[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 III
33/44

The hatred of bureaucracy he never overcame, even when he was at the head of the Prussian State.

It arose partly from the natural opposition between the nobleman and the clerk.

Bismarck felt in this like Stein, the greatest of his predecessors, who though he had taken service under the Prussian Crown never overcame his hatred of "_the animal with a pen_" as he called Prussian Civil Servants, and shed tears of indignation when he was first offered a salary.

Bismarck was never a great nobleman like Stein and he did not dislike receiving a salary; but he felt that the Civil Servants were the enemies of the order to which he belonged.

He speaks a few years later of "the biting acid of Prussian legislation which in a single generation can reduce a mediatised Prince to an ordinary voter." He is never tired of saying that it was the bureaucracy which was the real introducer of the Revolution into Prussia.


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