AMBASSADOR MORGENTHAU'S STORY
CHAPTER III
"THE PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE KAISER"---WANGENHEIM OPPOSES THE SALE OF
AMERICAN WARSHIPS TO GREECE
But even in March, 1914, the Germans had pretty well tightened their hold on
Turkey. Liman von Sanders, who had arrived in December, had become the
predominant influence in the Turkish army. At first Von Sanders' appointment
aroused no particular hostility, for German missions had been called in before
to instruct the Turkish army, notably that of Von der Goltz, and an English
naval mission, headed by Admiral Limpus, was even then in Turkey attempting the
difficult task of reorganizing the Turkish navy. We soon discovered, however,
that the Von Sanders military mission was something quite different from those
which I have named. Even before Von Sanders' arrival it had been announced that
he was to take command of the first Turkish army corps, and that General
Bronssart von Schnellendorf was to become Chief of Staff. The appointments
signified nothing less than that the Kaiser had almost completed his plans to
annex the Turkish army to his own. To show the power which Von Sanders'
appointment had given him, it is only necessary to say that the first army corps
practically controlled Constantinople. These changes clearly showed to what an
extent Enver Pasha had become a cog in the Prussian system.
Naturally the representatives of the Entente Powers could not tolerate such a
usurpation by Germany. The British, French, and Russian Ambassadors immediately
called upon the Grand Vizier and protested with more warmth than politeness over
Von Sanders' elevation. The Turkish Cabinet hemmed and hawed in the usual way,
protested that the change was not important, but finally it withdrew Von
Sanders' appointment as head of the first army corps, and made him Inspector
General. However, this did not greatly improve the situation, for this post
really gave Von Sanders greater power than the one which he had held before.
Thus, by January, 1914, seven months before the Great War began, Germany held
this position in the Turkish army: a German general was Chief of Staff; another
was Inspector General; scores of German officers held commands of the first
importance, and the Turkish politician who was even then an outspoken champion
of Germany, Enver Pasha, was Minister of War.
After securing this diplomatic triumph Wangenheim was granted a vacation---he
had certainly earned it---and Giers, the Russian Ambassador, went off on a
vacation at the same time. Baroness Wangenheim explained to me---I was ignorant
at this time of all these subtleties of diplomacy---precisely what these
vacations signified. Wangenheim's leave of absence, she said, meant that the
German Foreign Office regarded the Von Sanders episode as closed---and closed
with a German victory. Giers's furlough, she explained, meant that Russia
declined to accept this point of view and that, so far as Russia was concerned,
the Von Sanders affair had not ended. I remember writing to my family that, in
this mysterious Near-Eastern diplomacy, the nations talked to each other with
acts, not words, and I instanced Baroness Wangenheim's explanation of these
diplomatic vacations as a case in point.
An incident which took place in my own house opened all our eyes to how
seriously Von Sanders regarded this military mission. On February 18th, I gave
my first diplomatic dinner; General Von Sanders and his two daughters attended,
the General sitting next to my daughter Ruth. My daughter, however, did not have
a very enjoyable time; this German field marshal, sitting there in his gorgeous
uniform, his breast all sparkling with medals, hardly said a word throughout the
whole meal. He ate his food silently and sulkily, all my daughter's attempts to
enter into conversation evoking only an occasional surly monosyllable. The
behaviour of this great military leader was that of a spoiled child.
At the end of the dinner Von Mutius, the German chargé d'affaires, came up to me
in a high state of excitement. It was some time before he could sufficiently
control his agitation to deliver his message.
"You have made a terrible mistake, Mr. Ambassador," he said.
"What is that?" I asked, naturally taken aback.
"You have greatly offended Field Marshal Von Sanders. You have placed him at the
dinner lower in rank than the foreign ministers. He is the personal
representative of the Kaiser and as such is entitled to equal rank with the
ambassadors. He should have been placed ahead of the cabinet ministers and the
foreign ministers."
