii. 375, 377, 378, 379, 381.
+ to Mr. Layard (Sir H.), i. 347, ii. 207.
+ to Captain Lyons, i. 5.
+ to Lady Lytton, ii. 209.
+ to Lord Malmesbury, i. 13, 14.
+ to Admiral Sir A. Milne, i. 104.
+ to Viscount Monck, i. 123.
+ to Duke of Newcastle, i. 28, 29.
+ to Lord Rosebery, ii. 363, 365, 366, 367, 368, 374.
+ to Lord John Russell, i. 17, 20, 21, 26, 30, 31, 36, 41, 42, 47, 55,
+ 57, 59, 65, 67, 71, 74, 82, 85, 88, 101, 102, 115, 120, 122, 128,
+ 136, 143, 145.
+ to Lord Odo Russell, ii. 30, 42, 51, 129.
+ to Lord Salisbury, ii. 134, 139, 145, 151, 152, 156, 165, 169, 171,
+ 180, 191, 192, 195, 196, 198, 202, 204, 357, 371, 383, 387, 388,
+ 389, 392, 394, 396, 398, 400, 402, 403, 404, 405, 410.
+ to Mr. Seward, i. 131, 140.
+ to Mr. Stuart, i. 139, 156.
+ to Lord Stanley (Earl Derby), i. 156, 159, 166, 179, 182, 186, 187,
+ 190, 197, 201, 203.
+ to Prince of Wales, ii. 98.
+
+ Lyons, Admiral Sir Edmund, first baron, i. 1.
+
+ Lyons, Captain Edmund, i. 5, ii. 417.
+
+ Lytton, Lord, ii. 52, 209;
+ succeeds Lyons at Paris Embassy, ii. 411;
+ letter to Lyons, ii. 60.
+
+
+ McClellan, General, i. 56, 57, 65, 89.
+
+ McHugh, Mr. James, i. 131.
+
+ McLane, Mr., i. 13, 14.
+
+ MacMahon, Marshal, i. 306, ii. 38;
+ succeeds Thiers as President, ii. 43;
+ and war scare, ii. 83;
+ policy of, ii. 56, 67, 97, 105, 111;
+ character, ii. 100;
+ Gambetta on, ii. 100;
+ election defeat, ii. 116;
+ resigns office, ii. 167.
+
+ MacMahon, Madame la Marechale, ii. 47, 114.
+
+ Madagascar, ii. 300, 301, 307, 318, 360, 380.
+
+ Magee, Mr., Consul at Mobile, i. 97, 121.
+
+ _Magicienne_, the, i. 100, 103.
+
+ Magne, M., finance minister, ii. 59.
+
+ Malet, Sir Edward, accompanies Lyons to the Washington Legation, i. 90;
+ on Lyons' work at, i. 137;
+ transferred to Lisbon, i. 140;
+ accompanies Lyons to Constantinople, i. 144;
+ to Paris, i. 177;
+ emissary to Bismarck, i. 318;
+ alluded to, i. 347, 377, 383, 387, ii. 128;
+ in Egypt, ii. 238, 271, 276;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 319.
+
+ Malmesbury, Lord, foreign secretary, i. 2, 8, ii. 11;
+ in the _Cagliari_ case, i. 10-14;
+ succeeded by Lord John Russell, i. 17.
+
+ Malta, i. 5, 146, ii. 139, 243, 288;
+ troops in, ii. 290;
+ Lyons' boyhood at, ii. 417.
+
+ Marne river, i. 345.
+
+ Marseilles, i. 349; riots at, ii. 248.
+
+ Martel, M., ii. 114.
+
+ Martin, Sir Theodore, i. 61.
+
+ Martino, ii. 177.
+
+ Marvin, Mr., ii. 143.
+
+ Mary, Grand Duchess, of Russia, i. 235.
+
+ Maryland, i. 60.
+
+ Mason, Mr., Confederate delegate to England, seized on board the
+ _Trent_, i. 54;
+ alluded to, i. 59, 60, 63, 74, 81;
+ failure of mission to Europe, i. 121.
+
+ Matamoros, i. 100, 104.
+
+ Mathilde, Princess, i. 223.
+
+ Mayence, i. 265.
+
+ Mazzinians, revolt of the, i. 9.
+
+ Mazzini, plot against Napoleon, i. 188.
+
+ Mediterranean, English power in, ii. 109, 113, 140, 200;
+ fleet ordered to Constantinople, ii. 123;
+ Indian troops in, ii. 132.
+
+ Mehmet Ali, ii. 276.
+
+ Menabrea, General, ii. 294;
+ on Sir J. Drummond Hay, ii. 329;
+ Ministry, i. 186.
+
+ Mentana, i. 178.
+
+ Mercantile Marine Law in France, ii. 24.
+
+ Mercier, M., French Minister in U.S.A., i. 32-34, 46, 66, 115, 156;
+ friendly relations with Lyons, i. 44, 54;
+ on _Trent_ case, i. 68, 70;
+ visits Confederate headquarters, i. 82;
+ on American Civil War, i. 82;
+ proposal of foreign intervention, i. 90, 96.
+
+ Merv, ii. 325.
+
+ Mesopotamia, Russian policy in, ii. 137.
+
+ Metternich, Prince, Austrian Ambassador in Paris, i. 287, 318, 338;
+ letter from Beust, ii. 35.
+
+ Metz, i. 304, 358;
+ French army at, i. 307, 321, 327;
+ capitulation of, i. 329, 351.
+
+ Mexico, United States policy in, i. 13, 15, 21;
+ expedition against, i. 70;
+ French in, i. 177, 218;
+ Emperor of, i. 133.
+
+ Michel, Louise, ii. 316.
+
+ Midhat Pasha, ii. 196.
+
+ Military attaches, i. 120.
+
+ Military efficiency, Lord Palmerston on, i. 48.
+
+ Militia regiments in U.S., i. 47, 50.
+
+ Milne, Admiral Sir A., i. 39, 52, 58, 59, 100, 104, 119.
+
+ Missouri, i. 60.
+
+ Mobile, i. 97, 121.
+
+ Mohrenheim, Baron, ii. 325.
+
+ Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, i. 148-150.
+
+ Moltke, General von, i. 354, 374, ii. 30;
+ on Germany's position in Europe, i. 196;
+ on Franco-Prussian relations, i. 201;
+ on relations with Russia, i. 202;
+ and Clarendon, i. 203;
+ and the war scare, ii. 74.
+
+ Monck, Lord, Governor-General of Canada, i. 60, 125, 126;
+ and Canadian defence, i. 132, 133.
+
+ _Moniteur_, article in, i. 159.
+
+ Monroe doctrine, i. 23.
+
+ Monson, Mr., attache at Washington, i. 87.
+
+ Montebello, M. de, ii. 165;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 225, 407.
+
+ Montenegro, ii. 142, 227;
+ surrender of Dulcigno to, ii. 232;
+ Prince of, ii. 226.
+
+ Montpensier, i. 294.
+
+ Moore, Mr., i. 122.
+
+ Morier, Sir Robert, quoted, i. 344, ii. 82.
+
+ Morocco, French policy in, ii. 386.
+
+ Morrill Tariff (U.S.), i. 57.
+
+ Moscow, coronation, ii. 314.
+
+ Mouchy, Duc de, i. 233.
+
+ Moustier, Marquis de, French Ambassador at Constantinople, i. 147,
+ 148, 153;
+ and Roumanian difficulty, i. 156, 158;
+ Eastern policy, i. 165, 186, 192;
+ and Prussia, i. 195;
+ succeeded by de la Valette, i. 206;
+ alluded to, i. 202, 203.
+
+ Muenster, Count, German Ambassador in London, ii. 75;
+ on the German army, ii. 80;
+ and French policy in Tunis, ii. 139;
+ at French Embassy, ii. 388, 410.
+
+ Muenster, Countess Marie, ii. 387.
+
+ Murat, Prince Joachim, i. 233.
+
+ Muscovite party, and Germany, i. 255.
+
+ Mussulmans, and the Roman Catholic Church, ii. 4;
+ population in Turkey, i. 161;
+ discontent among, i. 167;
+ position in Bulgaria, ii. 227.
+
+ Musurus Pasha, i. 152, 171, ii. 348.
+
+
+ Naples, i. 8, 146.
+
+ Napoleon III., Emperor of France, i. 8;
+ proposal of intervention in American Civil War, i. 92;
+ Pro-Russian sympathies, i. 165. 170;
+ foreign policy, i. 183, 187, 213, 215. 220, 238;
+ on foreign policy of Prussia, i. 192;
+ on Franco-Prussian situation, i. 203;
+ on Spanish affairs, i. 207;
+ love of Conferences, i. 209;
+ ill-health of, i. 236;
+ plot, against, i. 285;
+ position in France, i. 187, 197, 235;
+ home policy, i. 227-9, 232, 234, 237, 240, 250;
+ and Constitutional Government, i. 190, 274;
+ and the plebiscite, i. 280, 291;
+ disposition for peace, i.
+ 191, 296;
+ with the army, i. 307, 355;
+ question of restoration, ii. 17;
+ at Chislehurst, ii. 21;
+ death of, ii. 36;
+ Bismarck on, i. 254, 320, 333;
+ friendship for Clarendon, i. 201;
+ letter to Gramont, i. 304.
