21 Metaphors for bismarck

Behind, the rowboat had given up the chase, but now, from other parts of the harbor, from which the Bismarck was fast speeding, came sounds of confusion.

Up to this period Bismarck was not a publicly marked man, except in an avidity for country sports and skill in horsemanship.

Bismarck is the sequel and sequence of Frederic.

In France the Marseillaise has become the national Him; while, in Prussia, BISMARCK is decidedly the national Herr.

It will be remembered that Bismarck was the deadliest and cleverest foe that Jesuitism has had.

Something of this was perhaps exaggerated, but there was no doubt that a breach had begun which was to widen and widen: Bismarck was no longer a member of the party of the Kreuz Zeitung.

Bismarck was no Napoleon; he had determined that war was necessary, but he did not go to the terrible arbitrament with a light heart.

Bismarck was a subject of the King of Prussia, but Prussia was after all only one part of a larger unit; it was a part of Germany.

But until 1890, that is to say so long as Prince Bismarck remained Chancellor, no such ambitious programme was adopted by the German Government.

In 1862, at a moment when liberalism was gathering strength in Prussia, Count Bismarck became chief Minister of the Prussian Crown and the dominating force in Prussian policy.

Bismarck was not only a keen observer, but he soon learned to disguise his thoughts.

Frau von Bismarck was the aunt of the unfortunate young man who was put to death for helping Frederick the Great in his attempt to escape.

Bismarck when he went to Frankfort was thirty-six years of age; he had had no experience in diplomacy and had long been unaccustomed to the routine of official life.

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.

We might say Bismarck was a Frenchman, since his name begins with the popular theatrical cry of "Bis!"

Bismarck was a Conservative and a reactionary, wholly out of sympathy with the ideals of 1848.

Bismarck was a Junker of Junkers.

Bismarck was a compound of both, in his patriotism and his unscrupulousness.

For more than two years the miserable quarrel continued; Bismarck was now the public and avowed enemy of the Court and the Ministry.

The Emperor had forgotten that Bismarck was a gentleman before he was a Minister, and that a Prussian nobleman could not be treated like a Russian boyar.

It is to be feared that just as Germans have lied for a century to prove that the English were annihilated at the battle of Waterloo, and for over forty years to show that Bismarck was not a forger, so they will lie for centuries to come in order to prove that the invasion of Belgium was not what Bethmann-Hollweg called it, a "breach of international law.

21 Metaphors for  bismarck