FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   >>  
rce people, speaking their own tongue, proud of their traditions, and who look down on the more modern Austrians as upstarts. Besides these there are the Bohemians or Czechs (cheks), who speak still another language, and are a wild and quickly irritated people, obstinate, and as a rule slow-witted. It is but natural that one or other of these people should be constantly offended at the course of the Government, and see in every new law an attempt to rob them of their rights and privileges. The great trouble at present is the variety of the languages spoken. An attempt has been made by the Government to enforce the speaking of German throughout Austria. A law was passed making German the language in which all official business must be carried on; but to make it perfectly fair for the Hungarians and Bohemians as well as for the Austrians, the law provided that all officers of the Government who were stationed in districts where Czech or Magyar was spoken must be able to speak these tongues as well as German. This law is intensely unpopular. The Austrians want one language throughout the country, and are indignant at having to learn the Czech and Magyar, which are both frightfully difficult; some people laughingly declare that Czech is as hard to learn as Chinese. The Bohemians and Hungarians, on the other hand, do not wish their languages to die out, and they think that it would be only right to allow them to use their own tongue for official business throughout Bohemia and Hungary. They have become so violently opposed to the law, that they have been making a great effort to revive their language, and have established a literature of their own, and are having the Czech language taught in the schools. In Prague and many of the cities of Bohemia, no other language is spoken. Now Count Badeni, who has the difficult task of handling all these fiery people, has got into disgrace all around. The Austrians are angry with him because in a certain place, and for a certain occasion, he allowed the Bohemians to use their own language for official business. The Bohemians are angry with him for having forbidden a certain public meeting; and others are again incensed against the Prime Minister for having offended them in various, apparently unimportant ways. It was on account of his unpopularity and the various quarrels with him that he was so badly treated by the members of the parliament, and was finally so exasper
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   >>  



Top keywords:
language
 

people

 

Bohemians

 

Austrians

 

official

 

business

 
spoken
 

Government

 

German

 

languages


Magyar

 

Bohemia

 

difficult

 

Hungarians

 
making
 

tongue

 

speaking

 

offended

 

attempt

 

cities


Prague
 

handling

 

Badeni

 
schools
 
literature
 

modern

 

Hungary

 

upstarts

 

revive

 

established


effort

 

opposed

 

violently

 

taught

 

traditions

 

account

 

unimportant

 
apparently
 

Minister

 

unpopularity


quarrels

 

finally

 
exasper
 
parliament
 

members

 

treated

 
occasion
 

allowed

 
incensed
 

meeting