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your dogmas, men perforce must fight

      With swords as well as words: be it their care

      With either, to heed honour, and fight fair.

      You would "speak daggers" only; be it so;

      But a word-stab may be a felon blow.

      John Bright certainly spoke daggers against those who, in his own phrase, kept the rebellion pot always on the boil.

      Germany's Momentous Year

      The Earl of Iddesleigh, better known as Sir Stafford Northcote, died in January. There is an unmistakable reference to Lord Randolph Churchill's treatment of his one-time leader in the verses in which Punch paid homage to a statesman "worn yet selfless, disparaged and dispraised," yet a "pattern of proud but gentle chivalry": —

      So the arena's coarser heroes mocked

      This antique fighter. And his place was rather

      Where Arthur's knights in generous tourney shocked

      Than where swashbucklers meet or histrions gather:

      Yet – yet his death has touched the land with gloom;

      All England honours Chivalry – at his tomb.

      Here the reference to Lord Randolph is inferential though unmistakable. But an opportunity for having a dig at him is never missed. When the Bulgarian throne was offered to Prince Ferdinand, and his cautious and diplomatic tactics resulted in long delays, Punch in pure malice suggested that the crown should be offered to Lord Randolph. He may be forgiven, however, in view of the remarkably accurate estimate which he formed of the slyness, timidity and meanness of "Ferdinand the Fox," and the alternations of servility and insolence in his attitude towards Russia. Bismarck again comes in for honorific notice this year in the guise of Sintram, accompanied and menaced by Socialism (the Little Master), but confidently riding along on his steed Majority. But 1888 was a momentous year for Germany – the year in which two Kaisers died and a third succeeded to the heritage of the Hohenzollerns. The old Emperor Wilhelm, the "Greise Kaiser," died on March 9; within a hundred days his son, the "Weise Kaiser," had fallen to the fatal malady which had sapped his splendid physique, to be succeeded in turn by the "Reise Kaiser," the nickname bestowed on Wilhelm II for his passion for movement and travel. At the moment of his accession Punch was not inclined to be critical. The cartoon of "The Vigil" in June of that year expresses no misgivings, but only sympathy for one called to bear so heavy a burden. And this view is amplified in the verses in which the lessons of the past are used to fortify the hopes of the future: —

THE VIGIL

      "Verse-moi dans le cœur, du fond de ce tombeau

      Quelque chose de grand, de sublime et de beau!"

Hernani, Act iv, Scene 2.

      The prayer of Charles, that rose amidst the gloom

      Of the dead Charlemagne's majestic tomb,

      Might fitly find an echo on the lips

      Of the young Prince, whose pathway death's eclipse

      Hath twice enshadowed in so brief a space.

      Grandsire and Sire! Stout slip of a strong race,

      Valiant old age and vigorous manhood fail,

      And leave youth, high with hope, with anguish pale,

      In vigil at their tomb! Watch on, and kneel,

      Those clenched hands crossed upon the sheathèd steel.

      Not lightly such inheritance should fall.

      Hear you not through the gloom the glorious call

      Of Valour, Duty, Freedom?

      … And youth must face

      What snowy age and stalwart manhood found

      A weight of sorrow, though with splendour crowned.

      Young Hohenzollern, soldierly of soul,

      Heaven fix your heart on a yet nobler goal

      Than sword may hew its way to. Those you mourn

      Heroes of the Great War when France was torn

      With Teuton shot, knew that the sword alone

      May rear, but shall not long support a throne.

      William has passed, bowing his silver crest,

      Like an old Sea King going to his rest;

      Frederick, in fullest prime, with failing breath,

      But an heroic heart, has stooped to death:

      Here, at their tomb, another Emperor keeps

      His vigil, whilst Germania bows and weeps.

      Heaven hold that sword unsheathed in that young hand,

      And crown with power and peace the Fatherland!

      Only a fortnight before the death of the old Emperor, Bismarck's Army Bill had awakened Punch's misgivings. He reluctantly admired the strength of the lion combined with the shrewdness of the fox; and put into Bismarck's mouth the sonorous couplet: —

      I speak of Peace, while covert enmity

      Under the smile of safety wounds the world.

      (Founded on the first part of an old Fable of Dædalus and Icarus, the Sequel of which Mr. Punch trusts may never apply.)

      But by September it was the young Kaiser, not Bismarck, who invited "A Word in Season." The counsel was prompted by a speech in which he declared, "It is the pride of the Hohenzollerns to reign at once over the noblest, the most intellectual and most cultured of nations," a sentiment mild when compared with later utterances, yet sufficiently thrasonic to earn a rebuke for indulging in demagogic flattery, coupled with the advice to read Lord Wolseley's article in the Fortnightly on Marlborough, Wellington and Napoleon, and to emulate the reticence of Moltke. In less than a month the inevitable cleavage between the Kaiser and his Chancellor is foreshadowed in the splendid cartoon reproduced, where Bismarck as Dædalus warns Wilhelm as Icarus, in a paraphrase of Ovid: —

      My son, observe the middle path to fly,

      And fear to sink too low, or rise too high.

      Here the sun melts, there vapours damp your force,

      Between the two extremes direct your course.

      Nor on the Bear, nor on Boötes gaze,

      Nor on sword-arm'd Orion's dangerous rays;

      But follow me, thy guide, with watchful sight,

      And as I steer, direct thy cautious flight.

Metamorphoses, Book VIII, Fable iii.

      For the establishment of the Triple Alliance Punch held Bismarck responsible. The three high contracting Powers become the "Sisters Three," Italy as Atropos, Austria as Lachesis, and Germany as Clotho. The policy is expounded in "a Bismarckian version of an old classical myth." Bismarck claims to be working for peace so long as he is the cloud compeller. While he is in power it will be all well with Germany. Of Austria he is less certain, owing to the precariousness of her crown, but he counts confidently on Italy, and ends on an optimistic note, dwelling on the pacific aims of this new political pact. It is hard to tell whether this is irony on the part of Punch or a genuine approval of the Triple Alliance. But there is no doubt of his mistrust of Germany's ulterior motives in undertaking to co-operate with England in suppressing the Slave Trade in Africa – a mistrust expressed in the quatrain: —

      When Fox with Lion hunts,

      One would be sorry

      To say who gains, until

      They've shared the quarry.

      Boulanger's Bid for Dictatorship

      The sequel justified the suspicion, and less than a year later Punch published

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