So I had affronted the Emperor himself! This, then, was the explanation of Von
Sanders' boorish behaviour. Fortunately, my position was an impregnable one. I
had not arranged the seating precedence at this dinner; I had sent the list of
my guests to the Marquis Pallavicini, the Austrian Ambassador and dean of the
diplomatic corps, and the greatest authority in Constantinople on such delicate
points as this. The Marquis had returned the list, marking in red ink against
each name the order of precedence 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc. I still possess this
document as it came from the Austrian Embassy, and General Von-Sanders' name
appears with the numerals "13" against it. I must admit, however, that "the 13th
chair" did bring him pretty well to the foot of the table.
I explained the situation to Von Mutius and asked M. Panfili, conseiller of the
Austrian Embassy, who was a guest at the dinner, to come up and make everything
clear to the outraged German diplomat. As the Austrians and Germans were allies,
it was quite apparent that the slight, if slight there had been, was
unintentional. Panfili said that he had been puzzled over the question of Von
Sanders's position, and had submitted the question to the Marquis. The outcome
was that the Austrian Ambassador had himself fixed Von Sanders' rank at number
13. But the German Embassy did not let the matter rest there, for afterward
Wangenheim called on Pallavicini, and discussed the matter with considerable
liveliness.
"If Liman von Sanders represents the Kaiser, whom do you represent?" Pallavicini
asked Wangenheim. The argument was a good one, as the ambassador is always
regarded as the alter ego of his sovereign.
"It is not customary," continued the Marquis, "for an emperor to have two
representatives at the same court."
As the Marquis was unyielding, Wangenheim carried the question to the Grand
Vizier. But Saïd Halim refused to assume responsibility for so momentous a
decision and referred the dispute to the Council of Ministers. This body
solemnly sat upon the question and rendered this verdict: Von Sanders should
rank ahead of the ministers of foreign countries, but below the members of the
Turkish Cabinet. Then the foreign ministers lifted up their voices in protest.
Von Sanders not only became exceedingly unpopular for raising this question, but
the dictatorial and autocratic way in which he had done it aroused general
disgust. The ministers declared that, if Von Sanders were ever given precedence
at any function of this kind, they would leave the table in a body. The net
result was that Von Sanders was never again invited to a diplomatic dinner. Sir
Louis Mallet, the British Ambassador, took a sardonic interest in the episode.
It was lucky, he said, that it had not happened at his Embassy; if it had, the
newspapers would have had columns about the strained relations between England
and Germany!
After all, this proceeding did have great international importance. Von
Sanders's personal vanity had led him to betray a diplomatic secret; he was not
merely a drill master who had been sent to instruct the Turkish army; he was
precisely what he had claimed to be---the personal representative of the.
Kaiser. The Kaiser had selected him, just as he had selected Wangenheim, as an
instrument for working his will in Turkey. Afterward Von Sanders told me, with
all that pride which German aristocrats manifest when speaking of their imperial
master, how the Kaiser had talked to him a couple of hours the day he had
appointed him to this Constantinople mission, and how, the day that he had
started, Wilhelm had spent another hour giving him final instructions. I
reported this dinner incident to my government as indicating Germany's growing
ascendancy in Turkey and I presume the other ambassadors likewise reported it to
their governments. The American military attaché, Major John R. M. Taylor, who
was present, attributed the utmost significance to it. A month after the
occurrence he and Captain McCauley, commanding the Scorpion, the American
stationnaire at Constantinople, had lunch at Cairo with Lord Kitchener. The
luncheon was a small one, only the Americans, Lord Kitchener, his sister, and an
aide making up the party. Major Taylor related this incident, and Kitchener
displayed much interest.
"What do you think it signifies ?" asked Kitchener.
"I think it means," Major Taylor said, "that when the big war comes, Turkey will
probably be the ally of Germany. If she is not in direct alliance, I think that
she at least will mobilize on the line of the Caucasus and thus divert three
Russian army corps from the European theatre of operations."
Kitchener thought for a moment and then said, "I agree with you."
