25
EUROPE AND AFRICA
Congo was recognized only to Noki. This last provision
shows Granville’s friendliness for the Congo Association,
but many feared that the cutting-off of the new state from
the sea would kill Leopold’s beneficent enterprise.
Almost instantly serious opposition arose to this treaty,
not only in the Cortes and in Parliament, but also on the
Continent. France knew the treaty was directed against
her; and in Germany a score of chambers of commerce
appealed to Bismarck for aid. The Woermann Line had a
monthly service to the Congo and from January, 1883, to
March, 1884, inclusive, had sold there 1,029,904 pounds of
powder, 2452 tons of liquor, and 555 tons of weapons and
rice; and the traffic in intoxicants alone had increased from
76 tons in January, 1883, to 502 tons in March, 1884.
There were also many sailing-vessels that visited these
regions. Bismarck imagined that this trade was threatened.
The French and German Governments approached each
other at almost the same time — April 17 to 19 — to as-
certain one another’s views; and Count Hatzfeldt, German
Minister of Foreign Affairs, wrote likewise to Holland,
Spain, Italy, and the United States, while vigorously pro-
testing against the treaty in Lisbon and London. Granville
had long recognized the necessity of Continental recognition
if the treaty were to accomplish its purpose; and, when Bis-
marck said that it would not be accepted even if Portugal
made further concessions as to the tariff and substituted an
international for the dual commission (which was to regulate
the navigation of the Congo), Granville announced that his
Government had abandoned the treaty. However, negoti-
ations were to be continued. Portugal had already made
the suggestion of an international conference, without
apparent response. But Bismarck took up the idea — if,
indeed, he had not already thought of it; and, in order
to get ahead of Great Britain, the natural power to call such