THE GERMAN REICHSTAG AND THE PRUSSIAN PARLIAMENT.
The Reichstag, or Imperial Diet of
the German Empire, was, during our stay in Berlin,
a focus for the eyes of all Europe and America.
The Government, professedly actuated by a fear of
war, asked for an appropriation, largely to increase
the army annually for a term of seven years.
This House of Deputies, elected by the people and
numbering nearly four hundred members, contained a
considerable element of opposition to the Government.
The debate over the Army Bill brought Chancellor Bismarck
up from his distant country-seat, where he had spent
several previous months, to a participation in the
contest which was anticipated on both sides with eagerness
and solicitude.
The building on Leipziger Straße,
as severe in inner details as in the sombre gray of
its outer walls, was hastily constructed in 1871 for
the accommodation of the newly consolidated German
Empire, and has long been inadequate to the need.
A single gallery surrounds three sides of the hall,
and is occupied on the right by boxes for the Imperial
household, the diplomatic corps, and high officials.
The left is appropriated to English and American visitors;
and the centre, immediately above the desk of the
presiding officer and the elevated seats of the Chancellor
and members of the Bundesrath, is alone left for the
general public. When the new building near the
Thiergarten shall be occupied, it is hoped that greatly
improved acoustics and ventilation may be secured,
and the accommodations for visitors such that it may
not be said that there are Germans in Berlin who have
for years desired visitors’ tickets of admission
without having been able to secure them.
By a singular good fortune, our tickets
gave us seats for this debate in full view of the
leaders of each of the great parties. On the
first day the Prime Minister made his great speech,
and on the second day thereafter, Richter, the leader
of the progressive party, took up the speech point
by point, and with bold and vigorous oratory for two
hours held the attention of all to his own opposing
views. A man of robust physique, still in the
prime of life, Richter’s dark complexion and
facial expression give the impression of “staying
qualities” formidable as lasting. The session
opened at eleven o’clock A.M., and the veteran
General and Field-Marshal Von Moltke was the first
speaker. His rising was the signal for a general
hush, and for about a quarter of an hour all listened
in breathless silence. Half the width of the
hall from the observer, his more than eighty years
seemed to sit lightly on “the great taciturnist;”
and his fair complexion, fine brow, thin face, and
singular firmness of mouth have the fascination of
genius. Later, during the long and sometimes denunciatory
speech of Richter, he seemed wearied. Rising
from his seat in the front rank of the Conservatives
on the extreme right, he moved to the rear, stood in
the aisle, took a vacant seat, resting by
various changes for fifteen or twenty minutes; but
when, between one and two o’clock, the time
for Bismarck’s entrance approached, he returned
to his own seat and thenceforth listened attentively.
Like the aged Emperor, Von Moltke’s age was
most apparent in his movements. Sitting or standing,
he was the graceful, well-bred gentleman, as well as
the dignified chief of the German army. In walking,
his movement is slow, and lacking vigor to a marked
degree. The offer of the Opposition to vote for
the bill with a term of one, two, or even three years,
while declaring that they could not vote for seven,
was haughtily received by the Prime Minister, who
had already given his reasons, supported by the Emperor,
by Von Moltke, and other eminent military authority,
for adhering to the longer term. “I will
not abate a hair’s breadth of the septenate,”
said he. “If you do not vote it, I prefer
to deal with another Reichstag.” This on
the second day of the debate. On the third day
Bismarck replied to some of the positions of the Opposition,
in a speech of three quarters of an hour, immediately
following his opponent, Richter. The latter,
and the members on the left included in the three
great divisions of the Liberal party, retired from
the hall at the conclusion of Richter’s two
hours’ speech; but the centre, or Catholic party,
among whom were several priests and a number of very
keen and watchful physiognomies, remained in their
seats, as well as the Conservatives of both grades.
Soon Richter was back, though without his supporters.
Fumbling a moment at his desk for pencil and paper,
he stepped forward in the aisle, so as not to lose
the sentences of Bismarck (occasionally somewhat indistinct),
and refusing to be diverted for more than an instant
by the communications of friends and officials.
Cries of Ja wohl! Ja wohl! and Bravo!
were heard from the right during the speech of Bismarck,
with now and again a general ripple of laughter at
some pleasantry accessible to the German mind; but
these were much outdone in heartiness by the applause
which frequently interrupted Richter when speaking.
There is a massiveness about this scene which rises
up in memory with a vividness greater, if possible,
than the reality made on our excited and wearied endurance
during the hours we spent there. Later, Windhorst,
the leader of the Roman Catholic party, made a memorable
speech. The dozen great electric lights depending
from the ceiling were extinguished when the early
afternoon sun faintly struggled with the clouds for
entrance through the skylight which forms the entire
roof of the room, except those left burning near the
seats of Bismarck and Von Moltke, which brought these
foremost figures into strong relief. Prince William now
Emperor and the gentlemen of his party were
in gay uniforms in the Imperial box, and the diplomatic
box was lighted mainly by the diamonds of the ladies
who sat there; while the crowded ranks of the other
galleries were in dim twilight. It was a picture
to remain in history. The bill was lost.
In less than twenty-four hours after we left the Reichstag,
Bismarck had read his summary dissolution of the Diet,
and before another sunset the hall was closed and silent.
The Iron Chancellor had made his appeal to the country.
The war-cloud was heavy over Europe, and great was
the excitement in Berlin. Under fear of a bolt
which might strike at any moment, the elections for
a new Chamber were held, and Bismarck had his will.
The Reichstag is the representative
body of the whole German Empire, with its four kingdoms,
six grand duchies, and sixteen lesser principalities
and powers united under one emperor. Prussia is
a kingdom which forms but one, though the most important,
of these constituent parts. The Reichstag is
a kind of Upper and Lower House in one; the Bundesrath
or Federal Council, with somewhat arbitrary powers,
has its private Council-room; but the Chancellor of
the Empire is its presiding officer, and, with the
members of this Council, occupies the elevated platform
at the right of the President of the Reichstag.
The chief function of the latter as a legal Chamber
of Deputies is to check the power of the Bundesrath.
It can thus reject bills and refuse appropriations,
but has no power to bring about a change of administration.
The Prussian Diet is composed of two
separate houses. The building of the Lower House the
Abgeordnetenhaus is near the eastern
extremity of the Leipziger Straße, and
the House of Lords Herrenhaus is
adjacent to the Reichstag-Gebäude. The
Prussian Lower House is somewhat larger in numbers
than the Reichstag, and is of course an elective body.
It contained a number of eminent men, as
Herr Windhorst, also the leader of the Catholic party
in the Reichstag, and Professor Virchow. On the
day of our visit no business of special importance
was before the assembly, and visitors’ tickets
were obtained with an ease in pleasing contrast to
the most difficult feat of obtaining entrance to the
Reichstag on a great occasion.
The House of Lords is reputed a dull
place, and is seldom visited. In a dwelling formerly
occupying this site (N Leipziger Straße),
and of which some memorials remain, Felix Mendelssohn
spent, with his parents and sister Fanny, several
years of his wonderful youth; and the “Gartenhaus”
of this estate witnessed the memorable private performance
of the work which first revealed his greatness to the
world, the “Overture to the Midsummer
Night’s Dream.”