Authors: Brigitte Hamann
Nor were the two mothers, Ludovika and Sophie, delighted at the young Empress’s interest in politics. Ludovika to Sophie: “I believe the presence of the child will fill many hours of the day, will calm her, will occupy her, animate her domestic senses, give a new direction to her habits and tastes. I would like to fan every little spark, nurture every good impulse.”
71
Only a few days after the Emperor had turned down Sisi’s suggestion that he make peace quickly, he himself admitted the futility of the war. Nevertheless, the initiative for an armistice came, not from him, but from Napoleon III, the arch-scoundrel, as Franz Joseph called him.
72
The Treaty of Villefranche obligated Austria to relinquish Lombardy, at one time her richest province, an Austrian possession since the Congress of Vienna. Though Venetia was to remain in Austrian hands, no one seriously believed that this last Italian possession could be held for long.
The Swiss envoy reported that in Vienna the peace
made a horribly unfavorable impression…. The halo that until now has surmounted the Emperor has shattered even among the lower strata of the people. For ten years, the most tenuous efforts were made to maintain the costly military system and to bring it to the highest degree of perfection, and now they realize that millions upon millions of guldens were thrown away to maintain a toy and a weapon for ultramontanism and for the aristocracy. If the Emperor returns with the idea of maintaining the present system of government and to rule with the help of the Concordat and his military protégés, the monarchy would face a dismal future, this system is rotten through and through and cannot but break.
73
In Hungary, a new revolution loomed on the horizon. Concerning conditions in Vienna, Dr. Seeburger felt that “the mood had never been worse than now, but Archduchess Sophie, to whom he [Seeburger] had told this, refused to believe him. In taverns and coffeehouses no one is afraid to slander the Emperor, but he is going hunting tomorrow in
Reichenau, and the Empress is going to the same place, to go horseback riding.”
74
Sophie’s husband, Archduke Franz Karl, also labored under some
misconceptions.
He spoke “openly about the prevailing discontent, but at the same time he denied that it had any greater significance, because he was still being saluted. What flimsy reassurance!” Minister of Police Kempen remarked in his diary.
75
Assassination plots were uncovered, one even in the Hofburg itself; a footman had planned to murder the Emperor and Archduchess Sophie. Ludovika found the people’s rage against the
Emperor
“as painful as it is outrageous … because it is directed specifically against the person of the Emperor, who is being unbelievably reviled; lies about him are spread that are so unutterably unfounded and unjust
precisely
against him of all people—Unfortunately, the rancor emanates largely from the military, which even abroad … expresses itself so bitterly about him.” The sentence that follows this passage is typical for Franz Joseph’s character; variations on it can be found in several contemporary sources, even in Archduchess Sophie’s diary itself: “in all this,” Franz Joseph “himself is, I would say, so innocent, for he is cheerful, actually that surprised me.”
76
Monstrous corruption in the military and financial systems came to light. Finance Minister Baron Karl von Bruck, devastated by the Emperor’s lack of trust, slit his throat. Ministers and generals were dismissed; besides Foreign Minister Buol, they were Minister of the Interior Bach, Minister of Police Kempen, General Gyulai, General Hess. It was very difficult for the Emperor “to allay the enormous mania for reorganizing and casting aside,” as he complained to his mother.
77
At the center of the criticism stood the Emperor’s adjutant general, his closest personal and political intimate and friend, Count Karl Grünne. He considered himself his sovereign’s whipping boy and accepted the blame that was by rights the Emperor’s. Even Ludovika knew: “The main hatred is directed at Grün[ne], because it is said that he deliberately kept him in ignorance of all the sad things that happened, about the terrible negligence, blunders, and fraud.”
78
Some years later, the liberal
Neues
Wiener
Tagblatt
wrote, “The name Grünne enjoyed an unpopularity that almost bordered on popularity.” He had been, the newspaper claimed, a “nonsystematic dictator,” a “head of government
extra
statum,
” with the “halo of a vice emperor.” In the Council of Ministers, he had represented “often also the voice of the monarch.”
79
Under the pressure of popular opinion, the Emperor was forced to
dismiss Grünne from his posts of adjutant general and head of the military chancellery—though he did so with great proofs of favor. Grünne did retain the office of chief equerry.
Sisi’s friendship with Grünne remained unaffected by politics. After his dismissal, she wished him “especially a better happier time than the last has been. I still cannot accept that now everything is so very different from before, and especially to see a different person in your place, but my only consolation is that we have not lost you altogether, and you know how grateful I am to you for this.”
80
Emperor Franz Joseph exerted himself to the fullest to avert a
curtailment
of his absolute rule. Archduchess Sophie supported him. She abhorred the “popular will,” considering it an offense against the imperial majesty. In her letters, she complained of treason and refused to admit any fault in the “system.” She complained that “my poor son, hard pressed by the victory of injustice over justice, by treachery and disloyalty, nevertheless was unappreciated by many.”
81
A fair evaluation of the Empress’s political attitude, which was soon made plain to a larger group, must take into account the fact that her liberalism, which was considered (at court) so taboo, her anticlericalism, her enthusiasm for the constitutional state came to the fore during Austria’s darkest hour, politically speaking. In the most personal terms, it was the antithesis of the demands for divine right, absolutism, and aristocratic thinking espoused by Archduchess Sophie.
1
. Sophie, March 5, 1855 (in French).
2
. Sexau Papers, to Therese of Bavaria, from Vienna, March 22, 1855.
3
. Festetics, June 26, 1872 (in Hungarian).
4
. Eugen d’Albon,
Unsere
Kaiserin
(Vienna, 1890), p. 176.
5
.
