He gained recognition abroad and gifts of money from the British and
Austrian governments, but it made his position as an official in Berlin impossible, as the Prussian government had no mind to abandon its attitude of cautious
neutrality. Private affairs also combined to urge von Gentz to leave the Prussian service; mainly through his own action, a separation with his wife was arranged. In May 1802, accordingly, he took leave of his wife and left with his friend Adam Müller for
Vienna. In Berlin, he had been intimate with the Austrian ambassador,
Count Stadion, whose good offices procured him an introduction to the
Emperor Francis. The immediate result was the title of imperial councillor, with a yearly salary of 4000
gulden (6 December 1802), but it was not until 1809 that he was actively employed. Before returning to Berlin to make arrangements for transferring himself finally to Vienna, von Gentz paid a visit to
London, where he made the acquaintance of Pitt and Grenville, who were so impressed with his talents that in addition to large money presents, he was guaranteed an annual pension by the British government in recognition of the value of the services of his pen against
Napoleon Bonaparte. From then on, he was engaged in a ceaseless
polemic against every fresh advance of Napoleonic dictatorial power and pretensions. With matchless sarcasm he lashed the nerveless policy of courts that suffered indignity with resignation. He denounced the recognition of Napoleon's imperial title and drew up a
manifesto of
Louis XVIII against it. The formation of the coalition and the outbreak of war, for a while, raised his hopes despite his lively distrust of the competence of Austrian ministers. Hopes were speedily dashed by the
Battle of Austerlitz and its results. Von Gentz used his enforced leisure to write a brilliant essay on
The relations between England and Spain before the outbreak of war between the two powers (Leipzig, 1806). Shortly afterwards appeared
Fragmente aus der neuesten Geschichte des politischen Gleichgewichts in Europa (translated as
Fragments on the Balance of Power in Europe, London, 1806). The last of von Gentz's works as an independent publicist, it was a masterly
exposé of the actual political situation and was also prophetic in its suggestions as to how this should be retrieved: ″Through Germany Europe has perished; through Germany it must rise again″. He realized that the dominance of France could not be broken but by the union of Austria and Prussia, acting in concert with
Britain. He watched with interest the Prussian military preparations. At the invitation of
Count Haugwitz, he went at the outset of the campaign to the Prussian headquarters at
Erfurt, where he drafted the king's proclamation and his letter to Napoleon. The writer was known, and it was in this connection that Napoleon referred to him as a ″wretched scribe named Gentz, one of those men without honour who sell themselves for money″. Von Gentz had no official mandate from the Austrian government, and whatever hopes he may have cherished of privately influencing the situation in the direction of an alliance between the two German powers were speedily dashed by the
Battle of Jena. The downfall of Prussia left Austria the sole hope of Germany and of Europe. Von Gentz, who from the winter of 1806 onwards divided his time between
Prague and the
Bohemian watering places, seemed to devote himself wholly to the pleasures of society, his fascinating personality gaining him a ready reception in those exalted circles that were to prove of use to him later on in
Vienna. However, though he published nothing, his pen was not idle, and he was occupied with a series of essays on the future of Austria and the best means of liberating Germany and redressing the balance of
Europe, but he himself confessed to his friend Müller (4 August 1806) that in the miserable circumstances of the time, his essay on the principles of a general pacification must be taken as a political poem. == Assisting von Metternich ==