+
+ Napoleon, Prince, on the "Roman" question, i. 181;
+ on French foreign policy, i. 185;
+ on war with Germany, i. 191, 194, 203;
+ visit to Germany, i. 191;
+ Proclamation denouncing the Republic, ii. 305, 309;
+ arrest, ii. 308;
+ release, ii. 311;
+ expulsion from France, ii. 366;
+ alluded to, i. 235, ii. 2, 64, 191.
+
+ National Assembly, at Versailles, i. 373.
+
+ National Guards, defection of, i. 376;
+ at Courbevoie, i. 381.
+
+ Neapolitan troops, i. 9.
+
+ Nelidoff, M. de, ii. 389.
+
+ Newcastle, Duke of, Colonial Secretary, i. 24, 28, 29.
+
+ Newfoundland Fisheries, ii. 103, 153, 156, 197, 356, 384, 386.
+
+ Newfoundland, Governor of, on colonial questions, i. 292.
+
+ New Hampshire, i. 113.
+
+ New Hebrides, ii. 314, 374, 386, 388, 390, 407, 409.
+
+ New Orleans, i. 83; captured, i. 93.
+
+ New York, i. 111, 113, 115;
+ visit of Russian squadron to, i. 120.
+
+ Nice, ii. 26.
+
+ Nicholas, Grand Duke, ii. 137.
+
+ Niel, Marshal, orations by, i. 196.
+
+ Nigra, Italian minister in Paris, i. 186.
+
+ Noailles, Marquis de, ii. 197, 287.
+
+ Nobiling, attempt to assassinate German Emperor, ii. 146.
+
+ Noir, Victor, i. 244.
+
+ Norfolk, America, i. 83.
+
+ Norfolk, Duke of, i. 11, ii. 417.
+
+ Norfolk, Duchess of, i. 139, ii. 218, 373, 424.
+
+ Normanby, Lord, Minister at Florence, i. 7, 8, 87;
+ on Parliamentary voting, ii. 9.
+
+ Northbrook, Lord, mission to Cairo, ii. 332;
+ return to England, ii. 337.
+
+ North Carolina, revolt in, i. 35.
+
+ _North German Gazette_, articles in, i. 299, 305.
+
+ North Sea, Prussian fortifications on, i. 265.
+
+ Nothomb, Baron, ii. 74, 76.
+
+ Nubar Pasha, ii. 171, 204;
+ on Egyptian situation, ii. 278.
+
+ Nuncio, the, in Paris, i. 287-8, 387.
+
+
+ Oldenburg, Duke of, i. 266.
+
+ Ollivier, M. Emile, i. 240, ii. 35;
+ ministry of, i. 243;
+ policy of, i. 266;
+ and the plebiscite, i. 283, 284, 286;
+ on disarmament, i. 248, 283, 301;
+ resignation of, i. 307.
+
+ Omar Pasha, sent to Crete, i. 166.
+
+ Ordega, M., French Minister at Tangier, ii. 329.
+
+ _Orenoque_, at Civita Vecchia, ii. 55.
+
+ _Oreto_, the, i. 99.
+
+ Orleans, i. 336, 349.
+
+ Orleanists, i. 228, 349, 368, ii. 2, 15, 18, 21, 25, 56, 66, 106, 116;
+ Expulsion Bill, ii. 365, 366.
+
+ Orloff, Prince, Russian Ambassador at Paris, ii. 33, 34, 231;
+ policy in Central Asia, ii. 38;
+ conversation with Decazes, ii. 69;
+ withdrawn from Paris, ii. 207.
+
+ Osman Pasha, ii. 167.
+
+ Oxford, Lyons at, i. 1.
+
+
+ Pacific coast defence, i. 40.
+
+ Pagny, ii. 400.
+
+ Pain, Olivier, ii. 358.
+
+ Paladines, General d'Aurelle de, i. 336.
+
+ Palermo, i. 146.
+
+ Palikao, Count, i. 307.
+
+ Palmerston, Lord, on fight of Bull's Run, i. 48;
+ on foreign intervention in American Civil War, i. 92;
+ and Lyons, i. 144, ii. 11;
+ death of, i. 149 _n._
+
+ Papal government, i. 3, 4, 8, 184, ii. 31;
+ and Irish affairs, ii. 234-6.
+
+ Paris, Conference at, i. 153, 155;
+ Lyons appointed to the Embassy, i. 173, 177;
+ riots in, i. 286, 376, 386, ii. 316;
+ panic in, i. 306;
+ defences of, i. 317;
+ diplomatists leave, i. 322;
+ siege of, i. 348;
+ bombardment of, i. 356, 383;
+ military power in, i. 356;
+ Embassy returns to, i. 375;
+ Commune proclaimed, i. 379.
+
+ Paris Exhibition, ii. 161.
+
+ Paris, Treaty of, i. 337, 339.
+
+ Paris, Archbishop of, seized by Commune, i. 384;
+ killed, i. 386.
+
+ Paris, Comte de, ii. 8, 21, 25, 48, 56, 365, 366, 382.
+
+ Park, engineer on the _Cagliari_, i. 9.
+
+ Parnell, Mr., ii. 234.
+
+ Pasquier, Duc d'Audiffret, ii. 117.
+
+ Pau, ii. 22.
+
+ Pauncefote and Egyptian Commission, ii. 353.
+
+ Pearson, Mr., ii. 417.
+
+ Peel, Sir Robert, attack on Lyons, i. 324, ii. 129.
+
+ Penjdeh, fight at, ii. 348.
+
+ Persia, Shah of, visit to Berlin, ii. 354.
+
+ Persian Gulf, Russian policy in, ii. 352.
+
+ Peruvian Papers, i. 32.
+
+ _Peterhoff_, the, i. 100, 103.
+
+ Petre, Mr., i. 2.
+
+ Philippines, German interest in, ii. 60.
+
+ Picard, M., i. 358, 387.
+
+ Pines, Isle of, ii. 362, 364.
+
+ Pius IX., ii. 423.
+
+ Playfair, Colonel, i. 382.
+
+ Poland, French policy in, i. 177, ii. 345.
+
+ Polish Party, intrigues of, i. 272.
+
+ Ponza island, i. 9.
+
+ Portland, U.S.A., i. 81.
+
+ Portugal, independence threatened, ii. 39.
+
+ Postage, international, i. 211.
+
+ Pothuau, Admiral, French ambassador, ii. 203, 210.
+
+ Potomac, i. 59; army of the, i. 128.
+
+ Prague, Treaty of, i. 204.
+
+ Prince Consort, advice in _Trent_ case, i. 61, 77.
+
+ Prince Eugene Barracks, i. 286.
+
+ Protection in U.S.A., i. 18.
+
+ Protection, growth of, in France, i. 241, 243, 245, 284, ii. 3, 27,
+ 165, 244, 257.
+ _See also_ COMMERCIAL TREATIES.
+
+ Protestants in Papal dominions, i. 4.
+
+ Provincetown, i. 74.
+
+ Prussia (_see also_ Germany and Franco-German War), proposed
+ intervention in American Civil War, i. 91;
+ irritation against, in Paris, i. 165;
+ alliance with Italy, i. 178;
+ refuses consent to sell Luxembourg, i. 168;
+ relations with Austria, i. 186;
+ armament of, i. 192;
+ desire for peace, i. 201;
+ relations with Russia, i. 202;
+ question of disarmament, i. 246;
+ and Hohenzollern candidature in Spain, i. 294.
+
+
+ Quebec, i. 116, 133.
+
+ Quertier, M. Pouyer, ii. 23, 24.
+
+
+ Raby, ii. 424.
+
+ Radowitz, M., ii. 130, 231.
+
+ Rahming, i. 132.
+
+ Raindre, M. de, ii. 317.
+
+ Rastadt, Prussian troops at, i. 302.
+
+ Reciprocity Treaties, i. 17, 50, 74, 123.
+
+ Recruiting methods in American Civil War, i. 110, 133.
+
+ Redcliffe, Lord Stratford de, ii. 424;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 150.
+
+ Regnier, M., and General Bourbaki, i. 327.
+
+ Remusat, M. de, ii. 23, 25.
+
+ _Republique Francaise_, anti-English articles in, ii. 180, 302.
+
+ Reunion, ii. 198.
+
+ Rhenish Prussia, i. 193.
+
+ Rhodes, ii. 159.
+
+ Riaz Pasha, ii. 203.
+
+ Richmond, U.S.A., Confederate headquarters, i. 82, 93, 133.
+
+ Ring, M. de, ii. 182, 238.
+
+ Rio Grande, i. 100.
+
+ Ripley, General, i. 94.
+
+ Ripon, Lord, mission to Washington, i. 190.
+
+ Rochebouet, General, ii. 120.
+
+ Rochefort, M. de, i. 230, 244, 313, 358, 363.
+
+ Rogers, Mr., ii. 425.
+
+ Rome, i. 2.
+
+ "Roman question," i. 178, 182, 231.
+
+ Rosebery, Lord, visit to Bismarck, ii. 353;
+ at Foreign Office, ii. 361;
+ retires from office, ii. 371;
+ letters to Lyons, ii. 363, 374.
+
+ Rothschild, Baron Alphonse de, ii. 312, 315, 405.
+
+ Rothschild, Sir Nathaniel, ii. 93, 315.
+
+ Rothschild, Messrs., ii. 90, 175.
+
+ Rouher, M., i. 228, 233, 244, 285, ii. 8;
+ foreign policy, i. 178, 183, 184, 254;
+ resignation of, i. 234, 237.
+
+ Roumania, i. 155, 156, ii. 131.
