[Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire by James Wycliffe Headlam]@TWC D-Link book
Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire

CHAPTER IX
16/19

To shew that they were in earnest, a beginning was made by seizing in Holstein Prussian subjects who had written in the newspapers in a sense opposed to the wishes of the Prussian Government, and carrying them off to be tried at Berlin.

In order to be prepared for all possibilities, an official request was sent to Italy to ask for her assistance in case of an outbreak of war.

After these decisions were arrived at, the King continued his journey to Gastein to complete his cure; there, on Austrian territory in company with Bismarck, he awaited the answer.
In Austria opinions were divided; the feeling of annoyance with Prussia had been steadily growing during the last year.

The military party was gaining ground; many would have been only too glad to take up the challenge.

It would indeed have been their wisest plan to do so--openly to support the claim of Augustenburg, to demand that the Estates of Holstein should be at once summoned, and if Bismarck carried out his threats, to put herself at the head of Germany and in the name of the outraged right of a German Prince and a German State to take up the Prussian challenge.
There were, however, serious reasons against this.


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