Wiener
Tageblatt
,
September 15, 1898.
6
. Schnürer, p. 256, September 18, 1856.
7
. Festetics, June 2, 1872.
8
. Ernst II of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha,
Aus
meinem
Leben
und
aus
meiner
Zeit
(Berlin, 1888), Vol. II, p. 174.
9
. Bern, December 21, 1860.
10
. Corti,
Elisabeth
,
p. 74.
11
. Ibid., p. 68.
12
. Schnürer, p. 259, December 4, 1856.
13
. Daniel Freiherr von Salis-Soglio,
Mein
Leben
(Stuttgart, 1908), Vol. I, p. 79.
14
. Schnürer, p. 259, December 4, 1856.
15
. Ibid., p. 264, March 2, 1857.
16
. Richard Sexau,
F
ürst
und
Arzt
(Graz, 1963), pp. 79f.
17
. Schnürer, p. 267, from Budapest, May 19, 1857.
18
. Crenneville, from Budapest, May 9, 1857.
19
. Schnürer, p. 267, from Budapest, May 19, 1857.
20
. Ibid., p. 270.
21
. Sexau Papers, to Auguste of Bavaria, July 23, 1857.
22
. Schnürer, p. 280, from Vienna, November 3, 1857.
23
. Sophie, August 4, 1857 (in French).
24
. Sexau Papers, from Munich, December 30 and 31, 1857.
25
. Ibid., July 27, 1858.
26
. Ibid., to Marie of Saxony, November 21, 1857.
27
. Ibid., from “Possi,” August 5, 1857.
28
. Ibid., to Sophie, May 15, 1858.
29
.
Wiener
Zeitung
,
August 23, 1858.
30
. Ibid., August 26, 1858.
31
. Sauer, ed.,
Sämtliche
Werke
(Vienna, 1937), Sec. 1, Vol. 12, Pt. I, p. 92.
32
. Sexau Papers, from Munich, March 12, 1859.
33
. Sophie, January 13, 1859 (in French).
34
. Sexau Papers, January 23, 1859.
35
. Marie Louise von Wallersee,
Die
Heldin
von
Gaeta
(Leipzig, 1936), p. 16.
36
. Sexau Papers, to Marie of Saxony, January 27, 1859.
37
. Wallersee, pp. 17f.
38
. Sexau Papers, to Marie of Saxony, March 2, 1860.
39
.
Wiener
Zeitung
,
April 29, 1859.
40
. Bern, May 19, 1859.
41
. Ibid., Enclosure with the above report.
42
. Sophie, May 9, 1859 (in French).
43
. Sophie, May 28, 1859 (in French).
44
. Khevenhüller, Summary for 1859.
45
. Schnürer, p. 292, from Verona, June 16, 1859.
46
. Joseph Redlich,
Kaiser
Franz
Joseph
von
Österreich
(Berlin, 1929), p. 243.
47
. FA, Nischer-Falkenhof, Diary of Leopoldine Nischer.
48
. Grünne, n.d., 1859.
49
. Sexau Papers, to Marie of Saxony, June 3, 1859.
50
. Nostitz, Vol. I, pp. 10f., from Verona, June 2, 1859.
51
. Ibid., p. 11.
52
. Sexau Papers.
53
. Joseph Karl Mayr, ed.,
Das
Tagebuch
des
Polizeiministers
Kempen
von
1848
bis
1859
(Vienna, 1931), p. 515, June 6, 1859.
54
. Ibid., pp. 532f., September 4, 1859.
55
. Roger Fulford, ed.,
Dearest
Child
(London, 1964), p. 286. The first note on this page in source, concerning the Queen of Naples, must be corrected to refer to Marie (and not Therese).
56
. Nostitz, Vol. I, p. 14, from Verona, June 7, 1859.
57
. Ibid., p. 16, from Verona, June 7, 1859.
58
. Redlich, p. 245.
59
. Ernst II, Vol. II, p. 499.
60
. Heinrich Laube,
Nachträge
zu
den
Erinnerungen.
Ausgewählte
Werke
,
Vol. IX (Leipzig, 1909), p. 433.
61
. “Die Schlacht bei Solferino,”
Das
Volk
,
June 25, 1859.
62
. Nostitz, Vol. I, p. 26, from Verona, June 26, 1859.
63
. Ernst II, Vol. II, pp. 500f.
64
. Sexau Papers, from Possenhofen, July 1, 1859.
65
. Nostitz, Vol. I, p. 33, from Verona, July 5, 1859.
66
.
Weckbecker
,
p. 216.
67
. Nostitz, Vol. I, p. 30.
68
. Ibid., p. 28, from Verona, June 27, 1859.
69
. Ibid., p. 25, from Villafrancca, June 23, 1859.
70
. Ibid., p. 35, from Verona, July 8, 1859.
71
. Sexau Papers, October 20, 1859.
72
. Nostitz, Vol. I, p. 35, from Verona, July 8, 1859.
73
. Bern, July 13, 1859.
74
. Joseph Karl Mayr, “Das Tagebuch des Polizeiministers Kempen (September bis Dezember 1859),”
Historische
Blätter
, 1931, no. 4, p. 88.
75
. Ibid., p. 106, December 22, 1859.
76
. Sexau Papers, from Possenhofen, November 11, 1859.
77
. Schnürer, pp. 294f., from Laxenburg, September 1, 1859.
78
. Sexau Papers, from Possenhofen, November 11, 1859.
79
.
NWT
,
November 6, 1875.
80
. Grünne, from Schönbrunn, November 2, 1859.
81
. BStB, manuscript collection, to Amalie von Thiersch. March 1, 1860.