INTERNATIONAL ILL-WILL

Great events do not proceed from small causes [69]
German hatred of England [70]
This is the German people's war [71]
Their illusion that England brought it about [73]
Difficulties in the way of international understandings [73]
British and German diplomacy compared [74]
German distrust and British indifference [78]
British policy as it appears to German eyes [79]
Vacillation mistaken for duplicity [80]
German policy as it appears to British eyes [81]

[PART II]

THE SPIRIT OF GERMAN POLICY

[CHAPTER I]

THE BISMARCKIAN EPOCH

National dreams [87]
1789 and after [87]
The first German dream—Union [88]
How it was realised [89]
What the world thought of it [90]
Material development in Germany [91]
The peace policy of Bismarck [92]

[CHAPTER II]

AFTER BISMARCK

Nightmares and illusions [94]
Grievances against England, France, and Russia [96]
The second German dream—Mastery of the World [97]
Absorption of Belgium, Holland, and Denmark [98]
The Austro-Hungarian inheritance [98]
The Balkan peninsula [99]
Turkey in Asia [100]
German diplomacy at Constantinople [101]
The Baghdad Railway [102]
The hoped-for fruits of 'inevitable' wars [103]
The possession of Africa [103]
The Chinese Empire [104]