And now for several months we had before our eyes this spectacle of the Turkish
army actually under the control of Germany. German officers drilled the troops
daily---all, I am now convinced, in preparation for the approaching war. Just
what results had been accomplished appeared when, in July, there was a great
military review. The occasion was a splendid and a gala affair. The Sultan
attended in state; he sat under a beautifully decorated tent where he held a
little court; and the Khedive of Egypt, the Crown Prince of Turkey, the princes
of the imperial blood and the entire Cabinet were also on hand. We now saw that,
in the preceding six months, the Turkish army had been completely Prussianized.
What in January had been an undisciplined, ragged rabble was now parading with
the goose step; the men were clad in German field gray, and they even wore a
casque-shaped head covering, which slightly suggested the German pickelhaube.
The German officers were immensely proud of the exhibition, and the
transformation of the wretched Turkish soldiers of January into these neatly
dressed, smartly stepping, splendidly manoeuvring troops was really a creditable
military achievement. When the Sultan invited me to his tent I naturally
congratulated him upon the excellent showing of his men. He did not manifest
much enthusiasm; he said that he regretted the possibility of war; he was at
heart a pacifist. I noticed certain conspicuous absences from this great German
fête, for the French, British, Russian, and Italian ambassadors had kept away.
Bompard said that, he had received his ten tickets but that he did not regard
that as an invitation. Wangenheim told me, with some satisfaction, that the
other, ambassadors were jealous and that they did not care to see the progress
which the Turkish army had made under German instruction. I did not have the
slightest question that these ambassadors refused to attend because they had no
desire to grace this German holiday; nor did I blame them.
Meanwhile, I had other evidences that Germany was playing her part in Turkish
politics. In June the relations between Greece and Turkey approached the
breaking-point. The Treaty of London (May 30, 1913) had left Greece in
possession of the islands of Chios and Mitylene. A reference to the map
discloses the strategic importance of these islands. They stand there in the
Aegean Sea like guardians controlling the bay and the great port of Smyrna, and
it is quite apparent that any strong military nation which permanently held
these vantage points would ultimately control Smyrna and the whole Aegean coast
of Asia Minor. The racial situation made the continued retention of these
islands by Greece a constant military danger to Turkey. Their population was
Greek and had been Greek since the days of Homer; the coast of Asia Minor itself
was also Greek; more than half the population of Smyrna, Turkey's greatest
Mediterranean seaport, was Greek; in its industries, its commerce, and its
culture the city was so predominantly Greek that the Turks usually referred to
it as giaour Ismir---"infidel Smyrna." Though this Greek population was
nominally Ottoman in nationality it did not conceal its affection for the Greek
fatherland, these Asiatic Greeks even making contributions to promote Greek
national aims. The Aegean islands and the mainland, in fact, constituted Graecia
Irredenta; and that Greece was determined to redeem them, precisely as she had
recently redeemed Crete, was no diplomatic secret. Should the Greeks ever land
an army on this Asia Minor coast, there was little question that the native
Greek population would welcome it enthusiastically and cooperate with it.
Since Germany, however, had her own plans for Asia Minor, inevitably the Greeks
in this region formed a barrier to Pan-German aspirations. As long as this
region remained Greek, it formed a natural obstacle to Germany's road to the
Persian Gulf, precisely as did Serbia. Any one who has read even cursorily the
literature of Pan-Germania is familiar with the peculiar method which German
publicists have advocated for dealing with populations that stand in Germany's
way. That is by deportation. The violent shifting of whole peoples from one part
of Europe to another, as though they were so many herds of cattle, has for years
been part of the Kaiser's plans for German expansion. This is the treatment
which, since the war began, she has applied to Belgium, to Poland, to Serbia;
its most hideous manifestation, as I shall show, has been to Armenia. Acting
under Germany's prompting, Turkey now began to apply this principle of
deportation to her Greek subjects in Asia Minor. Three years afterward the
German admiral, Usedom, who had been stationed in the Dardanelles during the
bombardment, told me that it was the Germans "who urgently made the suggestion
that the Greeks be moved from the seashore." The German motive, Admiral Usedom
said, was purely military. Whether Talaat and his associates realized that they
were playing the German game I am not sure, but there is no doubt that the
Germans were constantly instigating them in this congenial task.
