The Hohenzollerns in America / With the Bolsheviks in Berlin and Other Impossibilities
CONTENTS
The proper punishment for the Hohenzollerns, and the Hapsburgs, and the Mecklenburgs, and the Muckendorfs, and all such puppets and princelings, is that they should be made to work; and not made to work in the glittering and glorious sense, as generals and chiefs of staff, and legislators, and land-barons, but in the plain and humble part of laborers looking for a job; that they should carry a hod and wield a trowel and swing a pick and, at the day's end, be glad of a humble supper and a night's rest; that they should work, in short, as millions of poor emigrants out of Germany have worked for generations past; that there should be about them none of the prestige of fallen grandeur; that, if it were possible, by some trick of magic, or change of circumstance, the world should know them only as laboring men, with the dignity and divinity of kingship departed out of them; that, as such, they should stand or fall, live or starve, as best they might by the work of their own hands and brains. Could this be done, the world would have a better idea of the thin stuff out of which autocratic kingship is fashioned.
It is a favourite fancy of mine to imagine this transformation actually brought about; and to picture the Hohenzollerns as an immigrant family departing for America, their trunks and boxes on their backs, their bundles in their hands.
The fragments of a diary that here follow present the details of such a picture. It is written, or imagined to be written, by the (former) Princess Frederica of Hohenzollern. I do not find her name in the Almanach de Gotha. Perhaps she does not exist. But from the text below she is to be presumed to be one of the innumerable nieces of the German Emperor.
At last our embarkation is over, and we are at sea. I am so glad it is done. It was dreadful to see poor Uncle William and Uncle Henry and Cousin Willie and Cousin Ferdinand of Bulgaria, coming up the gang-plank into the steerage, with their boxes on their backs. They looked so different in their rough clothes. Uncle William is wearing an old blue shirt and a red handkerchief round his neck, and his hair looks thin and unkempt, and his moustache draggled and his face unshaved. His eyes seem watery and wandering, and his little withered arm so pathetic. Is it possible he was always really like that?
Stephen Leacock
THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA
With The Bolsheviks In Berlin And Other Impossibilities
I.—The Hohenzollerns in America
PREFACE
CHAPTER I — On Board the S.S. America. Wednesday
CHAPTER II — City New York. 2nd Avenue
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
II.—With the Bolsheviks in Berlin
III.—Afternoon Tea with the Sultan
A Study of Reconstruction in Turkey
IV.—Echoes of the War
1.—The Boy Who Came Back
2.—The War Sacrifices of Mr. Spugg
3.—If Germany Had Won
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4.—War and Peace at the Galaxy Club
5.—The War News as I Remember it
I—THE CABLE NEWS FROM RUSSIA
II—SAMPLE OF SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE
III—THE TECHNICAL WAR DESPATCHES
IV—THE WAR PROPHECIES
V—DIPLOMATIC REVELATIONS
VI—A NEW GERMAN PEACE FORMULA
VII—THE FINANCIAL NEWS
6.—Some Just Complaints About the War
7.—Some Startling Side Effects of the War
EDITORIAL FROM THE LONDON "SPECTATOR"
BONNE MERE PITOU
V.—Other Impossibilities
1.—The Art of Conversation
I—HOW TO INTRODUCE TWO PEOPLE TO ONE ANOTHER
Introduction to H.E. the Viceroy of India, K.C.B.,
K.C.S.I., S.O.S.
II—HOW TO OPEN A CONVERSATION
2.—Heroes and Heroines
3.—The Discovery of America;
Being Done into Moving Pictures and Out Again
4.—Politics from Within
5.—The Lost Illusions of Mr. Sims