+
+ Roumelia, ii. 145, 227, 360.
+
+ Roustan. M., French Agent at Tunis, ii. 240, 248.
+
+ Rouvier, M., ii. 335;
+ becomes President, ii. 404.
+
+ Russell, Lord John (Earl Russell), at Foreign Office, i. 17;
+ appoints Lyons attache at Rome, i. 2, ii. 11;
+ policy in U.S.A., i. 37, 38, 61, 76, 90, 101, 127;
+ dislike of Seward, i. 118, 123;
+ his appreciation of Lyons, i. 141;
+ offers Lyons Constantinople Embassy, i. 144, ii. 11;
+ succeeded by Clarendon, i. 149;
+ visit to Paris, i. 283, 284;
+ to Versailles, i. 345;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 19, 37, 52, 62, 64, 92, 98, 99, 118, 132, 141.
+
+ Russell, Odo (Lord Ampthill), on Roman question, i. 187;
+ meets Bismarck at Versailles, i. 339;
+ conversation with Bismarck, ii. 55;
+ on Bismarck's policy, ii. 60, 73, 87;
+ and the Constantinople Congress, ii. 145;
+ alluded to, ii. 71, 236, 345, 354;
+ letters to Derby, ii. 61, 72, 74, 77;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 184, ii. 29, 31, 40, 45, 52, 130;
+ despatch from, ii. 96.
+
+ Russell, W. H., quoted, i. 35.
+
+ Russia, policy in America, i. 91;
+ and the Treaty of Paris, i. 337;
+ foreign policy of, i. 354, ii. 33, 75, 76;
+ relations with Prussia, i. 202, 260, 268, ii. 42, 324;
+ and Denmark, i. 355;
+ policy in Turkey, i. 154, 159, 166, 209, 351;
+ in Eastern question, i. 164, 186, ii. 85;
+ in Asia, ii. 38, 345;
+ reputed ill-will to England, ii. 71;
+ military honour of, ii. 352.
+
+ Russo-Turkish War, ii. 109, 121.
+
+
+ Sackville, Lord, i. 41.
+
+ Sadowa, i. 185, 202, 301, ii. 36.
+
+ St. Albans (Amer.), raid of, i. 135.
+
+ St. Cloud, i. 197, 203, 208, 233.
+
+ St. Denis, i. 382.
+
+ St. Germain, i. 375.
+
+ St. Hilaire, M. Barthelemy, at Foreign Office, ii. 229, 213, 248.
+
+ St. Lawrence, i. 133.
+
+ St. Malo, i. 347, ii. 22.
+
+ St. Paul, M. de, ii. 114.
+
+ St. Petersburg, i. 162, 317.
+
+ St. Quentin, defeat of French at, i. 359.
+
+ St. Thomas, U.S. ships at, i. 104, 105.
+
+ St. Vallier, Comte de, ii. 136.
+
+ _St. Vincent_, deserters from, i. 111.
+
+ Salisbury, Lord, on Derby's foreign policy, ii. 105;
+ at Constantinople Conference, ii. 107, 108;
+ at the Foreign Office, ii. 132, 356;
+ on government of Orientals, ii. 178;
+ and Tunis, ii. 250;
+ and Mgr. Czacki, ii. 233, 234;
+ succeeded by Rosebery, ii. 361;
+ Layard on, ii. 138;
+ letters to Lyons, ii. 133, 140, 142, 144, 158, 172, 173, 175,
+ 176, 178, 180, 185, 187, 188, 190, 193, 242, 371, 386, 391,
+ 395, 409;
+ letter to Waddington, ii. 148.
+
+ Salzburg, ii. 47.
+
+ Sanford, Mr., i. 44.
+
+ _San Jacinto_, American warship, i. 54.
+
+ San Juan, disputed ownership of, i. 18, 23, 29, 30;
+ Company of Marines on, i. 43.
+
+ San Stefano, Treaty of, ii. 124, 131, 136, 137, 144.
+
+ Sapri, i. 9.
+
+ Sardinia, i. 8, 10.
+
+ Saumarez, Lord de, i. 377.
+
+ Saussier, General, ii. 367.
+
+ Savannah, i. 94.
+
+ Savoy, i. 382.
+
+ Saxony, i. 193.
+
+ Saxony, Crown Prince of, i. 387.
+
+ Say, M. Leon, Minister of Finance, ii. 119, 181, 200;
+ elected President of the Senate, ii. 210;
+ Eastern policy, ii. 225;
+ refuses office in Gambetta ministry, ii. 262.
+
+ Schnaebele, M., ii. 400, 401.
+
+ Schouvaloff, Count, Russian Ambassador in London, ii. 76, 80, 88,
+ 140, 142.
+
+ Schwarzenberg, Prince, i. 272.
+
+ Scotland, Papal Government's plans in, i. 4.
+
+ Scott, General, i. 19, 47, 64, 68.
+
+ Sedan, i. 351, ii. 17.
+
+ Seine, English merchant ships sunk in, i. 344;
+ Prefect of the, ii. 65.
+
+ Semmes, Captain, i. 105.
+
+ Servians and the Fortress of Belgrade, i. 161.
+
+ Seward, Mr., i. 29;
+ appointed Secretary of State, U.S.A., i. 30;
+ policy of, i. 31 _et seq._;
+ advocates annexation of Canada, i. 40;
+ in the _Trent_ case, i. 65 _et seq._;
+ friendly relations with England, i. 80;
+ on the war, i. 92;
+ and Conscription Act, i. 115;
+ proposes state visit to England, i. 117-9;
+ correspondence with, i. 121;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 141.
+
+ Seymour, Mr., i. 140.
+
+ Seymour, Admiral Sir Beauchamp (Lord Alcester), ii. 228.
+
+ Sfax, insurrections at, ii. 249.
+
+ Sheffield, Mr. George, Private Secretary to Lyons, i. 90, 136;
+ sent to Frankfort, i. 140;
+ accompanies Lyons to Constantinople, i. 144;
+ to Paris, i. 177, 347, 377, ii. 98, 128, 204, 397, 427;
+ conversations with Gambetta, ii. 226, 237.
+
+ "Shifting Scenes" quoted, i. 137.
+
+ Shumla, ii. 137, 138.
+
+ Siam, ii. 358.
+
+ Simon, M. Jules, i. 387;
+ Prime Minister, ii. 106;
+ turned out of office, ii. 111.
+
+ Sinkat, ii. 322.
+
+ Slave trade in America, i. 20, 34;
+ proclamations of Emancipation, i. 95.
+
+ Slave Trade Treaty, i. 85.
+
+ Slidell, Mr., Confederate delegate to England seized on board the
+ _Trent_, i. 54, 59, 60, 63, 74, 81;
+ failure of mission to Europe, i. 121;
+ Mr. Benjamin's letter to, i. 122.
+
+ Smyrna, proposed seizure of, ii. 228, 230.
+
+ Socialism in France, i. 280.
+
+ Somaliland coast troubles, ii. 362, 363, 409.
+
+ Soudan, Hicks Pasha's disaster, ii. 320, 321;
+ Baker Pasha's defeat, ii. 323;
+ affairs in, ii. 343.
+
+ Spain, internal affairs of, i. 200, 207, 221, ii. 39-41;
+ the Hohenzollern candidature, i. 294;
+ in Mexico, i. 70;
+ commercial relations with France, ii. 26;
+ in Constantinople Conference, ii. 109;
+ King of, mobbed in Paris, ii. 319.
+
+ Spueller, M., ii. 197, 263.
+
+ Stackelberg, on the Turco-Greek question, i. 206.
+
+ _Standard_, the, on Franco-German relations, ii. 382.
+
+ Stanley, Dean, ii. 193.
+
+ Stanley, Lord (Earl of Derby), becomes Foreign Secretary, i. 156_n._;
+ diplomatic views, i. 161;
+ on the Cretan quarrel, i. 163;
+ on the Luxembourg difficulty, i. 169;
+ offers Paris Embassy to Lyons, i. 173;
+ on the Roman question, i. 178, 181;
+ American policy, i. 188;
+ and Franco-Prussian situation, i. 195, 203;
+ succeeded by Clarendon, i. 206;
+ and Prussian disarmament, i. 246;
+ on Parliamentary vote, ii. 10, 11;
+ at the Foreign Office, ii. 54, 123;
+ resignation of, ii. 132;
+ foreign policy, ii. 105, 107;
+ in Egypt, ii. 104, 122;
+ in Russo-Turkish War, ii. 121;
+ in the Eastern Question, ii. 95, 125;
+ in French politics, ii. 64, 112;
+ and the Suez Canal Shares, ii. 93;
+ Bismarck's dislike of, ii. 353, 354;
+ letters to Lyons, i. 164, 168, 195, ii. 71, 86, 87, 91, 121, 125;
+ letter to Odo Russell, ii. 75.
+
+ Stanton, General, and the Suez Canal Shares, ii. 87, 90.
+
+ Staveley, Mr., letter to Lyons, i. 226.
+
+ Stewart, Lady Phillippa, ii. 427.
+
+ Stoeckl, M. de, Russian Minister in U.S.A., i. 32, 33.
+
+ Stoffel, Colonel, military reports of, ii. 50.
+
+ Strasburg, i. 321, 358.
+
+ Stuart, Lord, ii. 9.
+
+ Stuart, Mr., Charge d'affaires in Washington, i. 89, 92, 116.
+
+ Suakim, French consul at, ii. 362.
