The Inside Story of the Peace Conference eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 554 pages of information about The Inside Story of the Peace Conference.

The Inside Story of the Peace Conference eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 554 pages of information about The Inside Story of the Peace Conference.
looked extremely consequential and took on an imposing bearing, and professors who mentally set down their university chairs in the center of a listening Congress, but soon turned peevish and wandered hither and thither, complaining that they could not, for the life of them, make out what was going on.”  Again:  “It would have been to the interest of all Europe—­rightly understood—­to restore Poland.  This matter may be regarded as the most important of all.  None other could touch so nearly the policy of all the Powers represented,"[11] wrote the Bavarian Premier, Graf von Montgelas, just as the Entente press was writing in the year 1919.

The plenipotentiaries of the Paris Conference had for a short period what is termed a good press, and a rigorous censorship which never erred on the side of laxity, whereas those of the Vienna Congress were criticized without truth.  For example, the population of Vienna, we are told by Bavaria’s chief delegate, was disappointed when it discerned in those whom it was wont to worship as demigods, only mortals.  “The condition of state affairs,” writes Von Gentz, one of the clearest heads at the Congress, “is weird, but it is not, as formerly, in consequence of the crushing weight that is hung around our necks, but by reason of the mediocrity and clumsiness of nearly all the workers."[12] One consequence of this state of things was the constant upspringing of new and unforeseen problems, until, as time went on, the bewildered delegates were literally overwhelmed.  “So many interests cross each other here,” comments Count Carl von Nostitz, “which the peoples want to have mooted at the long-wished-for League of Nations, that they fall into the oddest shapes....  Look wheresoever you will, you are faced with incongruity and confusion....  Daily the claims increase as though more and more evil spirits were issuing forth from hell at the invocation of a sorcerer who has forgotten the spell by which to lay them."[13] It was of the Vienna Congress that those words were written.

In certain trivial details, too, the likeness between the two great peace assemblies is remarkable.  For example, Lord Castlereagh, who represented England at Vienna, had to return to London to meet Parliament, thus inconveniencing the august assembly, as Mr. Wilson and Mr. George were obliged to quit Paris, with a like effect.  Before Castlereagh left the scene of his labors, uncharitable judgments were passed on him for allowing home interests to predominate over his international activities.

The destinies of Poland and of Germany, which were then about to become a confederation, occupied the forefront of interest at the Congress as they did at the Conference.  A similarity is noticeable also in the state of Europe generally, then and now.  “The uncertain condition of all Europe,” writes a close observer in 1815, “is appalling for the peoples:  every country has mobilized ... and the luckless inhabitants are crushed by taxation.  On every side people complain that this state of peace is worse than war ... individuals who despised Napoleon say that under him the suffering was not greater ... every country is sapping its own prosperity, so that financial conditions, in lieu of improving since Napoleon’s collapse, are deteriorating every where."[14]

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The Inside Story of the Peace Conference from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.