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Special pages :
The Comedy with the Imperial Crown
First published: in the special supplement to the Neue Rheinische Zeitung No. 263, April 4, 1849.
Cologne, April 3. Herr Brandenburg yesterday told the Second Chamber what the King will do about the âGerman questionâ. The temptation was too great: âthe loyal Eckartsâ of the Neue Preussische Zeitung with all their warnings have been ignored. The King of Prussia will accept the proffered crown, and in the near future therefore we may be able to look forward to solemn entry of His Christian-Germanic royal imperial Majesty into the residence of the âImperial Governmentâ.
But, while accepting the imperial crown from the hands of the plebeian Frankfurt parliament, Frederick William at the same time gives a gentle kick to this parliament and the illusion of its sovereignty.
The Prime Minister
ârecognises that the decision of the Frankfurt Assembly is a big step forward towards the realisation of German unity. But he has to take into account also the rights of the governments. He considers that the decision will take effect only with the voluntary consent of the sovereigns and that it will be binding only for those German states the sovereigns of which have given this voluntary consent. The Prussian Government for its part will make every effort to bring about this voluntary unification.â
Very cunning! The imperial crown is always acceptable, particularly when it is an aim in life that has been desired in vain for a long time â compare von Radowitzâs well-known pamphlet: How Frederick William IV did not become German Emperor. But to the crown proffered by the Frankfurt parliament there adheres too much plebeian dirt, too much unpleasant memory of the unhappy days of the rule of the sovereign people, for a king by the grace of God and, moreover, one who has been rehabilitated, to be able to place it on his head without more ado.
Only when the other sovereigns, also crowned by the grace of God, have given their consent to it, only then will the new crown be cleansed by the grace of God from all sinful stains caused by the March events and consecrated; only then will he who has been chosen by 290 professors and HöfrĂ€te take it into his hands and say, as he did earlier in Berlin: âBy the grace of God do I have this crown, and woe to him who encroaches on it!â [1]
What new stage in the German imperial chaos will result from the imperial comedy, and especially from recognition or non-recognition on the part of the individual governments, is a matter which we leave to the wisdom of the Kölnische Zeitung to determine.
- â An allusion to the composition of the Frankfurt National Assembly which on March 28, 1849 resolved to elect the King of Prussia, Frederick William IV, âEmperor of the Germansâ. The overwhelming majority of the Assemblyâs deputies were government and state officials, professors and lawyers. At first Frederick William IV agreed to accept the imperial crown proffered by the National Assembly on the condition that the other German states agreed, but on April 25, 1849, he finally rejected the proposal of the Frankfurt National Assembly and the imperial Constitution it had drawn up. The phrase âBy the grace of God do I have this crownâ was pronounced by Frederick William IV on October 15, 1840 when he was crowned King of Prussia