+
+ Suez Canal, i. 156, 221, 222;
+ Anglo-French relations in, ii. 287, 289, 321;
+ Commission, ii. 348, 352, 362, 363, 375, 388-91.
+
+ Suez Canal Shares, Khedive prepares to sell, ii. 85;
+ purchased by England, ii. 90, 96.
+
+ Sumner, Mr., i. 41, 85, 119, 120.
+
+ Sunderland. Rev. Dr., on the _Trent_ case, i. 76.
+
+ Sweden, King and Queen of, visit to Berlin, ii. 81.
+
+ Switzerland, i. 198, 363;
+ proposed Confederation with South German States, i. 204, 205;
+ and Savoy, i. 382;
+ Commercial Treaty, ii. 8;
+ Protectionist policy, ii. 255.
+
+ Syria, Russia in, ii. 137, 141.
+
+
+ Tahiti, ii. 198.
+
+ Tangier, ii. 386.
+
+ Tariff Bill, U.S.A., i. 50.
+
+ Tel-el-Kebir, ii. 285.
+
+ Tennessee, i. 85.
+
+ Tenterden, Lord, letter to Lyons, ii. 90;
+ on Egypt, ii. 271.
+
+ Tewfik, Prince, ii. 174;
+ proclaimed Khedive, ii. 185;
+ plot to dethrone, ii. 261;
+ proposal to depose, ii. 278, 280.
+
+ Texas, i. 31.
+
+ Therapia, ii. 417.
+
+ Thibaudin, General, ii. 312, 319.
+
+ Thiers, M., foreign policy, i. 185, 338, 347, 368, 373, 378,
+ ii. 19, 43;
+ and the political crisis, i. 282, 284;
+ on Napoleon III., i. 221, ii. 36;
+ interview with Lyons, i. 311;
+ mission to the Powers, i. 315, 317, 335;
+ on causes of the war, i. 316;
+ interview with Clarendon, i. 323;
+ interviews with Bismarck, i. 329, 331, 342, 353, 358;
+ peace efforts, i. 345, 347, 349, 369-71, ii. 29;
+ on the situation in Prussia, i. 332;
+ favours a republic, i. 362, 372;
+ in the National Assembly, i. 365, ii. 1;
+ commercial policy, i. 245, ii. 3, 5, 24;
+ made President, ii. 14;
+ tenders resignation, ii. 21;
+ and military re-organization, ii. 27, 29;
+ ill-health, ii. 31;
+ and the Triple Alliance, ii. 42;
+ succeeded by MacMahon, ii. 43;
+ home policy, ii. 34, 64, _et passim_;
+ Gambetta on, ii. 99.
+
+ Thile, Prussian Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, i. 305.
+
+ Thouvenel, M., i. 44, 63, 66, 67.
+
+ Three Emperors Alliance, ii. 131, 145, 237.
+
+ _Thunderer_, H.M.S., ii. 239.
+
+ _Times_, references to, ii. 258, 303, 335, 343, 358.
+
+ Tirard, M., Minister of Commerce, ii. 253.
+
+ Tissot, M., i. 350, ii. 205;
+ at Constantinople, ii. 210, 300.
+
+ Tonquin, French affairs in, ii. 302, 307, 318, 320, 322, 327, 334,
+ 337, 340, 342, 344, 350, 360, 369, 380.
+
+ Toulon, i. 349.
+
+ Tours, i. 315, 324, 345.
+
+ _Trent_ case, i. 29, 54-78, 101, 103.
+
+ Tripartite Treaty, ii. 141, 142.
+
+ Triple Entente foreseen by Thiers, ii. 39.
+
+ Tripoli, ii. 105; Italy in, ii. 251.
+
+ Trochu, General, i. 303, 307, 318, 345, 354, 358, 359, 361.
+
+ Trower, Major, ii. 424.
+
+ Troyes, i. 197.
+
+ Tuilleries, balls at the, i. 245, 288.
+
+ Tunis, i. 8, 221;
+ French position in, i. 199, ii. 55, 139, 154, 163, 164, 173, 238,
+ 350;
+ French Protectorate established, ii. 243;
+ proposed Commission at, i. 206;
+ Germany in, ii. 55;
+ Italy in, ii. 105, 139.
+
+ Tunis, Bey of, i. 148.
+
+ Turkey, financial affairs, i. 146, 149, _et seq._, ii. 208;
+ bankruptcy of, ii. 84;
+ navy of, i. 151;
+ condition in 1866, i. 159;
+ in Crete, i. 208;
+ in Egypt, ii. 272, 276, 281, 321;
+ policy of Russia in, i. 159, 166, 351;
+ Prussian opinion of, i. 193.
+
+ Turco-Greece affairs, i. 206, 209, 210.
+
+ Turkey, Sultan of, and Khedive Ismail, i. 221;
+ and French Ambassador, ii. 32.
+
+ Tuscany, i. 2, 7.
+
+
+ Ultramontane Party in Belgium, ii. 68.
+
+ Ultramontanes, Bismarck's contest with, ii. 49, 50, 55, 81.
+
+ United States Legation, represents Prussia in France, i. 308, 309.
+
+ _Univers_, the, ii. 51.
+
+
+ Vacoufs, question of secularization, i. 147.
+
+ Varna, ii. 137, 138.
+
+ Varzin, Bismarck at, i. 299, ii. 70.
+
+ Vattel, i. 64.
+
+ Venables, Mrs. Lister, ii. 417.
+
+ Versailles, diplomatic meetings at, i. 330, 337, 345, 358;
+ peace negotiations at, i. 368;
+ National Assembly established at, i. 373;
+ Government retires to, i. 376;
+ Thiers at, ii. 3, 21;
+ MacMahon at, ii. 44.
+
+ Vevey, ii. 90.
+
+ Victor Emmanuel (King of Italy), i. 178, 183, 201.
+
+ Victor, Prince, expulsion from France, ii. 366.
+
+ Victoria, Queen, letter to President Buchanan, i. 26;
+ and _Trent_ case, i. 61;
+ Sultan's wish to visit, i. 171;
+ reported plot against, i. 188;
+ visit to Paris, i. 197, 198;
+ on France in Belgium, i. 211;
+ and the Empress Eugenie, i. 222;
+ on Prussian disarmament, i. 250;
+ on French disarmament, i. 259;
+ and the Hohenzollern candidature i. 297;
+ and exiled royalties, ii. 23;
+ opening speech on Russo-Turkish war, ii. 123;
+ projected visit to Paris Exhibition, ii. 162;
+ and Lyons, i. 76, 144, ii. 354, 397.
+
+ Vienna, i. 140.
+
+ Villiers, Colonel the Hon. George, report on French army, ii. 310.
+
+ Vinoy, General, i. 345.
+
+ Virginia, i. 60, 85, 93.
+
+ Vivian, Mr., H.B.M. Agent at Cairo, ii. 172, 173, 177.
+
+ Vogue, Comte de, ii. 32.
+
+
+ Waddington, M., Minister for Foreign Affairs, ii. 119;
+ and foreign policy, ii. 123;
+ on Egyptian affairs, ii. 133, 171, 176, 180, 338, 389;
+ and Bismarck, ii. 168;
+ internal policy, ii. 147, 148, 195;
+ despatches, ii. 158;
+ resigns office, ii. 201;
+ a Free Trader, ii. 257;
+ and the Ferry Ministry, ii. 313;
+ Lyons on, ii. 145.
+
+ Wagner, opera in Paris, ii. 403.
+
+ Wales, Prince of (Edward VII.), visit to Canada, i. 24, 25;
+ visit to U.S.A., i. 27, 86, 117;
+ visits to Paris, i. 199; ii. 136, 139, 162, 328;
+ at Paris Exhibition, ii. 161;
+ proposed visit to South of France ii. 26;
+ visit to Paris abandoned, ii. 311;
+ and Thiers, ii. 29;
+ attacked in French press, ii. 152;
+ interview with Gambetta, ii. 156;
+ anti-Turkish opinions, i. 162.
+
+ Wales, Princess of (Queen Alexandra), i. 99, 199.
+
+ Walker, Colonel, British military attache at Berlin, i. 219, 372.
+
+ Walker, Mr., despatch to Lord Russell, i. 122.
+
+ Walpole, Lord, i. 6.
+
+ Warre, Mr., i. 14, 17, 87.
+
+ Washbourne, Mr., American Minister in Paris, i. 384.
+
+ Washington, Lyons appointed to Legation, i. 11;
+ Lyons at, i. 23;
+ society in, i. 87;
+ climate of, i. 119;
+ official figures of despatches to and from in 1864, i. 137;
+ work of the Chancery, i. 138.
+
+ Watt, engineer on the _Cagliari_, i. 9.
+
+ Weiss, appointment by Gambetta, ii. 266.
+
+ Welles, Mr., Secretary to U.S. Navy, i. 58, 101, 103, 119.
+
+ Werther, Prussian Ambassador at Paris, ii. 299.
+
+ West Indies, proposals for defence, i. 40.
+
+ Westminster Abbey, ii. 193.
+
+ Westmoreland, Lord, on Parliamentary vote, ii. 10.
+
+ Wheaton on international law, i. 40, 64.
+
+ White Flag manifesto, ii. 57, 58, 65, 66.
+
+ Wilhelmshoehe, i. 333.
+
+ Wilkes, Captain (of the _San Jacinto_), i. 58, 64, 100, 105.
