A scrap of paper
Transcriber’s Notes
This book did not have a Table of Contents. The one below has been prepared by the Transcriber, using the actual Chapter headings.
CONTENTS
Photo: Elliott & Fry
Dr. E. J. DILLON
THE INNER HISTORY OF GERMAN DIPLOMACY AND HER SCHEME OF WORLD-WIDE CONQUEST
By Dr. E. J. DILLON
Third Edition.
HODDER AND STOUGHTON LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO MCMXIV
“Just for a word—neutrality, a word which in war-time had so often been disregarded—just for a scrap of paper Great Britain was going to make war.” Such was the significant comment of the German Chancellor on Great Britain’s determination to uphold the neutrality of Belgium. A scrap of paper! This phrase, applied to a binding treaty, is destined to stick like a Nessus’ shirt to the memory of its author, his imperial inspirer, and their country until such time as the militarism which originated it has been consumed without residue. It is a Satanic sneer hurled with fell purpose into a world of civilized human beings. No such powerful dissolvent of organized society has been devised since men first began to aggregate. The primal source of the inner cohesive force which holds the elements of society together is faith in the plighted word. Destroy that and you have withdrawn the cement from the structure, which will forthwith crumble away. But this prospect does not dismay the Prussian. He is ready to face and adjust it to his needs. He would substitute for this inner cohesion the outer pressure of militarism, which, like the hoops of a barrel, press together the staves. Brutal force, in the form of jackboot tyranny, then, is the amended formula of social life which is to be forced upon Europe and the world. Such, in brief, is the new social gospel of the Hohenzollerns, the last word of Teutonic culture.
This revolutionary doctrine, applied thus simply and undisguisedly to what normal peoples deem the sacredness of treaties, has awakened dormant British emotion to self-consciousness and let loose a storm of indignation here. It startled the quietism of the masses and their self-complacent leaders, whose comforting practice was to refuse to think evil of the Germans, however overwhelming the evidence. The windy folly of these advocati diaboli , from whom the bulk of the British nation derived their misconceptions of the German Empire, worked evils of which we have as yet witnessed only the beginning. Those who, like myself, know the country, its institutions, its language, literature, social life, and national strivings, and who continually warned their countrymen of what was coming, were put out of court as croaking prophets of the evil which we ourselves were charged with stirring up.
Emile Joseph Dillon
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INTRODUCTORY
The Bolt from the Blue.
War Against Servia Only.
Russia had no Right to Intervene.
Austria Yields at Last.
Germany Enters the Lists.
The Ambassadors Make their Exit.
Traditional Austrian Courtesy.
To the Princes and Peoples of my Indian Empire:
“Not Very Tactful.”
Colonial Loyalty.
Austria’s Impossible Demands.
Servia’s Position.
Assurances and Concessions.
Germany’s Duties.
Austria’s Last Word.
Deceptive Representations.
Summing up the Position.
Servia’s Readiness to Give Satisfaction.
Austria’s Refusal of Mediation.
Russia’s Mobilization.
Russia’s Efforts for Peace.
Telegram to Russian Ambassadors.
Austria’s Declaration of War.
FOOTNOTES
Transcriber’s Notes