The events that followed foreshadowed the policy adopted in' the Armenian
massacres. The Turkish officials pounced upon the Greeks, herded them in groups
and marched them toward the ships. They gave them no time to settle their
private affairs, and they took no pains to keep families together. The plan was
to transport the Greeks to the wholly Greek islands in the Aegean. Naturally the
Greeks rebelled against such treatment, and occasional massacres were the
result, especially in Phocaea, where more than fifty people were murdered. The
Turks demanded that all foreign establishments in Smyrna dismiss their Greek
employees and replace them with Moslems. Among other American concerns, the
Singer Manufacturing Company received such instructions, and though I interceded
and obtained sixty days' delay, ultimately this American concern had to obey the
mandate. An official boycott was established against all Christians, not only in
Asia Minor, but in Constantinople, but this boycott did not discriminate against
the Jews, who have always been more popular with the Turks than have the
Christians. The officials particularly requested Jewish merchants. to put signs
over their doors indicating their nationality and trade such signs as "Abraham
the Jew, tailor," "Isaac the Jew, shoemaker," and the like. I looked upon this
boycott as illustrating the topsy-turvy national organization of Turkey, for
here we had a nation engaging in a commercial boycott against its own subjects.
This procedure against the Greeks not improperly aroused my indignation. I did
not have the slightest suspicion at that time that the Germans had instigated
these deportations, but I looked upon them merely as an outburst of Turkish
ferocity and chauvinism. By this time I knew Talaat well; I saw him nearly every
day, and he used to discuss practically every phase of international relations
with me. I objected vigorously to his treatment of the Greeks; I told him that
it would make the worst possible impression abroad and that it affected American
interests. Talaat explained his national policy: these different blocs in the
Turkish Empire, he said, had always conspired against Turkey; because of the
hostility of these native populations, Turkey had lost province after
province---Greece, Serbia, Rumania, Bulgaria, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Egypt, and
Tripoli. In this way the Turkish Empire had dwindled almost to the vanishing
point. If what was left of Turkey was to survive, added Talaat, he must get rid
of these alien peoples. "Turkey for the Turks " was now Talaat's controlling
idea. Therefore he proposed to Turkify Smyrna and the adjoining islands. Already
40,000 Greeks had left, and he asked me again to urge American business houses
to employ only Turks. He said that the accounts of violence and murder had been
greatly exaggerated and suggested that a commission be sent to investigate.
"They want a commission to whitewash Turkey," Sir Louis Mallet, the British
Ambassador, told me. True enough, when this commission did bring in its report,
it exculpated Turkey.
The Greeks in Turkey had one great advantage over the Armenians, for there was
such a thing as a Greek government, which naturally has a protecting interest in
them. The Turks knew that these deportations would precipitate a war with
Greece; in fact, they welcomed such a war and were preparing for it. So
enthusiastic were the Turkish people that they had raised money by popular
subscription and bad purchased a Brazilian dreadnaught which was then under
construction in England. The government had ordered also a second dreadnaught in
England, and several submarines and destroyers in France. The purpose of these
naval preparations was no secret in Constantinople. As soon as they obtained
these ships, or even the one dreadnaught which was nearing completion, Turkey
intended to attack Greece and take back the islands. A single modern battleship
like the Sultan Osman---this was the name the Turks had given the Brazilian
vessel---could easily overpower the whole Greek navy and control the Aegean Sea.
As this powerful vessel would be finished and commissioned in a few months, we
all expected the Greco-Turkish war to break out in the fall. What could the
Greek navy possibly do against this impending danger?
Such was the situation when, early in June, I received a most agitated visitor.