+
+ Wilmington, Vigilance Committee at, i. 35.
+
+ Wilson, M. Daniel, on the Franco-Prussian war, i. 328.
+
+ Wilson, Sir C. Rivers, Minister of Finance in Egypt, ii. 153, 171,
+ 173, 175, 178, 188, 271, 313.
+
+ Winchester, Lyons at, i. 1.
+
+ Wistar, General, i. 112.
+
+ Woburn, Lyons at, ii. 219, 222, 424.
+
+ Wodehouse, Mr. Henry, i. 342, 377;
+ letter to Lyons, i. 343.
+
+ Wood, Mr., despatch from, ii. 55.
+
+ Wolff, Sir H. Drummond, question on Tunis, ii. 239;
+ mission to the Porte, ii. 376, 387, 389, 391, 407, 409.
+
+ Wolseley, Sir Garnet, in Egypt, i. 299, 358.
+
+ Wuertemberg and Confederation, i. 193, 266.
+
+ Wurtzburg, Baron, i. 11, ii. 417.
+
+ Wurtzburg, Baroness, ii. 424.
+
+
+ Young Turk Party, i. 167.
+
+
+ Zanzibar, ii. 378.
+
+ Zululand expedition, ii. 190.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ LONDON AND BECCLES.
+
+ Telegrams:
+ "Scholarly, London." 41 and 43 Maddox Street,
+ Bond Street, London, W.
+ Telephone: _September, 1913._
+ No. 1883 Mayfair.
+
+ Mr. Edward Arnold's
+
+ AUTUMN
+ ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1913.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LORD LYONS.
+
+ A Record of British Diplomacy.
+
+ By the Right Hon. LORD NEWTON.
+
+ _With Portraits. In Two Volumes._ =30s. net.=
+
+The late Lord Lyons was not only the most prominent but the most trusted
+English diplomatist of his day, and so great was the confidence felt in
+his ability that he was paid the unique compliment of being offered the
+post of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.
+
+Lord Newton, who has now undertaken the task of preparing a memoir of
+him, enjoys the advantage of having served under him for five years at
+the Paris Embassy. The interest of this work lies, however, less in the
+personality of the Ambassador than in the highly important events in
+which he played so prominent a part.
+
+Lord Lyons was the British representative at Washington during
+the period of the Civil War; subsequently he was Ambassador at
+Constantinople for two years; and finally he spent twenty years--from
+1867 to 1887--as Ambassador at Paris. During the whole of this eventful
+period his advice was constantly sought by the Home Government upon
+every foreign question of importance, and his correspondence throws
+fresh light upon obscure passages in diplomatic history.
+
+In this book will be found hitherto unpublished information relating to
+such matters as the critical relations between England and the United
+States during the course of the Civil War; the political situation in
+France during the closing years of the Second Empire; the secret attempt
+made by the British Foreign Secretary to avert the Franco-German War,
+and the explanation of its failure; the internal and external policy
+of France during the early years of the Third Republic; the War Scare
+of 1875; the Congress of Berlin; the Egyptian Expedition; Anglo-French
+political relations, and many other matters of interest.
+
+The method selected by the writer has been to reproduce all important
+correspondence verbatim, and it may be confidently asserted that the
+student of foreign politics will find in this work a valuable record of
+modern diplomatic history.
+
+ LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET. W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF
+ GEORGE WILLIAM FREDERICK,
+ FOURTH EARL OF CLARENDON.
+
+ By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart.
+
+ _In Two Volumes. With Portraits. Demy 8vo._ =30s. net.=
+
+Born in the year 1800 and dying in 1870, Lord Clarendon lived through
+a period of social, political, and economic change more rapid probably
+than had been witnessed in any similar space of time in the previous
+history of mankind. It was his lot, moreover, to wield considerable
+influence over the course of affairs, inasmuch as his public service,
+extending over fifty years, caused him to be employed in a succession
+of highly responsible, and even critical, situations. British Minister
+at Madrid at the outbreak and during the course of the Carlist Civil
+War from 1833 to 1839, he was admitted into Lord Melbourne's Cabinet
+immediately upon returning to England in the latter year. He was Lord
+Lieutenant of Ireland throughout the memorable famine years, 1847-1852.
+Relieved of that arduous post, Lord Clarendon entered Lord Aberdeen's
+government in 1852 as Foreign Secretary, which office he retained
+through the Crimean War, and became responsible for the terms of the
+Treaty of Paris in 1856. On Lord Palmerston's death in 1865, he returned
+to the Foreign Office, and had to deal with the settlement of the
+"Alabama" claims.
+
+The annals of the first half of Queen Victoria's reign having been
+pretty thoroughly explored and dealt with by many competent writers, the
+chief interest in these pages will be found in Lord Clarendon's private
+correspondence, which has been well preserved, and has been entrusted to
+Sir Herbert Maxwell for the purpose of this memoir. Lord Clarendon was
+a fluent and diligent correspondent; Charles Greville and others among
+his contemporaries frequently expressed a hope that his letters should
+some day find their way into literature. Sir Arthur Helps, for instance,
+wrote as follows in _Macmillan's Magazine_: "Lord Clarendon was a man
+who indulged, notwithstanding his public labours, in an immense private
+correspondence. There were some persons to whom, I believe, he wrote
+daily, and perhaps in after years we shall be favoured--those of us
+who live to see it--with a correspondence which will enlighten us as
+to many of the principal topics of our own period." It is upon this
+correspondence that Sir Herbert Maxwell has chiefly relied in tracing
+the motives, principles, and conduct of one of the last Whig statesmen.
+Among the letters dealt with, and now published for the first time, are
+those from Lord Melbourne, Lord Palmerston, Lord Aberdeen, Lord Derby,
+M. Thiers, M. Guizot, the Emperor Louis Napoleon, etc., and many ladies.
+
+
+WILLIAM AUGUSTUS, DUKE OF CUMBERLAND, HIS EARLY LIFE AND TIMES,
+1721-1748.
+
+By the Hon. EVAN CHARTERIS,
+
+AUTHOR OF "AFFAIRS OF SCOTLAND, 1744-1746."
+
+_With Plans and Illustrations._ =12s. 6d. net.= [_In preparation._
+
+Mr. Charteris has a good subject in "Butcher" Cumberland, not only on
+account of the historical and romantic interest of his background, but
+also by reason of the Duke's baneful reputation.
+
+In the present volume the author has carried the career of the Duke of
+Cumberland down to the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. The period includes
+the Duke's campaigns in Flanders against Marshal Saxe, the Battle of
+Culloden, and the measures taken for the suppression of the Jacobites in
+Scotland. Mr. Charteris has had the exceptional advantage of studying
+the Cumberland Papers at Windsor Castle, and it is largely by the aid
+of hitherto unpublished documents that he is now able to throw fresh
+light on a character which has been the subject of so much malevolent
+criticism. At the same time the volume deals with the social and
+political conditions among which Cumberland was called on to play so
+important a part in the life of the nation. These have been treated by
+the author with some fulness of detail. Cumberland, in spite of his
+foreign origin, was remarkably typical of the characteristics of the
+earlier Georgian period, and an endeavour has been made in the present
+volume to establish the link between the Duke and the politics, the
+morals, the aims, and the pursuits of the age in which he lived.
+
+
+MY ART AND MY FRIENDS.
+
+THE REMINISCENCES OF SIR F. H. COWEN.
+
+_With Portrait. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+In the course of a long and distinguished musical career, Sir Frederic
+Cowen has had opportunities of visiting many parts of the world, of
+meeting all the most eminent artists of the last half-century, and
+of amassing material for an extremely diverting volume of personal
+recollections. As a child he enjoyed the privilege of being embraced
+by the great Piccolomini; as a young man he toured with Trebelli,
+and became acquainted with the famous Rubinstein, with Buelow, and
+with Joachim. In later life he numbered such well-known musicians as
+Pachmann, Paderewski, Sir Arthur Sullivan, and the de Reszkes, among his
+friends. Nor was the circle of his intimates entirely confined to the
+world of music; he was on terms of the closest friendship with Corney
+Grain, with George Grossmith and Arthur Cecil; he capped the puns of
+Henry J. Byron and Sir Francis Burnand; he laughed at the practical
+jokes of Toole, at the caricatures which Phil May drew for him of
+his friends. To the public Sir Frederick Cowen is well known as the
+conductor of Covent Garden Promenade and Philharmonic Concerts, as the
+composer of such celebrated songs as "The Better Land" and "The Promise
+of Life," of "The Corsair" and "The Butterfly's Ball." In these pages
+he shows himself to be a keen but kindly student of human nature, who
+can describe the various experiences of his past life with a genial but
+humorous pen. The inexhaustible fund of anecdote from which he draws
+tends still further to enliven an amusing and lively volume.
+
+
+A CIVIL SERVANT IN BURMA.
+
+By Sir HERBERT THIRKELL WHITE, K.C.I.E.
