Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: thenians, etc., granted to each of these the free use of it8 own tongue in school and office?a concession which may be said to mark the beginning of Austria's decomposition. The results of this deplorable system as yet have been that the Germans, who in Austria form the wealthiest and most intelligent part of the population, imbittered at finding themselves degraded from their former position of leaders of the State, have become the most formidable opponents of the Government; while the minor races, only stimulated by the concessions received, are ever clamoring for more. The Taafc Ministry has marvellously succeeded, during the incredibly short space of seven years, in establishing chaos in the administration of the Cis-Latin provinces, contenting no one, and fostering racial contentions which can have but the most melancholy results for the stability of the empire. Whether a State, not only composed of such heterogeneous racial elements, but, moreover, governed by two such diametrically opposed systems, will have strength to resist attacks from without, who can say ? ?for it still remains to be practically proved which of the two governments has chosen the right road to success. So much, however, is certain?the Hungarians know what they want, and pursue their preconceived line of political action with consistent energy; while the Austrian Government, never knowing its own mind, is swayed at hazard by whichever of the minor nationalities happens to have the momentary ascendancy, and behindhand, as ever, of "an idea and of an army," may almost be said to deserve the definition of one of its own statesmen, of being the " land of improbabilities." CHAPTER IV. ARRIVAL IN TRANSYLVANIA?FIRST IMPRESSIONS. The War Office, whose ways are dark and whose mysteries are inscrutab...