This was Djemal Pasha, the Turkish Minister of Marine and one of the three men
who then dominated the Turkish Empire. I have hardly ever seen a man who
appeared more utterly worried than was Djemal on this occasion. As he began
talking excitedly to my interpreter in French, his whiskers trembling with his
emotions and his hands wildly gesticulating, he seemed to be almost beside
himself. I knew enough French to understand what he was saying, and the news
which he brought---this was the first I had heard of it---sufficiently explained
his agitation. The American Government, he said, was negotiating with Greece for
the sale of two battleships, the Idaho and the Mississippi. He urged that I
should immediately move to prevent any such sale. His attitude was that of a
suppliant; he begged, he implored that I should intervene. All along, he said,
the Turks regarded the United States as their best friend; I had frequently
expressed my desire to help them; well., here was the chance to show our good
feeling. The fact that Greece and Turkey were practically on the verge of war,
said Djemal, really made the sale of the ships an unneutral act. Still, if the
transaction were purely a commercial one, Turkey would like a chance to bid. "We
will pay more than Greece," he added. He ended with a powerful plea that I
should at once cable my government about the matter, and this I promised to do.
Evidently the clever Greeks had turned the tables on their enemy. Turkey had
rather too boldly advertised her intention of attacking Greece as soon as she
had received her dreadnaughts. Both the ships for which Greece was now
negotiating were immediately available for battle! The Idaho and Mississippi
were not indispensable ships for the American navy; they could not take their
place in the first line of battle; they were powerful enough, however, to drive
the whole Turkish navy from the Aegean. Evidently the Greeks did not intend
politely to postpone the impending war until the Turkish dreadnaughts had been
finished, but to attack as soon as they received these American ships. Djemal's
point, of course, had no legal validity. However great the threat of war might
be, Turkey and Greece were still actually at peace. Clearly Greece had just as
much right to purchase warships in the United States as Turkey had to purchase
them in Brazil or England.
But Djemal was not the only statesman who attempted to prevent the sale; the
German Ambassador displayed the keenest interest. Several days after Djemal's
visit, Wangenheim and I were riding in the hills north of Constantinople;
Wangenheim began to talk about the Greeks, to whom he displayed a violent
antipathy, about the chances of war, and the projected sale of American
warships. He made a long argument about the sale, his reasoning being precisely
the same as Djemal's---a fact which aroused my suspicions that he had himself
coached Djemal for his interview with me.
"Just look at the dangerous precedent you are establishing," said Wangenheim.
"It is not unlikely that the United States may sometime find itself in a
position like Turkey's to-day. Suppose that you were on the brink of war with
Japan; then England could sell a fleet of dreadnaughts to Japan. How would the
United States like that?"
And then he made a statement which indicated what really lay back of his
protest. I have thought of it many times in the last three years. The scene is
indelibly impressed on my mind. There we sat on our horses; the silent ancient
forest of Belgrade lay around us, while in the distance the Black Sea glistened
in the afternoon sun. Wangenheim suddenly became quiet and extremely earnest. He
looked in my eyes and said:
"I don't think that the United States realizes what a serious matter this is.
The sale of these ships might be the cause that would bring on a European war."
This conversation took place on June 13th; this was about six weeks before the
conflagration broke out. Wangenheim. knew perfectly well that Germany was
rushing preparations for this great conflict, and he also knew that preparations
were not yet entirely complete. Like all the German ambassadors, Wangenheim, had
received instructions not to let any crisis arise that would precipitate war
until all these preparations had been finished. He had no objections to the
expulsion of the Greeks, for that in itself was part of these preparations; he
was much disturbed, however, over the prospect that the. Greeks might succeed in
arming themselves and disturbing existing conditions in the Balkans. At that
moment the Balkans were a smouldering volcano; Europe had gone through two
Balkan wars without becoming generally involved, and Wangenheim knew that
another would set the whole continent ablaze. He knew that war was coming, but
he did not want it just then. He was simply attempting to influence me at that
moment to gain a little more time for Germany.
He went so far as to ask me to cable personally to the President, explain the
seriousness of the situation, and to call his attention to the telegrams that
had gone to the State Department on the proposed sale of the ships. I regarded
his suggestion as an impertinent one and declined to act upon it.