+
+_With 16 Pages of Illustrations. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+Sir Herbert Thirkell White, who has but recently retired from the post
+of Lieutenant-Governor of Burma, which he filled with ability and
+distinction, has now written what he modestly calls a "plain story" of
+more than thirty years of official life in India. In this volume are
+narrated the experiences of an Indian Civilian who has devoted the best
+part of his existence to the service of the Empire, and is in a position
+to speak with assurance of the many complicated problems with which the
+white man in India is continually faced. Sir Herbert's acquaintance with
+Burma began in 1878; since then he has had every opportunity of judging
+the peculiar habits, customs, and characteristics of the native Burmese,
+and has been able to compile a valuable record of the impressions they
+have made upon his mind. It was his fate to hold official positions
+of increasing importance during the Viceroyalties of Lord Ripon, Lord
+Dufferin, and Lord Curzon; he was privileged to serve such distinguished
+chiefs as Sir Charles Bernard and Sir Charles Crosthwaite, and witnessed
+that pacification of Burma which the last-named Chief Commissioner has
+described so eloquently in his well-known book on the subject. Sir
+Herbert writes clearly and with knowledge of every aspect of Burmese
+life and character, and this volume of his recollections should prove
+extremely popular among English readers who are interested in the
+government of our Indian Empire and the daily routine of the Indian
+Civil Servant.
+
+
+THIRTY YEARS IN KASHMIR.
+
+By ARTHUR NEVE, F.R.C.S.E.
+
+_With Illustrations and a Map. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+The stupendous natural surroundings amidst which they dwell have
+inspired sojourners in Kashmir and other Himalayan countries to produce
+some of the finest books of travel to be found. Among them will have to
+be included in future this book of Dr. Arthur Neve's, so effectively
+does the author reveal the wonders of the land of towering peaks and
+huge glaciers where he has made his home for the last thirty years.
+
+Going out to Kashmir in 1882 under the auspices of the Church Missionary
+Society, Dr. Neve took over the charge of the Kashmir Mission Hospital
+at Srinagur from Dr. Edmund Downes, who was retiring, and has stayed
+there ever since. In his earlier chapters he gives some account of the
+Punjab and Kashmir in the eighties, and also of the work of the mission.
+He then gets to the principal motif of the book--the exploring tours and
+mountaineering expeditions to which he has devoted his spare time. Nanga
+Parbat, Nun Kun, and many other Himalayan giants, are within hail of
+Srinagur, and before he has finished with the book the reader will find
+he has acquired the next best thing to a first-hand knowledge of this
+magnificent country. Dr. Neve has also a great deal that is interesting
+to tell about the people of various races and religions who inhabit the
+valleys, and from whom his medical help gained him a warm welcome at all
+times.
+
+A series of rare photographs gives a pictorial support to the
+letter-press.
+
+
+SPORT AND FOLK-LORE IN THE HIMALAYA.
+
+By Captain H. L. HAUGHTON.
+
+(36TH SIKHS.)
+
+_With Illustrations from the Author's Photographs. One Volume._
+
+_Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+Captain Haughton has written a book which should prove a welcome
+addition to the library of every sportsman, as well as being of supreme
+interest to the naturalist and the student of folk-lore. On the subject
+of sport the author writes with that thorough insight and sympathy
+which are the fruits of many years' practical experience with rod and
+rifle, in the jungle, on river-bank or mountain-side. In his agreeable
+society the reader may stalk the markhor or the ibex, lightly throw his
+"Sir Richard" across some Kashmiri trout-stream, or lie in wait for the
+Himalayan black bear on its way to feed; and if the author's description
+of his many amusing and exciting adventures and experiences is eminently
+readable, the value of his work is still further enhanced by his
+intimate knowledge of natural history, and by the introduction of many
+of those old Indian legendary tales that he has culled from the lips of
+native Shikaris round the camp-fire at night. The book is illustrated
+throughout with a series of remarkably interesting photographs taken by
+the author in the course of his many sporting expeditions.
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS OF A PENINSULAR VETERAN.
+
+By the late Lieut.-Colonel JOSEPH ANDERSON, C.B., K.H.
+
+_With Photogravure Portrait. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+The late Lieut.-Colonel Joseph Anderson was born in 1790, and from the
+age of fifteen, when he received a commission as Ensign in the 78th
+Regiment, to within a few years of his death in 1877, his career was
+almost continuously as adventurous as it was distinguished. In 1806
+he saw active service for the first time, when he took part in the
+expedition to Calabria; in the following year he served in the Egyptian
+Campaign of that date; and during the Peninsular War he fought at the
+battles of Maida, Busaco, Fuentes d'Onoro, was wounded at Talavera, and
+accompanied Wellington on the retreat to the lines of Torres Vedras. A
+few years later Captain Anderson, now a Captain in the York Chasseurs,
+was sent with his regiment to Barbadoes, and was present at the capture
+of Guadeloupe in 1815. He was appointed Colonel Commandant of the Penal
+Settlement at Norfolk Island in 1834, where his humane endeavours to
+reform the prevailing penal system, and his efforts to quell mutinous
+convicts, met with marked success. Nine years later Colonel Anderson
+went to India to take part in the Mahratta Campaign, and at the Battle
+of Punniar (where he commanded a Brigade) was severely wounded when
+charging the enemy's guns. After retiring from the Service, Colonel
+Anderson settled down in Australia, and it was at his home near
+Melbourne that these memories were compiled, during the later years of a
+strenuous and active life, for the edification of his family. They are
+written in a simple, unaffected style, which renders them peculiarly
+readable, and form a most instructive record of the manners and customs,
+of the mode of warfare, and the military and social life of a past age,
+and a bygone generation.
+
+
+MEMORIES OF A SOLDIER'S LIFE.
+
+By Major-General Sir H. M. BENGOUGH, K.C.B.
+
+_With Portrait. Demy 8vo._ =8s. 6d. net.=
+
+Major-General Sir H. M. Bengough joined the army in 1855, and retired
+in 1898, after more than forty years of distinguished service in all
+quarters of the Empire. His first experience of active warfare dates
+from the Crimea; later on he took the field in the Zulu War and the
+Burma Expedition of 1885. In days of peace he held various high commands
+in India, South Africa, and Jamaica, and finally commanded a brigade
+of infantry at Aldershot. In this volume of personal recollections the
+author narrates the many varied incidents and experiences of a long
+military career and vividly describes the campaigns in which he took
+part. He also gives an interesting account of his adventures in the
+realm of sport--pig-sticking, tiger-shooting, and pursuing other forms
+of game in India and elsewhere; subjects upon which a long experience
+enables him to write with expert knowledge. It will be strange indeed if
+so interesting an autobiographical volume from the pen of a deservedly
+popular soldier and sportsman fails to appeal to a wide public.
+
+
+ZACHARY STOYANOFF.
+
+Pages from the Autobiography of a Bulgarian Insurgent.
+
+Translated by M. POTTER.
+
+_One Volume. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+In this volume Zachary Stoyanoff gives us the narrative of his personal
+experiences during the Bulgarian outbreaks of 1875 and 1876. Almost
+by accident he became an "apostle" of rebellion, and was sent out
+forthwith to range the country, stirring up the villagers and forming
+local committees. It is an amazing story. With unsurpassable candour
+he portrays for us the leaders, their enthusiasm, their incredible
+short-sightedness, and the pitiful inadequacy of their preparations.
+The bubble burst, and after a miserable attempt at flight, Stoyanoff
+was taken prisoner and sent to Philippopolis for trial. There is no
+attempt at heroics. With the same Boswellian simplicity he reveals his
+fears, his cringing, his mendacity, and incidentally gives us a graphic
+picture, not wholly black, of the conquering Turk. The narrative ends
+abruptly while he is still in peril of his life. One is glad to know
+that, somehow, he escaped. A very human document, and a remarkable
+contrast to the startling exhibition of efficiency given to the world by
+the Bulgarians in their latest struggle with the Turks.
+
+
+SPLENDID FAILURES.
+
+By HARRY GRAHAM,
+
+AUTHOR OF "A GROUP OF SCOTTISH WOMEN," "THE MOTHER OF PARLIAMENTS," ETC.
+
+_With Portraits. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+It is perhaps unlikely that any two individuals will agree as to the
+proper definition of the term "A Splendid Failure"--a phrase of which
+the origin would appear to be obscure. It may, however, be roughly
+stated that the "Splendid Failures" of the past divide themselves
+naturally into three classes: those whom their contemporaries invested
+with a fictitious or exaggerated splendour which posterity is quite
+unable to comprehend or appreciate; those whom the modern world regards
+with admiration--but who signally failed in impressing the men of
+their own generation; and those who, gifted with genius and inspired
+with lofty ideals, never justified the world's high opinion of their
+talents or fulfilled the promise of their early days. In this volume of
+biographical essays, the author of "A Group of Scottish Women" and other
+popular works has dealt with a selection of "splendid failures" of whose
+personal history the public knows but little, though well acquainted
+with their names. Wolfe Tone, "the first of the Fenians"; Benjamin
+Haydon, the "Cockney Raphael"; Toussaint L'Ouverture, the "Napoleon
+of San Domingo"; William Betty, the "Infant Roscius"; and "Champagne"
+Townshend, the politician of Pitt's day, may be included under this
+category. The reader cannot fail to be interested in that account which
+the author gives of the ill-fated Archduke Maximilian's attempt to found
+a Mexican monarchy; in his careful review of the work and character
+of Hartley Coleridge; and in his biographical study of George Smythe,
+that friend of Disraeli whom the statesman-novelist took as his model
+for the hero of "Coningsby." This book, which should appeal strongly
+to all readers of literary essays, is illustrated with eight excellent
+portraits.
+
+
+THE CORINTHIAN YACHTSMAN'S HANDBOOK.
+
+By FRANCIS B. COOKE.
