There is general agreement among historians that Otto von Bismarck never really approved of the principles of parliamentary government advocated by the nineteenth century progeny of the French Enlightenment, even though he could tolerate particular parliamentary institutions when he considered it practical to do so.1 Thus, while he looked upon political theorizing about natural laws of society and the natural rights of man—the philosophical bases of modern parliamentarianism—as futile efforts to oversimplify the complex nature of social and political organization and regarded revolutionary attempts to implement such rationalizations as sinful and arrogant intermeddling in the divinelyordained, hierarchical social order, he, nonetheless, rejected the rigidly legitimist anti-liberal concepts espoused by the post-1848 Metternichian reactionaries. While the latter called for a total repression of all revolutionary movements, Bismarck, perceiving the futility of sheer negativism, sought to capture revolutionary forces and enlist them in the service of the traditional ruling circle wherever it was possible to do so.