The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 21 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 526 pages of information about The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 21.

The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 21 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 526 pages of information about The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 21.

True, the advent of the Turkish constitution saw Germany thrown crop and heels out of his snug place at Turkey’s capital, while that comfortable old suitor, Great Britain, which had been biting his finger-nails on the doorstep, was welcomed smiling once more into the parlor.  Great was the rejoicing in London when Abdul Hamid’s “down-and-out” performance carried his trusted friend William along.  The glee changed to grief when, within a year—­so quickly does the appearance of the chess-board change in “the great game”—­Great Britain was once more on the doorstep, and fickle Germany was snuggling close to Young Turkey on the divan in the dimly lighted parlor.  Virtuous old Britain professed to be shocked and horrified; he occupied himself with talking scandal about young Germany, when he should have been busy trying to supplant him.  Few chapters in modern diplomatic history are more surprising than the sudden downfall and restoration of Germany in Turkish favor.  With reason does the Kaiser give Ambassador von Bieberstein, “the ablest diplomat in Europe,” constant access to the imperial ear, regardless of foreign-office red tape.  During the heyday of the Young Turk party’s power, this astute old player of the game was the dominant personality in Turkey.

The disgruntled and disappointed Britons have comforted themselves with prophecy—­how often have I heard them at it in the cosmopolitan cafes of Constantinople!—­the burden of their melancholy lay being that some day Turkey would learn who is her real friend.  That is the British way.  They believe in their divine right to the earth and the high places thereof.  They are annoyed and rather bewildered when they see Germany cutting in ahead of them, especially in the commerce of the Orient; any Englishman “east of Suez” can give a dozen good reasons why Germany is an incompetent upstart; but however satisfactory and soothing to the English soul this line of philosophy may be, it drives no German merchantmen from the sea and no German drummers from the land.  The supineness of the British in the face of the German inroads into their ancient preserves is amazing to an American, who, as one of their own poets has said,

     Turns a keen, untroubled face
     Home to the instant need of things.

In this case, however, the proverbial luck of the British has been with them.  The steady decline of their historic prestige in the near East was suddenly arrested by Italy’s declaration of war.  For more than a generation Turkey has been the pampered enfant terrible of international politics, violating the conventions and proprieties with impunity; feeling safe amid the jealousies of the players of “the great game.”  Every important nation has a bill of grievances to settle with Turkey; America’s claim, for instance, includes the death of two native-born American citizens, Rogers and Maurer, slain in the Adana massacre, under the constitution.  Nobody has been punished for this crime, because, forsooth, it happened in Turkey.  Italy made a pretext of a cluster of these grievances, and startled the world by her claims upon Tripoli, accompanied by an ultimatum.  Turkey tried to temporize.  Pressed, she turned to Germany with a “Now earn your wages.  Get me out of this scrape, and call off your ally.”

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The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 21 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.