+
+_With 20 Folding Plates of Designs for Yachts, and numerous black and
+white Illustrations. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+This new handbook covers the sport of yachting in all its branches. The
+writer, who has had many years' experience of cruising and racing in
+yachts and boats of all types, has treated the subject in a thoroughly
+practical manner. The book is divided into six parts.
+
+In Part I., which deals with the selection of a yacht, the various types
+and rigs suitable for Corinthian yachting are discussed. The designing
+and building of new craft are also dealt with at some length, and
+designs and descriptions of a number of up-to-date small cruisers are
+given.
+
+In Part II. some hints are given as to where to station the yacht. All
+available headquarters within easy reach of London are described, and
+the advantages and disadvantages of each pointed out.
+
+Part III. is devoted to the equipment of yachts, and contains a wealth
+of information as to the internal arrangement, rigging, and fittings of
+small cruisers.
+
+Part IV. treats of the maintenance of small cruising vessels, with
+notes on the cost of upkeep, fitting out and laying up. Other matters
+dealt with in this section are the preservation of sails and gear, and
+insurance.
+
+Part V., on seamanship, covers the handling of fore-and-aft vessels
+under all conditions of weather, and upon every point of sailing.
+
+Part VI. covers the racing side of the sport in a comprehensive manner.
+An exhaustive exposition of the International Sailing Rules is followed
+by hints on racing tactics. The appendix contains, _inter alia_, an
+illustrated description of the British Buoyage System.
+
+Mr. Cooke's well-known handbooks have come to be regarded by yachtsmen
+as standard works, and a new and more ambitious work from his pen can
+hardly fail to interest them.
+
+
+THE FALL OF PROTECTION.
+
+By BERNARD HOLLAND, C.B.,
+
+AUTHOR OF "IMPERIUM ET LIBERTAS."
+
+_One Volume. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+This volume is a political-historical study of the great change which
+took place in British commercial and financial policy mainly between
+the years 1840 and 1850. The writer examines the state of things in
+these respects which existed before this revolution, and describes the
+previous protective system, navigation system, and colonial system.
+He then narrates the process by which those systems were overthrown,
+devoting special attention to the character, career, and changes in
+opinion of Sir Robert Peel, and to the attitude and action of the Tory,
+Whig, and Radical parties, and of their leading men, especially Mr.
+Disraeli, Lord John Russell, and Mr. Cobden. He analyses with care
+the arguments used on all sides in these controversies, especially
+with regard to the Repeal of the Corn Laws, and he shows the extent to
+which questions of imperial preference and the relations between the
+United Kingdom and the Colonies entered into the issues. One chapter is
+devoted to the Bank Act of 1844, and to the consideration of its causes
+and results. The author concludes by tracing very briefly the chain of
+events which connect the period in question with our own day, in respect
+of commercial and fiscal policy, and expresses his own views as to
+existing tendencies and future developments.
+
+Mr. Bernard Holland is known as the author of the Life of the Duke
+of Devonshire, and of "Imperium et Libertas." In a sense the present
+volume is a continuation of the latter book, or rather is an attempt to
+deal more expansively and in detail with certain history and questions
+connected with the same theme, for the full treatment of which there was
+insufficient space in that book. Mr. Holland having acted for a number
+of years as Private Secretary to two successive Secretaries of State for
+the Colonies, has been brought into close touch in a practical way with
+colonial questions. This book, it is hoped, will be of some service both
+to students of economic history and to politicians in active life.
+
+
+PAINTING IN THE FAR EAST.
+
+By LAURENCE BINYON.
+
+_A New Edition, thoroughly Revised, with many new and additional
+Illustrations. Crown 4to._ =21s. net.=
+
+Since the first edition of this book was published in 1907, much has
+happened, and a quantity of new material has been brought to light.
+
+Interest in the subject has been immensely widened and strengthened.
+The museums of Europe and America are vying with each other to procure
+fine specimens of Chinese and Japanese art. The opening this autumn of
+a new museum at Cologne, exclusively devoted to the arts of Eastern
+Asia, is a symptom of the times. Collections, public and private, both
+European and American, have been greatly enriched; and the exhibition in
+1910 at Shepherd's Bush, of treasured masterpieces lent from Japanese
+collections, has provided a standard for the student.
+
+Six years ago, again, scarcely any of the voluminous literature of art
+existing in Chinese and Japanese had been translated. On this side, too,
+an added store of information has been made accessible, though still in
+great part scattered in the pages of learned periodicals. Above all,
+the marvellous discoveries made of recent years in China and Chinese
+Turkestan have substituted a mass of authentic material for groping
+conjectures in the study of the art of the early periods.
+
+In preparing a new edition of this book and bringing it up to date,
+Mr. Binyon has therefore been able to utilize a variety of new sources
+of information. The estimates given of the art of some of the most
+famous of the older masters have been reconsidered. The sections
+dealing with the early art have been in great measure rewritten; and
+the book has been revised throughout. In the matter of illustrations it
+has been possible to draw on a wider range and make a fuller and more
+representative selection.
+
+
+PAINTING IN EAST AND WEST.
+
+By ROBERT DOUGLAS NORTON,
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE CHOICE."
+
+_Crown 8vo._ =5s. net.=
+
+The art of painting, which in the days of Gothic church-building
+contributed so much both to the education and the pleasure of the
+community at large, has admittedly come to appeal to ever-narrowing
+circles, until to-day it cannot be said to play any part in popular
+life at all. This book seeks to discover the causes of its decline
+in influence. A brief review of the chief contemporary movements in
+painting gives point to a suggestion made by more than one thoughtful
+critic that the chief need of Western painting is spirituality.
+Since this is a quality which those competent to judge are at one in
+attributing to Eastern art, the author, in a chapter on Far Eastern
+Painting, sets forth the ideals underlying the great painting of China
+and Japan, and contrasts these ideals with those which have inspired
+painters and public in the West. This leads to an inquiry into the
+uses of imagination and suggestion in art, and to an attempt to find a
+broad enough definition for "spirituality" not to exclude many widely
+divergent achievements of Western painting. Finally, the possibility of
+training the sense of beauty is discussed in the light of successful
+instances.
+
+Incidentally the book touches on many questions which, though of
+interest to picture-lovers, often remain unasked; such, for instance,
+as what we look for in a picture; how far subject is important; why it
+may happen that the interest of one picture, which pleases at first,
+soon wanes, while that of another grows steadily stronger; the value of
+technique, of different media of expression, of mere resemblance, etc.
+
+Without going into the technicalities of aesthetics, the author aims at
+investigating certain first principles which are overlooked at times by
+possessors of even the widest knowledge of individual schools.
+
+
+SHAKESPEARE'S STORIES.
+
+By CONSTANCE MAUD and MARY MAUD.
+
+AS YOU LIKE IT--THE TEMPEST--KING LEAR--TWELFTH NIGHT--THE MERCHANT OF
+VENICE--A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM--MACBETH--HAMLET--ROMEO AND JULIET.
+
+_With Illustrations from the famous Boydell prints. Crown 8vo._
+
+=5s. net.=
+
+Miss Constance Maud is the author of "Wagner's Heroes" and "Wagner's
+Heroines," two books on similar lines to these tales which have had a
+great vogue among young people of all ages. In the present volume she
+tells the charming stories of nine of the most famous of Shakespeare's
+Tragedies and Comedies in prose of delightful and unstudied simplicity.
+On occasion the actual text has been used for familiar passages and
+phrases. These great world-tales, regarded merely as tales, with the
+elemental motives and passions displayed in them, appeal strongly to the
+imagination, and when narrated by a competent pen there cannot be finer
+or more absorbing reading. In addition to this, he must be a dull reader
+in whom they do not awaken a desire to make a closer acquaintance with
+the plays themselves.
+
+The book forms a companion volume to Sir A. T. Quiller-Couch's
+well-known "Historical Tales from Shakespeare."
+
+
+THE MUSE IN MOTLEY.
+
+By HARRY GRAHAM.
+
+AUTHOR OF "RUTHLESS RHYMES FOR HEARTLESS HOMES," ETC., ETC.
+
+_With 24 Illustrations by_
+
+LEWIS BAUMER.
+
+_Fcap. 4to._ =3s. 6d. net.=
+
+All lovers of humorous verse will welcome a fresh volume of lyrics by
+the author of "Deportmental Ditties," "Canned Classics," and other
+deservedly popular products of the Minor Muse. Readers of Captain
+Graham's new collection of light verse will agree with the _Daily
+Chronicle_ in describing its author as "a godsend, a treasure trove, a
+messenger from Olympus; a man who really does see the ludicrous side of
+life, a man who is a genuine humorist." Once again the author of these
+amusing poems attempts to "shoot Folly as she flies," and genially
+satirizes the foibles of the age in a fashion that will certainly add
+to his reputation as a humorist; and his work is rendered still more
+delightful by the drawings of Mr. Lewis Baumer, the well-known _Punch_
+artist, with which it is lavishly illustrated. "It is a great and good
+thing," as the _Pall Mall Gazette_ remarked with reference to another
+of Captain Graham's books, "to have a man among us who is witty all the
+time and lets himself go. We ought to be duly thankful. And we are!"
+
+
+HANNIBAL ONCE MORE.
+
+By DOUGLAS W. FRESHFIELD, M.A.,
+
+VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY; TREASURER OF THE
+HELLENIC AND ROMAN SOCIETIES; FORMERLY PRESIDENT OF THE ALPINE CLUB.