To Djemal and the other Turkish officials who kept pressing me I suggested that
their ambassador in Washington should take up the matter directly with the
President. They acted on this advice, but the Greeks again got ahead of them. At
two o'clock, June 22d, the Greek chargé d'affaires at Washington and Commander
Tsouklas, of the Greek navy, called upon the President and arranged the sale. As
they left the President's office, the Turkish Ambassador entered---just fifteen
minutes too late!
I presume that Mr. Wilson consented to the sale because he knew that Turkey was
preparing to attack Greece and believed that the Idaho and Mississippi would
prevent such an attack and so preserve peace in the Balkans.
Acting under the authorization of Congress, the administration sold these ships
on July 8, 1914, to Fred J. Gauntlett, for $12,535,276.98. Congress immediately
voted the money realized from the sale to the construction of a great modern
dreadnaught, the California. Mr. Gauntlett transferred the ships to the Greek
Government. Rechristened the Kilkis and the Lemnos, those battleships
immediately took their places as the most powerful vessels of the Greek Navy,
and the enthusiasm of the Greeks in obtaining them was unbounded.
By this time we had moved from the Embassy to our summer home on the Bosphorus.
All the summer embassies were located there, and a more beautiful spot I have
never seen. Our house was a three-story building, something in the Venetian
style; behind it the cliff rose abruptly, with several terraced gardens towering
one above the other; the building stood so near the shore and the waters of the
Bosphorus rushed by so rapidly that when we sat outside, especially on a
moonlight night, we had almost a complete illusion that we were sitting on the
deck of a fast sailing ship. In the daytime the Bosphorus, here little more than
a mile wide, was alive with gaily coloured craft; I recall this animated scene
with particular vividness because I retain in my mind the contrast it presented
a few months afterward, when Turkey's entrance into the war had the immediate
result of closing this strait. Day by day the huge Russian steamships, on their
way from Black Sea ports to Smyrna, Alexandria, and other cities, made clear the
importance of this little strip of water, and explained the bloody contests of
the European nations, extending over a thousand years, for its possession.
However, these early summer months were peaceful; all the ambassadors and
ministers and their families were thrown constantly together; here daily
gathered the representatives of all the powers that for the last four years have
been grappling in history's bloodiest war, all then apparently friends, sitting
around the same dining tables, walking arm in arm upon the porches. The
ambassador of one power would most graciously escort to dinner the wife of
another whose country was perhaps the most antagonistic to his own. Little
groups would form after dinner; the Grand Vizier would hold an impromptu
reception in one corner, cabinet ministers would be whispering in another; a
group of ambassadors would discuss the Greek situation out on the porch; the
Turkish officials would glance quizzically upon the animated scene and perhaps
comment quietly in their own tongue; the Russian Ambassador would glide about
the room, pick out someone whom he wished to talk to, lock arms and push him
into a corner for a surreptitious tête-à-tête. Meanwhile, our sons and
daughters, the junior members' of the diplomatic corps, and the officers of the
several stationnaires, dancing and flirting, seemed to think that the whole
proceeding had been arranged solely for their amusement. And to realize, while
all this was going on, that neither the Grand Vizier, nor any of the other high
Turkish officials, would leave the house without outriders and bodyguards to
protect them from assassination---whatever other emotions such a vibrating
atmosphere might arouse, it was certainly alive with interest. I felt also that
there was something electric about it all; war was ever the favourite topic of
conversation; everyone seemed to realize that this peaceful, frivolous life was
transitory, and that at any moment might come the spark that was to set
everything aflame.
Yet, when the crisis came, it produced no immediate sensation. On June 29th we
heard of the assassination of the Grand Duke of Austria and his consort.
Everybody received the news calmly, there was, indeed, a stunned feeling that
something momentous had happened, but there was practically no excitement. A day
or two after this tragedy I had a long talk with Talaat on diplomatic matters;
he made no reference at all to this event. I think now that we were all affected
by a kind of emotional paralysis---as we were nearer the centre than most
people, we certainly realized the dangers in the situation. In a day or two our
tongues seemed to have been loosened, for we began to talk and to talk war. When
I saw Von Mutius, the German chargé, and Weitz, the diplomat-correspondent of
the Frankfurter Zeitung, they also discussed the impending conflict, and again
they gave their forecast a characteristically Germanic touch; when war came,
they said, of course the United States would take advantage of it to get all the
Mexican and South American trade!