+
+_8vo._ =5s. net.=
+
+In this little volume Mr. Freshfield has put into final shape the
+results of his study of the famous and still-debated question: "By which
+Pass did Hannibal cross the Alps?" The literature which has grown up
+round this intricate subject is surprisingly extensive, and various
+solutions have been propounded and upheld, with remarkable warmth and
+tenacity, by a host of scholars, historians, geographers, military men,
+and mountaineers. Mr. Freshfieid has a solution of his own, which,
+however, he puts forward in no dogmatic spirit, but in such a fashion
+that his book is practically a lucid review of the whole matter in each
+of its many aspects. To an extensive acquaintance with ancient and
+modern geographical literature he unites a wide and varied experience as
+an alpine climber and a traveller, and a minute topographical knowledge
+of the regions under discussion; and these qualifications--in which many
+of his predecessors in the same field of inquiry have been conspicuously
+lacking--enable him to throw much new light on a perennially fascinating
+problem.
+
+
+THE PASTORAL TEACHING OF ST. PAUL.
+
+By the Rev. Canon H. L. GOUDGE,
+
+PRINCIPAL OF THE THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE, ELY; AUTHOR OF "THE MIND OF ST.
+PAUL," ETC.
+
+_Crown 8vo. Cloth._ =2s. 6d. net.=
+
+These lectures were delivered at the end of May, 1913, at the Palace,
+Gloucester, to the clergy of the diocese, and are now published in
+response to the request of those who heard them. They do not constitute
+a detailed commentary on the Pastoral Epistles, though a good deal of
+detailed exegesis necessarily finds a place in them. The writer's aim
+has been to collect and arrange St. Paul's teaching as to the work of
+the Christian pastor, and to point out its applicability to modern
+conditions and modern difficulties. The writer has often found, through
+his experience in conducting Retreats, that the Pastoral Teaching of
+St. Paul is of the greatest value to the clergy to-day, but that this
+teaching is often obscured by the unsystematic character of St. Paul's
+writing and by the passing controversies with which he has to deal. In
+these lectures the First Epistle to Timothy is used as the basis, but
+continually illustrated by passages from the other Pastoral Epistles,
+and from St. Paul's earlier writings. The first lecture deals with the
+pastor's aim, the second with the pastor's character, the third with
+the pastor's work, and the fourth with the adaptation of his message to
+men and to women, to old and to young, to rich and to poor. The ground
+already covered by the writer's earlier book, "The Mind of St. Paul,"
+has been carefully avoided, but it is hoped that the one book may throw
+light upon the other. An index of texts has been added for those who
+may wish to use this second book, as far as that is possible, as a
+commentary.
+
+
+_NEW NOVELS_
+
+SOMETHING AFAR.
+
+By MAXWELL GRAY,
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE SILENCE OF DEAN MAITLAND," "THE GREAT REFUSAL," ETC.
+
+_Crown 8vo. Cloth._ =6s.=
+
+The scene of Maxwell Gray's new story is laid in London and in Italy,
+where the gradual unfolding of an elaborate but absorbing plot holds
+the reader's attention until the very last page of the book. This is a
+tale of heroism, of self-sacrifice, of romance, full of incident and
+adventure, illumined by those tender and imaginative touches, that vivid
+portrayal of character, which the public has learnt to expect from
+the author of "The Silence of Dean Maitland." From these pages we may
+learn that there is "something afar from the sphere of our sorrow," the
+highest aspiration of the lover, the artist, the poet and the saint,
+which, beautiful beyond all that man's heart can divine, is yet within
+the reach of every one of us.
+
+
+THE GENTLE LOVER.
+
+A Comedy of Middle Age.
+
+By FORREST REID,
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE BRACKNELLS," "FOLLOWING DARKNESS," ETC.
+
+_Crown 8vo._ =6s.=
+
+This extremely interesting story, of which the title gives a most apt
+description, is written in a lighter vein than the author's previous
+work. It is a love story, and while the tale itself is enthralling,
+it depends in great measure for its charm on the attractiveness of
+the characters who figure in the drama and who are all very pleasant
+company. The book is essentially human, the note is never forced, yet
+the interest goes on increasing right up to the end. It is actual life
+with its comedy and tragedy so closely intermingled that it is not
+always easy to distinguish one from the other. The scene is laid abroad,
+partly in Bruges, and partly in Italy, but the characters are, with one
+or two exceptions, natives of that part of Ireland with which the author
+is most familiar, and they lose none of their individuality by being
+transplanted to those beautiful old-world cities where we follow their
+varied fortunes. Mr. Reid's previous novels have already secured for
+his work the warm appreciation of some of the best judges of literary
+values, and the present novel may be confidently stated to exhibit his
+undoubted power as a writer of fiction in an advanced and progressive
+stage.
+
+
+_NEW SCIENTIFIC WORKS_
+
+INDUSTRIAL POISONING
+
+From Fumes, Gases, and Poisons of Manufacturing Processes.
+
+By Dr. J. RAMBOUSEK,
+
+PROFESSOR OF FACTORY HYGIENE, AND CHIEF STATE HEALTH OFFICER, PRAGUE
+
+Translated and Edited by Dr. T. M. LEGGE,
+
+H.M. MEDICAL INSPECTOR OF FACTORIES.
+
+_Fully Illustrated. Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
+
+
+MALINGERING
+
+And Feigned Sickness.
+
+By Sir JOHN COLLIE, M.D., J.P.,
+
+MEDICAL EXAMINER, LONDON COUNTY COUNCIL; CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER,
+METROPOLITAN WATER BOARD; CONSULTING MEDICAL EXAMINER TO THE SHIPPING
+FEDERATION; MEDICAL EXAMINER TO THE SUN INSURANCE OFFICE, CENTRAL
+INSURANCE COMPANY, LONDON, LIVERPOOL, AND GLOBE INSURANCE COMPANY,
+AND OTHER ACCIDENT OFFICES; LATE HOME OFFICE MED. REF. WORKMEN'S
+COMPENSATION ACT.
+
+Assisted by ARTHUR H. SPICER, M.B., B.S. (Lond.), D.P.H.
+
+_Illustrated, xii + 340 pp. Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
+
+In this work Sir John Collie, whose wide experience has eminently fitted
+him for the task, has given an interesting and lucid description of the
+methods and peculiarities of the malingerer. He describes fully and in
+detail the methods of examination for the detection of malingering and
+the diseases usually simulated, and discusses the attitude required by
+the medical attendant towards unduly prolonged illness.
+
+
+OLD AGE:
+
+Its Care and Treatment in Health and Disease.
+
+By ROBERT SAUNDBY, M.D., F.R.C.P., LL.D., J.P.,
+
+MEMBER GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL; EX-PRESIDENT BRITISH MEDICAL
+ASSOCIATION; PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE, UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM; PHYSICIAN
+TO THE BIRMINGHAM GENERAL HOSPITAL.
+
+_320 pp._ =7s. 6d. net.=
+
+No English writer having recently dealt with this subject, it has
+been felt that there is room for a book which should bring together
+the various contributions made to it in modern times, including the
+results of the author's extensive experience during forty years of
+medical practice. The author discusses the principles of health, by
+due attention to which healthy old age may be attained. The diseases
+to which the aged are especially liable are fully described, their
+causes are clearly indicated, and the author shows in a practical way
+by what means they may be avoided and how they may be appropriately
+treated. Special attention is given to such important subjects as
+diet, exercise, etc. Suggestive dietary tables are given, both for
+use in health and in particular diseases, while the chapters devoted
+to methods of exercise most suitable in advanced age will also prove
+of value.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET, W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Transcriber notes: |
+ | |
+ | P.30. 'Chiselhurst' changed to 'Chislehurst' |
+ | P.42. 'Gortchakoff' changed to 'Gortschakoff' |
+ | P.88. 'attribute' changed to 'attributed'. |
+ | P.268. 'Commerical' changed to 'Commercial'. |
+ | P.277. 'Commerical' changed to 'Commercial'. |
+ | P.294. 'futher' changed to 'further'. |
+ | P.358. 'in in' changed to 'in'. |
+ | P.376. 'Debats' changed to 'Debuts'. |
+ | P.378. 'the the' changed to 'the'. |
+ | P.388. 'Agenu' changed to 'Agence' as in Agence Havas. |
+ | P.397. 'radicle' changed to 'radical'. |
+ | P.401. 'Schraebele" changed to 'Schnaebele'. |
+ | P.417. 'D'Israeli' changed to 'Disraeli'. |
+ | P.419. 'holdiay' changed to 'holiday'. |
+ | P.432. 'Amabssador' changed to 'Ambassador'. |
+ | P.437' 'Gortchakoff' changed to 'Gortschakoff'. |
+ | P.440. 'Marechal' changed to 'Marechale'. |
+ | P.440. 'Malot' changed to 'Malet'. |
+ | P.442. 'Caroina' changed to 'Carolina'. |
+ | P.443. 'Pasquior' changed to 'Pasquier'. |
+ | P.443. 'd'Audiffrot' changed to 'd'Audiffret'. |
+ | P.445. 'Stowart' changed to 'Stewart'. |
+ | P.446. 'Secreatry' changed to 'Secretary'. |
+ | Fixed Various punctuation. |
+ | |
+ | Please note, text surrounded by =this= is bold, and |
+ | text surrounded by _this_ is italics. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Lyons: A Record of British
+Diplomacy, Vol. 2 of 2, by Thomas Wodehouse Legh Newton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A RECORD OF BRITISH DIPLOMACY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 44143.txt or 44143.zip *****
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