When I called upon Pallavicini to express my condolences over the Grand Duke's
death, he received me with the most stately solemnity. He was conscious that he
was representing the imperial family, and his grief seemed to be personal; one
would think that he had lost his own son. I expressed my abhorrence and that of
my nation for the deed, and our sympathy with the aged emperor.
"Jab, Jab, es is sear schrecklich" (yes, yes, it is very terrible), he answered,
almost in a whisper.
"Serbia will be condemned for her conduct," he added. " She will be compelled to
make reparation."
A few days later, when Pallavicini called upon me, he spoke of the nationalistic
societies that Serbia had permitted to exist and of her determination to annex
Bosnia and Herzegovina. He said that his government would insist on the
abandonment of these societies and these pretentions, and that probably a
punitive expedition into Serbia would be necessary to prevent such outrages as
the murder of the Grand Duke. Herein I had my first intimation of the famous
ultimatum of July 22d.
The entire diplomatic corps attended the requiem mass for the Grand Duke and
Duchess, celebrated at the Church of Sainte Marie on July 4th. The church is
located in the Grande Rue de Pera, not far from the Austrian Embassy; to reach
it we had to descend a flight of forty stone steps. At the top of these stairs
representatives of the Austrian Embassy, dressed in full uniform, with crêpe on
the left arm, met us, and escorted us to our seats. All the ambassadors sat in
the front pew; I recall this with strange emotions now, for it was the last time
that we ever sat together. The service was dignified and beautiful; I remember
it with especial vividness. because of the contrasting scene that immediately
followed. When the stately, gorgeously robed priests had finished, we all shook
hands with the Austrian Ambassador, returned to our automobiles, and started on
our eight-mile ride along the Bosphorus to the American Embassy. For this day
was not only the day when we paid our tribute to the murdered heir of this
medieval autocracy; it was also the Fourth of July. The very setting of the two
scenes symbolized these two national ideals. I always think of this
ambassadorial group going down those stone steps to the church, to pay their
respect to the Grand Duke, and then going up to the gaily decorated American
Embassy, to pay their respect to the Declaration of Independence. All the
station ships of the foreign countries lay out in the stream, decorated and
dressed in honour of our national holiday, and the ambassadors and ministers
called in full regalia. From the upper gardens we could see the place where
Darius crossed from Asia with his Persian hosts 2,500 years before---one of
those ancient autocrats the line of which is not yet entirely extinct. There
also we could see magnificent Robert College, an institution that represented
America's conception of the way to "penetrate" the Turkish Empire. At night our
gardens were illuminated with Chinese lanterns; good old American fireworks,
lighting up the surrounding hills and the Bosphorus, and the American flag
flying at the front of the house, seemed almost to act as a challenge to the
plentiful reminders of autocracy and oppression which we had had in the early
part of the day. Not more than a mile across the water the dark and gloomy hills
of Asia, for ages the birthplace of military despotisms, caught a faint and, I
think, a prophetic glow from these illuminations.
In glancing at the ambassadorial group at the church and, afterward, at our
reception, I was surprised to note that one familiar figure was missing.
Wangenheim, Austria's ally, was not present. This somewhat puzzled me at the
time, but afterward I had the explanation from Wangenheim's own lips. He had
left some days before for Berlin. The Kaiser had summoned him to an imperial
council, which met on July 5th, and which decided to plunge Europe into war.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction Chapter I Chapter II Chapter III Chapter IV Chapter V Chapter VI Chapter VII Chapter VIII Chapter IX Chapter X Chapter XI Chapter XII Chapter XIII Chapter XIV Chapter XV Chapter XVI Chapter XVII Chapter XVIII Chapter XIX Chapter XX Chapter XXI Chapter XXII Chapter XXIII Chapter XXIV Chapter XXV Chapter XXVI Chapter XXVII Chapter XXVIII Chapter XXIX
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